Dublin Core
Title
Traverse City Press, June 29, 1917
Subject
American newspapers--Michigan.
Grand Traverse County (Mich.)
Traverse City (Mich.)
Description
Issue of "Traverse City Press" Newspaper.
Creator
Contributors to the newspaper.
Source
Microfilmed reproduction of this newspaper issue is held at the Traverse Area District Library, Traverse City (Mich.).
Publisher
Gothic Press Printing Service
Date
1917-06-29
Contributor
Traverse Area District Library, Traverse City (Mich.)
Rights
Excluding issues now in the public domain (1879-1923), Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc. retains the copyright on the content of this newspaper. Depending on agreements made with writers and photographers, the creators of the content may still retain copyright. Please do not republish without permission.
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None
Format
PDF
Language
English
Type
Document
Identifier
tcp-06-29-1917.pdf
Coverage
Grand Traverse County, Michigan
PDF Text
Text
The Traverse City Press
GRAND TRAVERSE
1
LSERCdiaN
f’S HOME NEWSPAPER
C^Y CIRCULATION-3000
HOW SHALL WE
RID OURSELVES
OF FOUL BROOD?
^
HTTy, iiro(.. TO
By CARRIER SI YEAR
at. f917
By mail s/.so
year
mP! HIP! HURRAH!
THREE CHEERS FOR
' IRMECmf
Further the price has oot advanced as
jother siuft has. In fact, the price of
honey reminds me of a certain picture.!
rr
one of the very hest and a head liner, *
w if.t
..
.
^
hut the price remains the ^anle, & t'nd
Mr. Hilbert Hands in One on'toc. Well, honey is always a bead linThe Bee Question—Very ■er, but the price seems to always
■main the same, like the picture show.
Important Topic
•Now Mr. Editor, this imporUnt industry]
---------.
.standsagood chance of being wipedi
Reel Sport is Shown Among
Traverse City People Over
New Industry
OF INTEREST TO EVERYBODY
NAPOLEON PLANT IS A SURE GO
;
forgotten to appropriate a few thousand]
June _M, lbl7.
to take care of it. It does seem strange^
There is very’ litfle question but what
Mr- Editor, Traverse City Press:
: but it is a fact that they did not forget:
the Napoleon Motor Car Co. will move
DeanSir:
to provide hundreds of thousands of>
jto Traverse Oily.
I enclose article for publication which doiiars for wha' looks, from t.'.e stand-]
T^e stock has been subscribed to a
seems very important to me and the poi.it of ilu-public.ian absolute wastepoint where fai'ure is almost impossi-l
public should be informed of the con- and tltr-y have had it all charged to dad
ble. Subscribers! large and small, have'
ditions as 1 found them,
to be i>aid m taxes next winter
warmed up to the proposition and ha^e
This article ism regiu-d to foul brood.
.Now, M-. Editor, I want to leil vou!
bought stock liberally. Several have
8 disease ..f the bees. E'or the Inform- somethmn m confidence. Ma was with!
I doubled their subscription and several
ationoi the public, I iwlt say that Foul me o„ ,j„s trip to look after Foul Brood.'
jlarge invesloi^s are '
Brood IS very .omagious among liees; Oh yes, 1 forgot to tell vou that raa is
jwith Mr Oauntletl. As Mr. Gaunllett
th;ii It spreads from one apiary to an- the wife of the wnler and I want to]
lexplained al the meeting last night.
other very last, and jf not controlled tell tou ma has been studying this p»l-'
' There is no question but what Travwould wipe ounhe whole industry of iiical game for a year or two. She has
»ree City will get the plant, but for -the
the Stale.
reading about these voles for w .
[ lall I I . infornii-d b\
igood of the concern it Is veiy- es-sential
ii'w.miaii how do you spell
proiiiineiil hee-kiepef that there led solTrage,
th^t we move quickly. Customers
alS It. Well, when w
nob pressing the Napoleon Co. for cars
bei-ii part ol a (arload of bees shipped !i,,iue, 1 c....»
„,b ..su
u.e.
and (he Napoleon plant is oot in shape
from Indiana 10 TravertseC-ny and tat- thmu'..,, her mind’"'sJ'w hen w’^eot
to satisfy* their demands.” To date,
en out on the p.-mnsula; that he had settled she sets: -Father,-she alv avs
better than 850,000 has been stibicribed.
viMif-d liw- apiary and found Foul calls n.e fnlhrr, ' do vou remember
^Tbe balance between •20,600%id..t25.
Brood; ihai-elie mau. u ilr. Frazier, ad- 1,^, re idina an ariiv-le in the Grand
1000 will be disposed of in a veiy shortmm.-d b.- had it 111 tile apiary.
Rapids Press about a bil' introduced bv
itime and investors who arejooking for
Wed^lhisspitiig I began to irnesli- a Senator Smith for a stale park, to cost
la square, clean cot deal had better get
gate. 1 liad an ai iicle published in the the* state IfiO.iMl: that the Senate and
'in the game now. It's a sure inj.esttiecord-Eagle, al-ol had Mr. Baker ot Mouse of Representatives bad passed,
jment: a boost for the town, a boost for
the .Siai- Bank make inquiries.
But the bill, but the ijoveruor, before signW- - didn’t i,eeui to get anywhere or gel i„g the hill, had sent an expert to look
, , „ n.-_i_.
'os®- Joi"
'oofi
iufoni.aiion The ohject was to have the land ot er and estimate its value and'
Ithe old town today, tomorrow may be
the houl Brood inspector that is eni- get whai other infoimaiion he could in
_______
! too late.
ployed h\ the State, come up here and regard lo same: that he reported to the'
.
.
.
.
7.
clean up itie disease.
Governor that Uie land in question was Farmer bothered With
Old Settlers had a ^rand day'
and.
for their picnic and enjoy
been f^
yeani. I netermined to in- mut the laxxtion value was placed
?d at''
protect property ,
ed themselves greatly
The remains of Mibs C. Hill, who
vestigatf. Mi on the 1 .th I drove out to HG.OOO and that the Gbvemor had vepassed away at Detroit Thursday night,
Did Mission and there got track of this toed the bill? "
apiary of Foul Brood. J. found ihe
And I savs, "Yes, ma. vour memory
W. B. Nelaon, whoresld«oo alPijA]
The Gi-and Traverse Old Settlers
brought to this city Friday night
bees had bewi located on a Mr. Holmes' is preitv good. There was such an art- farmwestoftbacity. has bad coBsd^ I have accepted the invitaUon of Archi-jJ"®® 29 on the 11:20 train. Mr. Hill
fruit farm; that Mrs. Holmes, an oldish cie in the Freis. tVhy? What about able trouble of Ute with tl>e
l^jButUrs of Charlevoix to Rave the t underwent *n operation for appcndicilady, had a small lot of bees, )6swarms,h?- Masays. ’Never mind wbatabout'
city. A fo«^.4Br«
annual pwnic and meeting in that:‘’>
‘^® ^°^P‘
ago from Which be
_________
she told me. and that she, on'.accountlitDOw'. Bof do you f«member.:;^u«
of lojt'
o^r dujea^^on^d
thR a inM|M)exir - ‘
at jsMpla qttfdwl .
reina^were t^en^to the tmnf-
DOGS MOLESTING
ANDirrWASA
PERFECT
FARMER’S PROPERtJ
4-
OB the Central school groutiJs
«hadia*n, Harid and
Tram!Wednesday Bad enjuyed'a welt planned:^'*'' hrothers. Geot^ A. and Norman
noUceasomettiog wrong with the bees a misUke somewhere, that the land in eity hereafter and «rfli
program in the afternoon.
.W, and a sister. Mrs. Frank Unllen to
that they were uoi doing well and that question war. verv valuable worth at ‘he owiu a of the canines.
there seemed to be a disagreeable smell k-ast V^9,«00; ihai the Governor recoA-,
"’!
The officers wen-elected as follows‘^eir loss. Mr. Hill
^president, .^n-hibaid Buttars, Charle->'®®rs of age and was well and favorably
La the hives; that she not knowing any sidered the mailer and finally signed DAV CfAIITC DPTHDM ACTCD
.\Tu.r~iuT.:—secretaiy,
Mrs. Harry'Nichols.
b®®" a mason by trade
thingofFouibrood. asked Mr. Frazier tb .b.r-"
'
™
what the trouble was and he replied
i says............................................
-Yes. ma. that v
.................
itN DAYS CAMrlNG TRIP Charlevoix; treasurer and Jmnoran, *"1^ ® resident here for 3C years. He
that the bi-u.-'d was stdrved. not enough Press, but whai lias that got lo do w.fh - About forty Boy Scouts made camp president. Wiiliani S. Anderson, this
"® ercatly among his large circle
honey to'nmig in. Well, the outcome this Foul Brood question?'
II the shore ol Green Lake rfear Inter'‘I®® P«’S'«l®''ts. Mi-s. W. L. Case.
fnends and the_ beraaved family
of an this v.«sttiat MfA Holmes lost all' ,rhi: will be continued n.
lochen and spent ten days in real camp Benzie county; Miss Irene J. Ueiiy, Kal- i>a'r iiie sympainy ol the enlire
week.
her Pees.
life.
Mr, Leland Scout Master and
««--Y A. Powei-*., Leelanau; L. munity Funeral services will be held
su watuli tor Uie ausi^er to itiis
Now last year these bees, what were
question; bm don't hold your physical training .teacher accompanied F- Ain^'®®Traverse; Mrs. F. •\V..«ro“’ th® heme Sunday at 3 p.
lefl of them, were nio\ed lo the Frank
breatii until then.'
fhe boys and instructed them as to the Mayne, Charlevoix; Robert Campbell
Edgecomb larm and some more shipped
Iproperwaysof making camp, cooking, Emmeti.
S. C. Despres, this city, i:
up and what is left is there now.
|elc. The boys were divided into groups historian,
that is, the h;vc*s and lixtures are there
of four. Each group was provided wiih
----------------------now. There are no bees in them. ii
,„d ov«„ ,„d did iu 0.. cooki LYRIC yhEATRE add
Summer Schedule effective June
whenever you find any
s*ems that this man Frazier bought u;most of the small lots of bees that were isfollcm;:
of your furniture that
I
The boys returned to the city last
VAUDEVlIif PROGRAM
North Bound;
on the Hepinsula. so that now 1 coulc
needs repairing.
5:10 a. m. Resort special Charle-i“‘”^‘‘*^'
besides having agood^ Traverse City's vaudev ille critics will
only l^ear_nf 2 stn-ill apiaries, a total ot j
vou- and Peloskey, Daily except,*’’"® ‘h®>^*‘*ve learned more about Boy be treated to some high class acts com- “A Stitch in Time------ ’*
15 swarta.-. One small lot owned by a
Monday
'
j Scout life,
meocing next week, at the Lvric. For
Mr. Fox, supposed to be all right at'
Lv, 5:45 a. m. For all points north.I
----------------------present, iliice acts will be run on
present, are loc-ited about liO rods'from
Connect
at
Bellaire
for
E.
Jordan.'
nrn
AnAAA
AIPPAA
niUH
these di5ca.sed h;ves. I found some
Datty except Sunday
RFfl CRIISX NEEDS FUND ^
"1.
? First Class Upholstering
old cans with diseased and dirty honey
Lv. l:4Up. m. Central Lake, E. JorWHUUU llUtWW I W
progra'hi wiH change daily as usual. It
Furniture Repairing
in them open for any stray bee to lick
-Arrive from North'
'
--------has always been the policy of the .Lyric
u > and carry the disease home will.
and Refinishing
Lm.
dan. Charlevoix, and PetoskevJ
.
#i n« non onn nBBMi
Daily except Sunday
' |
fOF. *1 00,000,000 OpCM photo plays obtainable at pnre-s which
Now- heie is an important industry
TlirOUgheUl CWIltry
*®'^
’*’“1
practicilly w.^ed ofi of Ihe map as fa. Ar. 11:)U 8.,m. From Petwkev, Charlevoix. E. Jordan and J-lk Rapids
______
charged m other parts of the state '
as the Peiimsula is cotu-eroed and lbal|
<
The management promises a conlinu
Daily except Sunday
isn't tiie end. Tne disease seems to
^f ihesc good pictures as weii as
Cilz. Phone R992
2 ou p. m. From Mackina-w i.'itv. New York and Chicago Wit! Otv« at
sialtvr Ilk-tn? wiiiJ anj only the eS
Laaat
$40.000.000—Every
Region
the
creani of vaudeville.
Petoskey, Charlevoix.' Boyne l'n>,
pert can handle and stop it and then, i<
MuBt Be Generous Now.
_____________
and East Jordan. Daily except
you save llie bees, you loose the honey
(PHENDGES
John Hendges
----
ANOTHER OLD RESIDENT CONE
Sunday.
fur tfne year that the bees
9 35 p-m Resort special from Pejveslo;D&cle Bam Is calling tor a Bed Croes
John K. Fush, for many years hack
luskey and I'harlevuix Daily ex fund of llOO.OOO.OOe to enable the Bad drivVr and bagragi man in this niy.
this IS not aU. The fruit grow j
cepi Saturday.
ei- iier-d* ihi-ie bees just as much ai
Cross to give the proper care to the passed away al the lu me ol his son in
’ South ^uund;
the bee k-ep,r d'Wr, -utlie D.-e is very]
sick and wonnded. the homelasB and .letroil. onThoi*>dn\ June 21 and was
Musk.
important to carry the pollen H-om"-v 5.|J 8. m. Saginaw,
skegoti,
desolate, when hlatmeiuget Into luried June '23 at ■ iH-iroit. Mr Busli
Flint
Grand
1 tapios. Chicago. Lan—
"
d Ra,
blu-soiM to b’i>sso:ii lo fertilize the fruii|
flgbua* la earaesu New York city was well know-,1 all over the city and
nd ii
f jr wiiiiout pollen tertili.-aii„n, no fruit j
sing and all poinis east and west. i,„ jttomptlj pl«l<ed luelf to "T»lee hi.s been sj;d. and \.-ry truly, of him,
Mr. F-ix with II..S small apiary so neai
Daily excepr Suuday.
one-fourth of whatever Bum la needed." [that aiivon,- gi.i>i;! the xame w*v Johnthe diseased hit of lu.-ps spoken of, i3:IU p. m. Saginaw, Bay City, Flint
la now collectln* the money. ChiBush was, rwrr had to walk, even,
very inu.'h c-tii-erned; he and others:
Ludiiigton. Grand Rapids, Chicago cago has been asked for aomettlc* be f thev didn't have the pnee ol i rid.- :
had tt-riiu-:i to the Foil Bro id Inspec and Detroit. Carnes Ciiu-a.;o Sleep- tween IB.OOO.OOO and 110.000.000, th* rle had been in failing health fur about:
er every'Saturday- Daily.
_ levy baaed on popnUMoa and credit
He will he pre-jtlv mi-.sed
or at Lansing, at first getting -no reply
but finally got a letter savin ; that ow- Lv 9:40 p m. Grand Rapidv Latisin,*. ^Ung.
I ihroiighojt the cilv
Detroit, Chicago, St Louis, Mo.
Mr. O. B. Towne has been appointed |
ing lo the fa I ihit there had been no
approprpMioi nia.e by the Stale fort
Carries day coach. Club car and by Waahlngton ai director of the Bed
thru sleepers to all above points, croaa war fund
for the canhis iravetim expe.ises. he was not ableDaily except Saturday.
t^ai divlelon. and haa opened a drive
!o come and atiend lo the matter.
I
Arrive from South:
I jor the money in nine ataiea.
Now for your information will say.
that some years ago I think abo.it Id. A*" 5:00 a. m. From Detroit, Toledo.' The money la being rataed by subLansing, Grand Rapids, Chicago and scrlptlon amoog the varlons chapters.
toe Bee Industry of t'.e state put the
St. Louis. Mo , With dsy coach and
*»*»
arranzed U»at each
milter up to the Wislatu-e and after a
sleepers from ali above poiu s <**Pl« «UU have oaefoorth
whallot of red tape fiadfly gn a Foul Brood
Dailv
except Mondav.
,
Towne ^pes,
law passed and one lone inspeeto-ap
pointed fo the great sU e of Ml b g i . A''
the natlottl orfaoUattos Us full
Saginaw. and^Grand Rapids. Dsily, | Jij,)i.OOO.OOO
^
The salary, as 1 understand is not large.
over and abovs what ths
ground $1500 to $2«K). But the powers Ar. IhZOp, m. From Chicago. Grand chaptgrs retain.
Rspids,
wit. T
'*-•--'s, Muskegon, Detroit.
Toled-.,
The Bad Oroas
4hat have charge are so busy looking
ipel
Saginaw Dail.v exce;itWunday
t»und
lu tugd from ^s people becaose It
after very important matters that Uiey..
has «o small an endowment fund—:
'forget fb appropriate any cash to take'
less than tt.MkOOIk—whlla Japan, tor
care of this important matler, especial-'
liNitaBce. haa iMre than tK.OOO.MiO In
ly this year of high prices on sugar and,
her r,,,^ p^alftci^e from’wblch
.rhii-h pays
wars Mr. Wilbur H. Pareee takes office of
.r.a Lher'fund',
all food products.
'
; 403 t. Front btreel will hold reguUir
eipen,!j^*^
Justice of Peace. July 4 for a term of'
I just want to call ydur especial at-: meetings. Wednesday and Saturday
The money U neccMary to keep up fouryears, to succeed k. B. Curtis. He
tentioo to the fact that honey has more'eveningSi also Sunday at -i p. m. and the
supplies
and
equipment
of
the
.
-- , base
, will oceup> his present office rooms at
food value, pound for pgund, than sug^ TiSOp. m. All are invitedtaplUl.. ut lo, nUoI .or, U> ««■
Sn,K
BoilO.OE.
1
cro,>
Drink a
AT
OUR FOUNTAIN
EVERY DAY
You will find it satisfying
and refreshing. We use
only the purest of fruit syr
ups at our fountain.
SANITARY
is the word
at
Wait’s
Soda Fountain
WEATHER
IS HERE
Order That Palm Beach
Suit Now—It’s Not
Too Late.
Sid Johnson
TAILOR /
226 EAST FRONT S-tREET
'
Vacation
Time
Send the things you %ill
need on your vacation to us4
You will find us dependable
and expert in laundering
everything from an ordina^
bundle washing to the,fin^
of fabrics and fancy ^irt
waists.
We specialize in Superior
Collar and Shirt work.
PROGRESS
LAUNDRY
Pony Votes
WHEN IN DOUBT AS TO NEW
CORRECT STYLES, IN
MEN’S and BOYS’
Clothing Hats and Furnishings
GOODS MADE OF Al QUALITY.
PRICES WITHIN REAt^H OF ALL.
GARLAND & CHAMPNEY’S
121 UNION STREET
$50.00 REWARD
TO :‘kNV PERSON for a medicine equal to Tieer Oil. according to the
testimony reported in "The Friend cf Suffering Man” abound each bot
tle of Tiger Oil. Again we challenge an equal to Tiger Oil far the core
of Che grealpsi number of diseases
-
SODA
tacklng
PASSED AWAY AT DETROIT
PERE MARQUETTE RAILWAY
VOL 2-NO. 81
Sold by druggists, grocers, agents,
National Grocery Co. and
DR. JOHN LESSON. CmBDoc. Mdi.
TRAVERSE CITV PRESS
AMERICANS TRAIN
FOR CONVOY WORK
Uave Ambulance Corps to Take
Up Army Transportation
Senrioe.
\ wen Mnpioyeti.
RiBIS ROUTINE IS FOUOWED
Cetirw ef Training 1i Racily cn *1tv
- tciMlvc Ccurw" to Fit Men In Shortest Foeelblo Tbm to Take Comtncnd of Trcneportc. ,
Paris.—FlftecD Americsss have exchanged the streonous life of the
bolaace Arid service (which had loterrals In Its strennoslty) to stody to
become officers In the French ermy
transportation service at a ecbool
where the coarse seems, to leave
opening for the proverbial finder of
employment for Idle hands.
This Bbcool was established
Meaox toward tbe eod of last March,
and bad 150 French pnplla, officers and
noncommissioned officers In training
when the American contingent'Joined
Q week ago. The course Is exactly
the same for French .and Americans,
bat the Americans are kept In a spe
cial class for the sake of those t^t
need EngUsh-speaking Instructors.
At S :S0 in tbe morning everyone
up and must be dressed, have made
bis bed and bad breakfast In time to
answer his name at roll call at 6:25.
As regards breakfast, the American
stomach found that It conid not do a
morning's herd work on th6 reguiatloD
French breakfast of coffee and bread,
so eggs and bacon have been adde<l
From B;S0 to 7:30 theory Is studiedT
and from 7:30 to 0:30 lectures on au
tomobile technique are given. foUowed
by practical work In tbe workshop,
such as soldering metals tempering
steel and all sorts of forge work.
'Busy SoMion In Afternoon.
Lnncbeon at eleven is taken in the
mess shed, and Js. like dinner later, an
excellent example of that proficiency
In cuisine for which FYance Is nnriTsled. At first the 15 Americans sat
together, but on the second day their
French comrades gave a dinner In
their honor, and after that the Ameri
cans (who still wear their field seccioo
uniforms) divided up omong the other
tables.'
From 12:45 to 5:30 p. ro. on three
afternoons a week, work Is done on tbe
bodies of camions (military' trucks);
they are dissected and put together
' again, etc. On tbe other three after
noons tbe ccnvol (train) of camions,
generally eight, are taken out as If
they were on actnal service. Each man
In turn Is named head of the section
(and Is In genbral chsrge'for the day).
Orders are given him to take a hypo
thetical load of munitions to some
point some miles away, and he has to
conduct his train by the map. set thk
pace, keep them together, and show
them how to overcome dlfficnllles that
arise. These difficulties are at present
chiefly Imaginary, but hypothetical
«Lses of broken axlea, of towing cars,
etc., are treate«l
' nie lieutenant attached to the Amer
ican group, Lieutenant de Kersauson,
whose long residence In Callfonile has
given him a perfect mastery of the
American langnage, accomp^es the
train, but gives no advice, only ob
serves. is the officer of the day mis
takes Us route, be has to find out
error end rectify It himself. After
the return at 5:45, the lieutenant gives
f half-hour' critldsm of tbe convol’s
work and points out mistakes made
and bow to avoid them.
Evening Spent In Study.
Dinner Is at 6:30. and more study
follows till lb p. m., when all Ugfata
are pu\ oul Sneh a program, with
plenty of maoual work in tbe open air,
provides enough exercise, bnt regular
anny drill is put Jn three times
EATS GOLD FISH IN POND
■
'J'
■
Ma-hA-ne«iKm. an Indian ntld
yenra of age, heard the call of
the wud and ran away, One momiag
a kMper In a Los Angrias park foand
Jhe glri beodlog over riie flab pond.
BsMde her on the bank was a gold flab
atmg^lng with Ita last ga^t. Ma-hflrae«i-oo had caught It with be- band.
•‘Whj CAUsb the gold flahr asked the
"Ma-ha-rac-ao-oD eat tUB,”
Mid ^ gilt as Bhe picked iQt the flA
and ran.away.
Sunday Is a day «f rest, or would
he. only that many-^ fact, all-4nd.
It necessaiy to catdi up tbe week's
work, read up notes, mske or finish
diagrams and such things, which they
have had only the Pme to do hur
riedly during the week.
The course is really an
DtODBlTe
coutst," somewhat forced, « it Is
hpped that after three weeb' study
the Americans will be prepared for examinatloas wbicb wUI allow tbem to
be made sublleulensnu Id the trans
port sendee and be put In charge.of a
section of 50 men. Five weeks Is the
time allowed their French comrades
for tbe same work.
SveryoDe knows what eutomobtle
transportation means In modem war
fare. and Its Importance has been plain
the least military mind ever since
saved Verdun. A seepon of 50 Amer
icans is already at work at tho front
conducting camions moving anuDonttloD from railhead to the ammunition
staPons, and the new school at Meaux
will provide Americans to officer these
seePons and the new ones that will
follow If Pratt Andrew, inspector gen
eral of the "American field service In
France,” is JnsPfied In his hope of eoehundred men arrive each week
from the States for this service.
Amerlean Flag on the Qata.
Tbe officers in charge of tbe a,ntoffloblle InstrucPon center et Meaux
(there are other schools for drlv^
mecbanica. etc.), from Colonel Bcrschoek down, are all keenly imereste^ In
the coming of the Americans, and the
colonel spokelilghly of the serious way
tlw had settled down to work. The
gne into the camp of 16 barrack
eheds has an American flag on one
post and a French one on the other.
When the New York Sun's corre
spondent visited the school recenilUy,
the convoy waa sent to the villagej«f
Crecy, where all tbe trucks were to
be parked In (he market place (drawn
up side by side, close together, at an
angle to the rnmn road so that they
could be started off again without de
ss do most French villages these days,
with noPilng but aged men, women
home. But it woke up
as the trucks 1
I In and took
up their appointed places.
"Are they English T' asked a woman
who appeared at her shop door.
“No I"
When she heard that they
Amarleaos, then abe beamed with con
tent It seemed as eaneet of the aid
that was coming, and evidently con
vinced P»e good woman that the Cnited States had declared war far more
vividly than anything abe had read or
heard aaid.'
Tbe military spirit la strong in tme
new band of fighters for France, a
salute and permission Ts asked from
tbe lieutenant to go and buy ciga
rettes at tbe shop, 20 yards sway, al
though the camions were all oow
perked In an Irreproachable line eM%
halt was being taken, ht a previoiu I
halt, when tbe officer of the day woe
deciding which road he ahould take,
and every driver had got down for a
few minutes, great was the dlscussloo
whether a cigarette could be smoked,
the “antis" holding that they were on
duty, when smoking Is barred, while
the "pros" agreed that a halt was a
break in tbe service.
Mllittry Etlgwatte Observed.
The captain of the center, who wat
conductlDg tbe New York Son's corre
spondent to see the convoy at practical
vfork. passed by the drtveta several
rimes, and this brought up the question
whether he should he saluted every
time or treated as being on doty with
tbem. when the first.salnte at meeUng
would suffice.
Bnt there was a deeper gnesrion diat
each was eager to discuss. Were they
doing the best they could for their
own country and for France? Should
they be where they were, or ought
they to be In their own country offer
ing It their services directly? They all
bad served with the American ambnlance sections M the front, and hive
aU succeeded In becoming heads of secdons. This experience has taught
them a useful knowledge of the French
langnage. Several have Uved yean
In France and know the language tboiv
oughly. It has taught them-much about
the Freoch army and trench warfare
end given them already a valnabli
training. They wonder whether they
are
this training to tbe best ad.vantage. or whether they ought to be
at home, where armies are forming
and mei with their quallUes are being
needed. Meanwhile they are working
hard end acquiring further training,
which will assuredly make them valu
able • officers for the first American
troops to t«ke tbe field In France
This firs; class of 15. training at
Meaux to become transport offleets. ti
composed of Charles Freeborn. Callfomia; Allan .Mnhr. Phllsdelpbte:
Henry Isetla Paris: George Struby,
Denver: A. Douglas Dodge New York;
B, Reed. New Jersey: William Bige
low. Boston; W. H. Wallace Bre
N. Y.; A. Henderson, New York: H.
ladelphla:
Barton. H. Houston, Fhiladi
‘
Ooiford.
Dows*Dunham. Boston,
New York: Thomas DoaghertyT Phila
delphia ; Balpb Blcbmond. Waltoo,
LEAVING THE TORPEDOED SONtAY AS SHE SANK
Hemarkable photograph showing the passenger* and crew of tbe French liner Sontsy taking to the lifeboats
after the vessel had been torpedoed by a German submarine In.the Mediterranean. The captain and 44 ottien
perished.
•
KING GEORGE VISITS AMERICAN liVARSHlP
r
0- V-
•
'
»
UNREST GROWING ^ AMONG GERMANS
As U-Boat Toll Decreases the
People Show Signs of
Dissatisfaction.
GLOWING PROMISES FAIL
England $hewt No Signs of Weaken
ing, but Seeme More Determined
to Preeeeute War More Bit
terly Than Ever.
don among the people et large with
the polldcsl results of the ruthle«
submarine campaign and the absence
of any tndlcndons that It has brought
tbe desired peace near to band.
During their long campaign for the
nnrestricmd use of submarines the ad
vocates of the measure made very defi
nite promises of immediate results.
"Two or three mouths" was the phrase
used everywhere In street and news
paper arguments In regard to the dme
It would take to bring England to ber
knees, ready for peace. Even though
the official propaganda since has de
clared tbe government bound Itself to
pardcular dme to produce results,
‘ prediedon that they would be obned In two or three months has re
mained In tbe minds of tbe people.
are now beard that, al
though four months have passed. Eng
land shows no signs of weakening, but,
the contrary, seems determined to
prosecute the wsr more bitterly th»i>
ever.
Reports of Franos DIseradItsd.
Smternenta that France has book
“bled white" and wlU he forced
dre from the war have been made so
often that they no longer attract the
slightest credence. Tbe entry of the
United States and BrasU Into the war
and the rupture of
Otrmany and the balk of the neutral
worid outside Buroi>e are now tsk
seriously and regarded with gloom.
Qnesdohs have been recendy asked
tbe correspondent by Germans here,
not In olBcisl posldona. who are dis
gruntled over the results of tbe sub
marine campalgu up to the iVcsciBt
ttme. with regard to what would be
tbe
In the. United States If tbe
submarine warfare were ahandoi '
Hm goverument, however, shows
signs of weakening and is now en
gaged In a vigorous puMldty. cam
paign to bolster up the waning confi
dence at home and quiet the com
plaints of neutrals.
It la a matter of knowledge to the
_____ ____________ ________
least____ mem
ber of rite German governiaat
commit himself to soy deflulte
dme limit for bringing Great Britain
Into a frame of mind to disenss peace.
In tbe correspondent's last Informal
conversation with Dr. ^fred Zlousermenu, head of the fot^gn office, a few
hours before news qf the rupture pf
reiadons with the United States
received In Berlin, the minister, who
on tenterhooks to know what the
Uqited. plates would do. declared InpulKlvely:
"U the United States will only keep
hands off and let us alone, two or
three months will be enough."
Then, noddng the correspoDdept
prick up his ear# at the foreign office
use of the stock phrase of the i
lessness advocates, he quickly amend
ed his estimate.
"Say six months,” be said, and then
reeding a further query In the corre
spondent's eyes, edfiedt
"Well, let us not fix any definite
dme."
Doctor Zlmmermann then went
with tbe argument that England and
the entente quickly would be made
amenable to the peace idea If the
United States would only refrain from
breaking relations or declaring war to
consequence of the proclamadon of
tbe unrestricted submarine campaign.
German naval writers for some time
have been preparing their readers for
a poBslble falling off in tbe monthly
figures of tonnage destroyed by sub
marines. Many of them farnlsb the
advance explanation that if It hap
pens. it will be due largely to the ab
sence of vessels to torpedo, or. In soma
articles, to the results of British meth
ods. No mentioD of any Increase In
losses of submarines Is made.
King George of Great Britain greeted the United States destroyers on their arrival la British wmeis and V
aboard several of the vessels. The photograph shows him inspecting one Of the big guns.
PRESIDENT MENOCAL INAUGURATED IN HAVANA
"ST
J'/K-lo-- .
(Jen. Mario Menocal was re-lnangurated as president of Cuba with considerable ceremony. Th* lUa*tra(lno
shows the inaugural parade on tbe famous Malecon In Havana, and. at tbe right. President Menocal and memberr of his cabinet reviewing the procession.
GERMAN WAR PRISONERS PUT TO WORK
r ^
: Seminary Graduates
Fast Leave for War.
.
;
,
'
;
New Yoik.—Only
• 20 at _
members of tbe gradnaOng
class of Union Theological
seminary were here at the commencement to receive their
diplomas. The others ted Joined
the colors.
Of the daases of »ir nod
1B18 of the seminary, u men
had gone as riiapUlns. ten
the Y. M. a A. field serriee. six
to Platttearg. either as student
officers or to do spiritual work,
and tour were In Europe with
Bev. Dr. Thomas C Hbii
Husband and Wife Enlist
Cffiester, Pa.-7-Urs. James B. Don
nelly led her husband to a naval
crulting station. After he signed
as a machinist she enlisted as a chltf
yeoman.
my -
I
■^1
Among the promising young office
of the American navy U Commandw
J. C Van de Carr, la command of Sub
marine dirislon
the
Oannan prisonen of war at the ToulouM a
of ammunition cases.
J
traverse city -PRF-SS
BE 1011*
»Mil tor Savlnj Brwden and
fttin Is Great
CROW
REDUCE
FERTILmf
Call Cr*|N Crn* Her ltij«ir« Land If
^Uirtfood la Net Raplaead—Mva
ItMk Will Kmp Up Rioh.
iMaa »f Soil
By OeOROE A. BROWN,
of Boot Huabandry, M. A. C.
Baat Laoatns. Mich.—In many »eo
OoM Of the atate the extremely hl^
prtcea preralllnc tbli sprin* for grain
and prorender. together with the poor
ovtlo^ tor the hay oop, are canMng
the aale of coomdeeable munhera of
yoong atock which now, if erer, should
be grown ont to the fuUeat extent poatfhle.
The fanner or Ure stock man In any
aort of ton(d> at all with agrlculttiral
and market coodltlooa doesn't hare to
kxA far for reasons why animals
tbonld be kepL In the first place the
cecesBlty for inmenalog our meat auppiy la urgent and coupled with this
Is the addltJooal fact that prospects
tor a continuation of high prices were
oarer belter. And we should bear In
odnd further that oar lire atock pop
ulation Is already far too small to
insure the malnteoanA of soil fer
tility and the production of bonodfal
crops lu the years to come. To appre
ciate this fully It U only neceaaary to
consider the Immense amonnt of fer
tility which Is sold with the rarions
oops.
Reallxatloo of this brings
borne the immense Importance of feed
ing ont erery •t<im«i possible.
Use Up to 400 to MO Pounds of Water
tor Each Pound of Pry
Matter.
Baat Lanalog. Hlc:i—The farmer
who Is looking out for No. 1 Uils sea
son. or lu any season, for that matter,
wlU see to It that weeds In com and
beans are klllod before they get a
start Early cnltlratlon. and eonUn®.
oBs pracBce ot It throu^out Me grow
ing season la the rmnedy. say farmcrops mm ot the Michigan AgilcultBtal eoB^
"Weeds." It (s Hid. “are the great
est crop eDsmiaa. aodMt U a mlsuka
to allow them to get up four or fire
inches before cuiaratlng. The Urn#
to hit them hardaat la Just when they
Stan.
‘Soon after planting, with both com
and beans the field should be gone
over alth a spike-tooth harrow, teeth
slanting slightly back. Tbe weeder la
excellent tool for eurty cultivation,
and can be used In
until the
plants are six or eight Inches high.
“The first cultivation with the culUrator Is usually made wbo“ Me
plants are up high enough so the rows
be easily toljowed. Tbls culUraUoD should be close to tbe plants and
fairly deep, though if the seedbed has
been preperly prepared, deep cultlraHon Is not necessary.
'The next eultlratlon usually comes
within a week or ten dayA This enltimtion abould not be quite so close
to the planu. or as deep. Later cul
tivations. with-either com or beans,
should be shallow—merely deep enougb
dislodge the developing weeds and
keep the ground In loose condition,
-ifter about S5 daya' growth, the roou
ora or bean plants completely interiace between the rows and come to
ultliln about two inches of the surface.
These surface roots are the <Mle( feed
ing** roots of the plant and deep cnltiratiou will cause a coualdereble Iom
ield by pruning them. Level and
low cultivation la' the best and the
of smaU ahovela. or small cultiva
tors equipped with blades or sweeps
Is advised. Qpep cultivation Is partlcnlariy the practice of “laying by".
Cultivating deeply at the Ian cultivaand throwing the earth from the
middle ot the rows should be avoided."
WIRE WORMS ARE SOD PESTS
I MuR Be Taksfi i
vent Its Attacking Cera end
Other Crops.
fitlCHlOAN WANBEABON.
The RIflbt Uas ef tha Marrow, and
Rropsf Cultivation, WHt Help to
Put the Held In This Condition.
An acre of oats yielding GO buabels
ot grain, by way of illnatratlon. will
remore from the soil In grain alone
approximately 81.BS pounds of nitro
gen. ISiie pounds of phosphoHc add
and 8.96 pounds of potash. To re
place this amount of plantfood by the
uae of commerdal fertiliser would cost
not leM than *6.84 per acre, even at
the prlees preralUng three yean ago.
But an kcre of com, yielding one
hundred^ baskets, or CO bushels of
shelled com remores stUl greater
guantltlea of dealmble elements Trom
the sou. The grain alone in the
temoved from an acre of land
tains 4CJ6 pounds of nitrogen, 1BB2
pounds of phosphoric add and 11.2
posnds of pota^ haring a fertiliser
rsdne of IB.69. The ftftlUxlng Ingre
dients In a too of dover hay are rai
ned at 1836.
When these figures are
nghtfuUj
d the farmer cannot bdp but
reaUse that he can hardly afford to
sell all the crops be raises. Ratber.
be abould derote only a set area To
crops and make It a fixed policy
to teed the remainder of his oops to
lire stock. Tbs animal utlUtea only a
small part of the fertlUslng Ingredi
ents In the faad. and those wUeh
aren't need are returned to the farm« in the form of manure. It Is safe
to say that where manure Is carefully
handled, full 80 per cenf of the fer
tility ralne of s feed finds Its way
Ack to the SOU.
Figuring on this
bsalB. an acre of oats If fed to stock
oo the farm, returns to the soil *8.47
worth of fertility. On the other hand
If the oats ere sold, ts.47 worth of fer
tility is remored from each acre. With
com the loss -through sale would be
•7.7G an sere, and In the case of a
ton of clover bay the loss through sale
would be r.48 worth of fertlUty.
reedlDg these crops returns these raloca to the land.
For each bushel of oats fed. we
back 11 cents worth of fertility
tor each bushel of com IGH cents
worth of fertlUty. The adrlaabUlty of
rising more Ure Rock becomes appa
rent even though part of the feed
must be purchased.
The: proAln^di feeds, which are
tb» ones most economical to boy. hare
a moth graatse fertlUty value thafi
the homegrown feeds. The fartlUS'
tag TBiue ce the maanre obtained from
the feeding eg a ton of bran la |6
Item a MB ag BvMd maal flTBS.
tnm a ton eg cotteaMsE maal E2S.?a
Both
tbs last named feads can be
fad la
feed* *i4 a BroEt obtalhed «a tbe Uvis
•tack peodnand. to ny doUIibe «E tbs
fbot tbt noaara mUtaBt tM
Mr foMtog la pcaetlc^ oqual t»
nlaa to «tm
bnada «C oan-
East Unsing, Mlcb.-Tbe wire
worm, at always, win bear watrtilng
in MlchJgaA. Wire worms
are yellowish broito larysA pceeH
sing hard polished sklos and bodies
slender and cylindrical la shape, meaeuHng from three-quarters of an Inch
an Indi In length. Tbe moR Injn*
rlous form In Michigan prefers low,
mucky, or poorly-drained soils, where
It feeds upon the roots of grassesv
grains and the llkt
Two or three
years Is feqnlred tor this pen to rea<^
itnrlty. which accounts, many timeA
r the damage done by it a year or
o after grass sod has been turned
under. The adult Is a brownish beetla
which from its habit of snapping Ita
body up In tbe air, is known as a
■•click beeUe."
Susceptible cropA like potatoea com
or root ciopA should not be planted
after plowing up gran sod. Prof. S.
A. Forbes of DHuoIa suggests that re
cently plowed up grass sod should be
kept In dover as much as practicable
for a few yeara as wire worms do not
thrive well In clover land. In planta
badly Infested with wire worms It
would be well to use some commercial
fertiliser. This will not klU the In
sect. bnt will aid the plant in over
coming Its work.
It Is sometimes advisable to drain
land and add Ume In order to make It
possible for the clover to establish ItsMf. and this has given rise to the
that tbe Ume Itself kills
e wire worms. As a matter of fact
MOVING PAY AHEAD FOR BEES
East Lansing. Mich.—The old box
hlva and ctoBSed-lrame htvea which
progressive bee men have so long rent
ed against, are headed for the junk
heap, for a new law which was passed
by the loR legislature and which Just
recently was signed by the governor,
makes tbe use of these relics a penal
set. After May 'l the state Inspertor
of apiaries will be privileged to order
the destruction of every one he finda
Accordingly there Is every prospect
there will before long be a genera]
moving day tor honey gatherers Id
those communities where bees are still
kept in the old-fashioned way.
The new act was passed In tbe tntereR of greater food production, tor
the box hive containing crooked combs,
have always been unproductive, be
cause in such blves It Is UnpossOtle te
examine and manipulate tbe brood
chambers. Good beekeeping, it U ex
plained by tbe state Inspector ot
aplarla at the coBegB reqnlrM that
every part ot tbe hive Aall be acceeslble to make It posMble to datRmlne
at all tinMs the condition of tbe col
ony.
By the time tbe new law beooBM* op.
etattve, bees now In old hlvee mutt bo
tranMemd to new. Methods for ma^
tag tbs Maasfer are explained la a
balMan ■nddeb may be had by beekMpen It ^ wlU write In to tbs
slate taspwtor cC aptartoe at tbe eab
LOCATION AND DESIGN OF VARIOUS ROADS
iD
BUILDiNG
GOOD ROADS NOW IMPORTANT
TruMportation of Raw Matariale and
Finished ProduRs of Farrauehtng towportanoe.
MOSS SECTlOe ShOR'INS IBM Wr« BUET UOVC SUMt
(Prepared by the Colted SUtes Depart
ment of Agriculture I
The minimum width to aocommoda'e
safely two lines of average b'ir-<edrawn traffic is 14 feet, sod for iiutomi.blle traffic the Vidth preferably
sh-Duld be not lets than 18 feet, th.'ugh
a width of 18 feet is used frequrnfly.
lu order to maintain the travel.-d way
to the required width and to ofTord
proper sefoguards against accldeui.*. It
Is necessary to provide a shoulder not
leM than^hree or four feel wide along
each Bide Of the roadway proper. The
er crown than the rest of the
surface, but they abould be sufficieotly
flat not to-endanger traffic using tl'cm
and really should constitute sn addi
tional width of roadway. This means
that the total width of roaduuy be
tween aide ditches never should I>c len
than 20 feet where horse-drawn traffic
predominates, and 24 feet where any
considerable volume of euiouioblle
traffic Is to be accommodated.
■ Where sharp curves occur In the
alignment It la dealreblo. though not
customary, to Increase the width of
the traveled way. A vehicle being
drawn along a curved road teoda to oc
cupy an appreciably greater width
than where the road is strsigbi. and
nnleH the width of the traveled wsy la
Increased cotreapondlngly. this ten
dency contributes materially to tbs
baaards that tnvarlahly acc&mpeny
sharp corvea. The minimum widths
given above Mould also he increased
oo embankments of any cooslderablt
d^th. so as to make malmcnanes
easier and at the same time dlmlnlMi
fKa danger of aecidenCA
The width of rtght of way required
to provide aU nseeasary area ter tbe
coadway. al<ves sad- dltchea varies
considerably with the nature of tbs
topography. '
In dsffignlag s pitirUe
where the road Is or Is expected to be
come of sufficient Importance to warrunt a highly Improved surface, tbe
mexlnmm grade usually la fixed with
reference to this feature about as fol
lows:
^
;
Coaeul
------ plain and pralrte regloJT^.jISH
• rolling couniry ................... 4 to 6
■ mountalooua regions...........e to 8
The question of minimum grade Is
of Imponnneo only as regards the aide
diicheA Those abould have adequate
fail to empty the water that collects
la them at a Riffldently rapid rate to
prevent damage to the road. Ordinar
ily It la desirable to give the aide
ditches a fall of about one foot per 100
feet of length, though a somewhat Im
fall has proved satisfactory sometimeA
Whererer changes in grade occur
the change sbonid be made by means
of a vRticai curve, and not by as
abrupt angle.
SlopsA
Tbe slope at which earth will stand
when faced up In a ent or pitted In as
embankment depends (1) on tbe chat^
acter of tbe Mrth and (2) tn the cUmatA In cuts, a good quality of nonslaking clay usually will stand on a
slope of about 46 degrees, or. as elope
U expreesed nanaUy. one horirootal to
one vertlcaL even where fairly deep
freeing occura, and in some of tbe
Soutbera states such msterlal has been
known to stand for many years on a
slope of leas than one^balf to ooe. Oo
tbs other hand, clay that slakes very
easily, may require a slope of three to
MA or even four to one, under tbe most
favorable condition of cKmatA but
this latter extreme la vety onnanal.
The usual tiope for clay In cuts Is one
to one In warm climates and one and
ooe-taalt to one la cold’cUmateA
While In the cum of embankmenta
ffiay usually can be deposited oo an
initial slope of about one to ooA this
steep Mope sMdom can be
ly la the question-dT
able grades. In deciding
this que^o^
.
ng thlB
tbe advantages to be gained by reduc- Ordinarily clay embankments should
log all of tbe steeper gradM on a par have a slope of about two to one in
cold dimates and at leaR one and oneticular road to a given maxli
should be wRgbed agalhR the addi hall to one In warm climates; and If
tional coR which the reduction in the day be of qoestiosable quality
these values should be Increased. Em
volves.
bankment slopes require more care in
. The following data and suggestloos
construction than excavation slopeA
are intended to aid tndlvldnal Judg
becauM any flattening of an embank
ment. which necesaartly must be tbe
ment slope by the action of weather
prime factor In solving this Unportaat
after the road Is completed Is very
problc
likely to damage the road surface;
1. The COR of average pleasure traf while the sliding In ot excavation
fic, horse-drawn and motor. Is precti- slcmea usually does do further damage
cally unaffected by grades of not more
side ditch*,
than 8 or 7 per cent <slx or seven feet
. reonened readily,
rise per 100 feet, measured horirontal-, ^
JvJSTqwll^ usually re
ly). provided tbe conditions are snch
Zo to one In
that It U unnecessary to apply the ,
one In embankments.
brakes to vehldes whM descending regardleM of climate.
Moderately
the gredeA But for traffic where loads coarse nnd mixed with gravel will
are as important as speod. even very stand on a steeper slc^te than fine
light grades may b6 of considerable sand, because the former is not moved
dlsadvantagA
so readily by the action of storm we2. Increasing tbe ste^sss of s er.
grade decreases In three distinct ways
Solid rock excavation usually can be
the load a boree can haul: (a) for the ;
^ average slope of about onesame character of snrfacA the required
to one except where the rock
tractive effort or puU per too of load secure la sloping strata separated by
Is increased by about 20 pounds tor; gu„p^
»
In the latter case
each per cent Increase In gndA (b) the
average slope may be as much as
the possible pull the hone can exert u oue-half to ooe or three-fourths to ooe.
decreased by an amount equal to the The faces of rock cuts usually are not
effort required to lilt his own weight dressed down to even aa approximate
through the rlSA This amount Is ap ly smooth slopA 88 is done tn earth
proximately equal to one one-hun cuts. In excavating solid rock only
dredth of the horse's weight for each such material Is moved as Is ectuall.v
per cent Increase In grade, (c) tbe ef necessary to obtain the desired width
fective pull of the horse Is reduced by at the bottom of the cut or as has been
the chutge lu the angle at which the loosened In blasting. Tbe faces shRifd.
pull Is applied.
of conrsA be cleared of all- material
8. The pull a horse can exert on a which is loosA oc„ which might be
level road varies grestly with thq. tn looeened subsequently by frost end
dlvldnal anlmaL and Is affected by the slide down upon tbe roadl Slone em
manner of hitching and tbe skill of the bankments usually will stand on a
driver. The character of the road alope of about ooe to one.
surface also may have an important
In order to prevent damage by waahInfluence by affecting the secutiU of log all earth elopes In either excavstbe horse's foothold.
tlon or Rnbankmeot should be protect
TeRs made by tbe office of public ed by a growth of grass as soon hs
roeds and rural eugineerlng Indicate practicable after they are formed.
that, on a level road, average farm
In many localities where the soli Is
horses untrained to the road can exert fertile and a good quality of grass is
a Ready pull tor several cousecutlve nativs no seeding of the slopes Is nec
hours equivalent to from 0.08 to O.lu essary. In other cases the soil may not
of their own welrfit without undue possess sufficient fmlllty to grow
fatigue, and that by resting at Inier- crass, even when the slopes are seed
valB of from 600 to 000 feet they can ed, sod in which event It may be very
egert a pull equivalent to about 0-28 desirable to cover the slopes with..cut
of their weight, provided the foothold sod. This Utter procoM usnallj U
U good.
very erpRislvA and should be em
A The tests retorrM to above also ployed only where It U known that
Inffleata that with u weU-constrncted thoroHgb seeding and fertilittng ^uld
wagou' the puB required to move a fall to sectfte a covering of sod.
«roM iMd of ooe too over a level road
vartee about as fMlows:
SUTT In order to prevent the washing
sway of 8i3»vatlon slope* U to Utercept water frMU the naturul ground
surface which otoe^vUe would flow
FItd sorth or HaA-May load................ <2 down over toe excaraaon MopA ThU
U done by means of a *n>erm" ditch
In geneaL the Judgment should be courtroeted well back from toe top of
fArsely InfluHesd. la fixing the maxi- the elopA' Mgnpe 2 niuMratoe a coodiaao whlA makM a ■^ma" diwfe
mum grads, by tbe t»jK)C«PbT of
Wflon which the rood traverseA A®- dsMruble and uUo sbowa bow raeh E
eordlhg to the heR current prscflcA ditch u ctmotrueted.
..........
Hl^way authorities are fadng a
new public demand which muR recelve at once the mo« careftfi study.
Every resource of tbe country muR be
utilized to the utmoR and all nnprt^
ductive expenditures of money and enbe foRered by greater efficiency among
those called upon to bear tbe financial
strain on our resources and to furnish
the labor and material needed to supfarm and factory must be supplied to
both nation and private consumer at
the loweR reasonable coR In order
that all may contribute their utmost.
Good Road Nur Chleuga.
whether It be-oall or lur^ to toe
national dafenaA nu trauRtortutlon
ii
before, tor tranapoita^on charg» form
a Urge part of the coR of many eoMotiaU.
UtiUty muR'be gives more weight
• uad Here en
astor
joyment, ortUsafUy-u legitimate ob
ject for s«ne expendltiire of public
toads. muR be relegated to toe back
ground for avtlfflA Our roads have ac
quired an importance as agendea in
which «vin« for
a mobUizatlOQ of our road buUders for
tbs greateR effiidency In the broad
transportation problems ot ths
Ill CM
Ho Rnandal OoprootioiL RiU
Hone Slim the War Btean.
------------------------ of an
Important Weotera dally pdpor raemit*
^made an extaadod vutt to WoRan
Oanada. and In euamlug up toe ra>
■nlta, after gotag thoroughly Into CAdltlons then, nays there u no an«f»fe«i
dRireeMoD in Canada, nor has tbera
keen anything of the Mrt Rnce toa
war begaa. AnyoM who has watched
too berometer of tradA Ad seen the
benk clearings oC the different dtlH
grow and continue to grow will hare
artved at toe same conclusion. The
«de sUtUties reveal a like situation.
The progress tost toe farmers are
making U highly Mtisfactory. As tbU
correspondent says: Tt U true toere
have been adaputions to meet new
conditions, and taxee have been re
vised. and that a very Urge burden of
added expense tn many tines has boa
assnmed. bnt It has alt been done me
thodically. carefully and with toll regard for the resources to be called on.
That this has been done fairly and
wisely u proved by the present com
fortable financlel position.
“With the exception of a restrteted
p«a Id the east, Canada U not an Innstrlel country. The greater portion
of the Dominion moR be classed as
agrlcnltural area, with only an InfiniteRmal part of It tolly developed.
“Lacking complete development the
agrlcnltural portion ot Canada bag
naturally pUced lU main dependence
upon fewer reeonrees than would be
the case lu tbe SUteA Even in peace
timsA bustnen would be subject to
more frequAt and wider finctaatieaa,
due to the narrower foudatibn opoai
wblto It reRu.
Thna, Canada bu been able to
come up to tbe war with effidHcy and
nffidency and to wipH-t* and even
advance Its dviUau octlvltleA
"Canada's firR element of fidaocUl
Rreogto lay U lU branch bank
tern. ThU syRem has two great advastagH: It makes tbe en«pi«i«i rw '
eourcM ot the Domlaln fluid m tost
auppUes of caplUl can ran qnlAly..
from the high spM to the low spotsi
also. It pUoM at tbe command of eaA
Individual bnndi the «amblned reeonreet of the whole tosOtutlon ue
that there U un eSdrat rafAUurd
agalnR Mvere Rnln at any om
pout.
“Here to Winnipeg, toe eB-Oanadu
hanking houses |natoUto big, straog
' ' and, aa cUewhere in the
Dominion, thsM held to an uttitode oC
eanraere and uoUdlty that praveBtud
even toe Ran OC Roy tetheUl d^
That bustnen geoerully U sow eoihtog strong oo an even keel U Uigety
due to tbe aboRote retoaal of thu
banks, both branch ud Independent,
to exhibit tbe sUghteR dgns of esdtemrat or ai^rehensIrmeeA
"For all Canada the nvlngs bunk
flgurH are astonUhlng. Beginning with
1918. they are. for tbe fiscal year end
ing March 81:
1918 .....................................
faMoea^en.
TO REBUILD COUNTRY ROADS 1814............................................ deSdBOJW
1915
fl8S,76I.4«8
Pthsu^, Rural ByRam Laid Out Hun 1916 .......................................... 788.169312
dred Years Ago—VaR Change In
1917 .......................................... 888.7BS3M
Traffic ConditlonA
There figures represent what CanodUns have pot away after paying the
Ths nation's rural road syRen Increased Uvtog cost whldi U about
needs replanning. Prof. Frank A. the same as In tbe SUtee. all toeraaoWan^ of the Masuchusetts Agricul es to tuxn end Imports of all kinds
tural coUege. Amherst. Mass,, today made necesHiy by the war and gen
told the delegates to the convention erous subtetlpBona to war bond
of the American Civic assocUtl<
“Prohihltlon has helped greatly la'
“Our present rural road system
planned years ago and In some sec- keeping the money snpplUs clreuUtr
tloDS they were laid out a hundred Ing to toe Donnal, nocensry ehannelA
years ago,” he Mid. Traffic condi TndesmM geureally attribute a Urge
tions were vastly different then, tbe pert of the good fiiuncUl condltloo to
automobile had not been Invented and the fact that the boore bm has ben
a Urge portion of the crops produced eliminated. Canada tak* Uw enforoomeat with true British serlousneoA
on each farm were consumed or i
/PlnancUlly. as to every other
ufactured at bon>A
“Up to the preseot time major Im spect Canada hat devMASd anffieleney. She has done It to Rrito of toUlal
provements have been confined ti
coodltlau which would not look pMBrect trunk lloee connecting Urge
term of popuUtion. Such roads, there lilag to tbe StntM and Rie has done U
fore, are espedelly valuable for the to a big. strong wsy.
"One of the best things we did." said
movement of heavy freight and are
now being used extensiTely by auto- one ot toe leading Winnipeg bankers
to me. "was to decide early In the
mobUe truckA*’
game that we simply would not borrow
DRAG IS FUNDAMENTAL TOOL troublA
"WeRarted In Ignorance of bow the
war would develop and without know
It Is SItnpleR and CheapeR ef All Im ing exactly what our resoorcH were,
plements—Net Difficult of
and had to find tbe way.
Operation.
‘And yet Canadians are not overbur
dened vrtto tax* nor are they cemEconomy in road building cslU for pUlsing of
For toe coBunod
consideration of tooU, coaRderatlon of people toere has been but a alight tax
operation, and comparison of resultt. totreare. If any. to a direct way. In
On all these points the R>llt4og drag direct payments, of eoursA are made
scores a bnll's-eyA It U the RmpleR to the shape of higher prices for Uvtog
and cheapest of all rood tooU. And It oommodltleA but the price advance on
U the cheapeR and eaaleR to operatA such Items U no heavier than in tbe
And. when assUted by farm imiJe. States to toe same period."—Advertise
ments, it can be mede to do anything moot.
that needs to be done in building the
average earth road; with resulU that
U is difficult to obtain with any other
Tbe straw hath reappearance led
tool, no matter bow expensive It may Barday Warburton. the PbUadelphU
newnaper owner, to aay:
"Before tbe war I often golfed at
BUmta. at the Cbambre d'Amour
Good roads are e
golf IMnka. looking ont over too Bay
of Bb
.
numGsrmsT
MUST KILL WEEDS EARLY
with malted milk, but toere U notoIng more certain to convert a cowpath into a hard-eurfaced highway
than btatoA pha money, plua con-
nan one day:
"Glorious view I (BorUBa vlav, ehr
" TSA Mr. Warburton.* said te TTs
what yon might call a vary fin*
TOBatBA'*
PafleM work with toe drag w
•Tur aeosHaiy during the Maaow wlB
Bean toore for our roads than wn
ttylag te boi^Usasa.
Ms Aapeot
Thera U oothtoc to that OMS btt
te held taota." Ttea hew mm te
icwyen epUt hetot mm RT
IMVERSE cmr PRESS
Priated TveidAyi and Fridiyi by«be
CURATING I 4th of July— Celebrate!
GOTHIC PRESS PRINTINO SERVICE
C. B. Uy«rs,
Oen. Uffr.
GOTHIC PRESS PRINTING SERVICE
Myers L Myers, - Sole Owners
312 South Union Street
Prices You Can Afford.
E. Hutchins
PUISLDC TOIR.UM J. 417
Barlow St.
These two lines we set in rage.
To finish up this pesky page.
Largest stock of FIREWOR^
wc have ever carried. Every
thing in coqipEance with the
State Safe and Sane Laws.
We peck and crate
household goods for
shipping so they “get
there" without break. age.
~^K»tehft9*ed !•#»
The City Book Store R
THE HO'BART CO., Prop s.
Phone 157
Help Your Boy or Girl
HuiaiES
Electric
anges
WIN A PONY
BY BUYING YOUR
GROCERIES FROM
Walker Grocery' Co.
539 W. Front St.
BOTH PHONES
WTO more cookmg by gueeework. Electric cooking ie
repladag guesswork with
an almost edentiBc euctDess. It
makes cooking successes the rule,
failures rare. It gives food a
richer, better flavor, a deliciousness
before unknown. The Hughes
Electric Range is setting this new
standard of cooking excellence —
making a nation of better cooks.
Th« abnlaiely even b~t el > HngbM
Electric Rang* gives a anVoniuty cf
results hithano impoaalbla.
ConnsM
waictiiog; is o
mrad in advancs.
The Haghea Blaetrie ovsa, with its
hesv^ly insutatad, hast ratsinint arslla,
savea ^aatly in meat shiinleaca end
gives tba mast a 6nar, battat fiavoi.
Cakes and bread rise avaolj and brawn
niurormty. bacanaa of tbs aronOarioPy
even bM tbnoghoat ttw even. Tban
no air enrrana to cany ofl tba rtcb
jo^.laa. nor gasaoos fotlias to winracalnere
iba food.
With such a raara as Aia, avaty wetnaa
can bccoDS a betur coot When to bar
cate In preparation la addad perfection
in cooldng, is it any wonder that Hngbaa
Elaotric Ranges are being bought by
tbouaanda, that avary range inataDad in
a neighborhood bacotnat Iba canter of a
gtoa-ing group af uaeta?
U< OS teU you more about tba dsanHoaas and convaniaoca <if tba Hngbsb
Eleotile Range, end abow you bow tnoeb
batter raaulta yoo can obtain with It than
with any otbar fooMng aatbod.
BUY
of
««•.'
It is^e energy that
ies you swi
ener—*-"
through
POWER makes vour car easy to drive on the Road or m Traffic.
Power makes you'forget
1 forget the ___________
mechanism ..
mechani
of your car. It meets the
noticeable effort, without
wi
emergencies of ti avcl and traffic without
Studehaker
............. That IS the way Sludebaker
has has made Studebaker cars the
most powerful cars on the market in ratio Jo weight.
^ They made them powerful by perfecUnp
four year^Stud^
and perfecting Studebaker motor designs, until today StuSebaker ia
the most powerful ear on the market, in ratio to size or cost.
At the same time it is economiially powerful. It gives you great
poWer with very reasonable gasoline consumption.
Prices F. O. B- Detroit.
THURSDAY, JULY 5
Makind a Nation
o/'Befier Gxks
ECONOMICAL POWER
POWER-Power is the very
“T1 JIBERTV”
ADRAHAOFTHE BOUR X
A Patriotic Serial
Different
from
the
Usual
Will be shown with the last episode of “Peg O’ The
Ring” at the
PALACE THEATRE
West Michigan Garage
116^118 State Street
Queen City Brand Coffee
30c lb.
SAVE COUPONS FOR ALUMINUM
■'
WARE PREMIUMS.
The Coffee Ranch
213 E. Front St.
Here’s the Way I am Going
to Share Profits With YoU
3^ for money ^Su must spend
EVERY WOSAN BAY NOW EQUIP HER KITCHEN
WITH HIGH QUALITY ALUBINUB WARE
Every time you make a Cash Purchase you
will receive a Free Aluminum Coup>on cor
responding to the amount of your purchase.
Save these and when you have the necessary
amount of coupons bring them to the store
and receive the Aluminum Ware they entitle
you to. absolutely FREE.
We know you will appreciate this as yon
may acquire a full set in this way of this
feautiful Sanitaiy Ware now on exhibition in
our window.
City klectric Light
242 E. Front St.
GET IN m PONY
CONTEST
YOU CAN JOIN
Any Day Next Week
McCormick, “of Course”
GROCERIES
Cltswu* Phon. 271 402 SOUTH UNION STREET Tr.ver.cCUy. Mich
Vacation Clothes
JULY THE FOURTH and vacation
" time is at hand. For camping, fish
ing. boating, tennis and golf you need
Vacation Clothes.
J^UXBAK SUITS, Khaki and Linen
Pants, Sport Shirts, Cool Under
wear, Swimming Suits, a comfortable
Fishing Hat, Soft Collars and Wash
Ties. Come in and talk it over with
us—we can help you get ready.
/-VUR SNAPPY SPORT SUITS are the ideal dress for going on a
visit to your friends. As soon as you come here and see these
Sport Suits, you’ll understand why this is true. They're the style for
styliiSi men: Belt all around, three-quarter belt and plain back—all
beaiioff the military “swing” so stylish now in men’s wear.
Prices, $7.50 up.
STORE WILL BE CLOSED ALL DAY. WEDNESDAY. JULY 4th
OopyrigMHHtM,^.
Hamilton Clothing Company
Style Leaders
The boys and girls who have enrolled
their names in the Dunlap Pony Con
getting busy gall.111,;
gathering in
m
|||t
votes, to such an extent Miat it has be
come bothersome to some of the merjrhants who are backing the contest and
Uie Press has found it Deoes.sary to ask
all children to not stay in front of the
stores asking for votes as the customers
come out. The Press appreciatea the
Tact that these vote getters are exiremly anxious to win the pony but they
should remember that they can get
many more voles by aakingtheir friends
to trade witb the merchants who give
pony votes and saving their votes for
Ithem. Any child who has enrolled can
[get post cards to mail to their friends
asking them to save their votes, by
|c»Hing at the Press office. They are
I neatly printed wiUi a picture of the
pony on one side and a letter asking
jfor votes is printed on the other side.
WTiile the contest has been under
headway for nearly two weeks there is
still room for some more contes^ts.
It costs you nothing to enter. The boy
- girl who wins the pony wili be the
I who has reel American pluck.
ENROLL TODAY and gel ypur pony
-otes at the following stores:
Walker Grocery Co., Foote's Old
Stand
Palace Theatre
Progress Laundry
Paris Sugar BowL Pine Candies
and lee Cream
A. V. Priedridi Shoe Stm
J. N. Martinek t Son. Jewelers
J. H. Steinberg, Dry Goods, Cloaks
and Clothing
Johnson Drug Co., the RexMI Store
Witaon Pnnutore Co!, .Fnn&a-e
and Floor Coverings
■.
Traverse City Press.
COSTS YOU NOTING TO m
Some child in Traverse City
will win a pony, A little r
hustle and ^oui, may . Win: ;,
JMODGETS
classified ads
RATES—One cent per word for first insertioa or three iaeues fer the price of two, excepttog Real Estate Ads which ran at one
cent per word per issue. SITUATIONS
Wanted run free of charge. '
[<piwrBaiiti!3tliiiiier»lpiji
at Aitiirrami’a
WANTED
BOYD’S
Service
Taxi, Transfer and Dray
_
-OfTh* pbooes-
Cit2 3uaad307
Bell u»
_____Res- R-108i Citixeno
tric lights, for sale cheap. Call Bell
WANTBD-Girl fer general house kw.
28.3
work. two in family. Good wages,
quire 481 W. Fifteenth. Cilz. Phone FOR SALE—Lawomower in good
fibs.
2S-8 condition. 18 inch cut. Cheap for wh
SAXON TAXI LIliE
KOY GUnmiE. Mgr.
Large Comfortable Cars
>'rompt Service Regulalion Prices
:TJ4 E. Kront Phone 11^4, Bell 13Gw
447 E. Front St.
WANTED—To exchange, 8 good or
gan for wall papering, paper furnished.
Apply 239 East Front St.
3
I GOLD COW BUTTER
I
Give
your Battery
a Cool Drink
j
Your battery gets as thirsty as you do this hot weather- and it
do»’t take Jong to make a thirsty battery a dead one.
Fill it with distilled water once a week—as often as you take a
hydrometer test.
If you haven’t pure water, or don’t want the trouble of filling :.-our
battery yourself—we'll do it for you.
Willard Service is good for any battery—v/.iether it pves it a
thorough overhatiling, or merely fills and t cri s it. And if your battery
needs repairs it provides a rental battery for your use whatever the
make or nwdel of your car.
Drop in next time you're dov.-r this way—and if ynv; haven’* r
already get a Willard Service '.jrd that entities yju to .'rec-----.•
monthly testiitg.
TRAVERSE CITY BATTERY SHOP
II5 EAST STATE STREET
TRAVERSE CITY, MICHIGAN
Traverse City Creamery
Minnetonna Home
Creamery
FOR SALE
FOR SALE—Houod pups of choice
breeding, < mo. old. Cheap If tMwa
al once. These pups wffl make good
general purpose dogs. E. A. Knowles.
WAKTED-SALESLADiES.
SUple 811 S. Union.
31^
articles, salary or commiasioo. Drop
card and I will call. W. fl. Ecabroad.
FOR SALE—Overland touring ear,
Traverse City.
overhauled, tires practically new, elec
I LOST—On Central School grounds at
lOldSetfler s picnic, bla^k crochet band
I bag with purse inside, about 82 mosey,
: two handkerchiefs and door key. Find• erldve at Press office.
Phone 314.
2^
FOR SALE—Completely equipped
motor boat at less than cost of engine.
Inquire Press office.
24tf
FOR RENT
FOR REOT—Modem bouse, close in.
Inquire at Press Office.
2T-3
HOW $1001)00,000
FUND WILi BE SPENT
ISfflsSiiess Gasnis
Red Cress Cheiraiea TeRi Of Ww
Relief nans
GERANIUMS
"'“PROFESSIONAL
DRS. TRUEBLOOD & TRUJ stLOOl)
teopathic Physicians. FITS-U classfitted. 40G Wilhelm.BuiliSrig,
DR. SARA ^ASE, 4(l7 State Bank
Block. Diseases of women and cbNd
The way in which the Red Cross
war council plana to upend the $100,000.0^ fund which ia being raised was
explained by Henry P. Davison, chair,
man. In a letter from him to the Red
Cross.
DR. W. J. HIGGINS - - DENUST
The purpose to use the bulk of the
GOOD Dentistry FINE Preparations
fund In the purchase of necessary
for Painless’^
snppllea was made clear in Mr. Dav
ison’s letter. He gave assurance that Snxith A Price Bids.
■only a small percentage of each dol
RB.KYSEUCA.M.D.
lar contributed would be required to
.ROOM 2
Dry Cleaning and Steam Pressing carry the relief to Ua destination,”
City Opera House Block
.
because of the volunteer character of
Both Phones
the best American talent In medicine,
Residence.
Office *
GEORGE F. ROWE, Prop.
sankatioo. transportation, construe- M3 So. Uoien SL
Telephone
Itlon welfare work, purchasing, comCite. 2»
Gite 519
I merclal hnslness, acconntlng and along
other llnesCONNINE & CONNINE
Baae hospitals will continue to be
organised, to he tamed over to the
401 Stale B^^uOdiag
army at once for service la Prance.
CItePhpaeSr* .
Untu fer military axLd navai mobUlgaE. H. Burrozvs & Son
Uon eampa wRl be proidded. Supplies
DRAYLIRBS
must be purebaaed. collected, trana
low E. Eighth
Citz. Phone 796 ported and stored. Hospital ships are
BENRU.SSCL
to be bought, equipped and manned. Ughi Dray A Baggage Lmm. Oin. Pbooe
A sanitary engineering corps will be 985. Re*. Pbewe 234.
formed. ITie extent of all this preps
be estimated, Mr.
BERrmULLEN
^
for
BEDDING PURPOSES
Porch boxes, baskeU. etc.
PADTS GREENHOUSE
- TRAVERSE CITV STEAM
UUNDRY
EAST SIDE TAXI LINE
MOBERN 7-ROOM HOUSE
-
FOR
.SALE
-
whether
AT A BAKOAIN
CREAM ar
PHOTO-PLAYS
HOME OF GOOD PICTURES, PERFECT VENTIUTION AND THE $5,000.00 PIPE ORWN
CHANGE OF PICTURES EVERY DAY.
MATINCE DAILY AT 2:15
EVENING AT 7:00
,/x K. oi
ob.jej^nings
The Press, lOc month
'
Jisge
m
MONDAY
Bryant Washburn and Marguerite Clayton, in
s
Admissions a lo cents
“The Prince of Graustark"
w^TSllv
If Chummy Roadster
and Two Act Keystone Comedy
TUBS.
WED.
'A Lasky Paramount picture. Another notable
Fannie Wari-Lasky Achiovi-ment
“THE* DERELICT"
and a Good Black Diamond Comedy
and Hearst Pathe News Weekly
Adults IS cents
*
The car that combines all the
patterns of aR ordinary road
ster with the conveniences of
a touring car.
A iiiolure with a moral
and Irene Fenwick and Owen Moore, in “A GIRL LIKE THAT”
Children 6 ceot.
422 Rose SL
Alice Brady, in “DARKEST RUSSIA"
A Metro Wonder Play of the Womao Redeem
ed, in five acts.
and Hearst Pathe News Weekly
at these pricrt In t|ie Slat* ^ MtcbigaB.
Saxon Chummy Roadster
••PLENTY OF ROOM FOR FOUR PEOPLE"
SUN.
SSiSSSrSH
lhc.se prices: Adults 10c.
Children be.
10c for adult*. Tburs•brceacts of high class
•Dd b^st sbflVr
rS7^/r-;/; a ‘B'lg^ealure Gvery^Dayl
716
' Phone R547
LODGES
Five Beel Peerless Screen Version of n Mc^drams Showine Conditions in Russia thal llaspily
SAT. '
All work
HENRY L GROESSER
Painting and Paperhangiitg
Satisfaction gearaoteed
EXTRA - THREE Aas OF REHNED VAUDEVILLE - EXTRA
and Barton Holmes Travels, “THRU CANADIAN CANYONS.”
D. H. DEVENDORF
Painter and Paperhanger.
Ready for nif now? Best of work.
\ Paramount picture that i'- diUercnt; in five acts
and the last chapter of “THE 6REAT SECRET" with Francis Rushman
______________ and Beverly Bayne.
FRIDAY
EDWARD MARTIN
Painter and Paperbenger. Estimates
cheerfully giveB. 219 E, Tenth St,
Citz. Phone H011
12-9
FRANK HUNT
I Painter and Paperhanger.
Pbont
;iG6H6. Residence 861 East Eighth St.
children 5 cents,
THURSDAY
Mme. Petrova, in
*en,issio,. n«loe
“WAITING SOUL”
Plumbioi; and Repair werk. Estimates
cheerfully furnished. Res. 91S-WTishinglon Sf- atz. Phone R397.
12-1?
fuaranleed. Samples on request.
W. Seventh. CiU. Phone 401.
EXTRA - THREE ACTS OF REFINED VAUDEVILLE - EXTRA
Adu«.«cent.
247 Cite Phone
511 E. EXgfatb
PLUMBING AND REPAIRINC
J. D. SMITH
PAIPrnNG >ND PAPERHANGWG
In five acts from George Darr McCutch.-on’s Novel
Fanny Ward, in
Admb.ioni loc
“BETTY TO THE RESCUE"
MARK CRAW^
For light draying and baggng;G calls.
Phone Number Forty.tw’o
48-4
If you want rubbish hauled, gardens
plowed er any kind of dra^c
CONTINUOUS
YOU CAN COME AS LATE AS 9:30 AND SEE A FULL SHOW
PROGRAM FOR THE WEEK OF JULY 2nd to JULY 8th
Light and Heavy -Dray. HoiBebofrt
Goods Moving a Specialty. Auto Truck
Service.
Phones. Cil2. Office 3^
Res ^1096
NOW $935 f- fc- DETROIT
— FOR SALE BY —
Saxon Agency
F. C. RICE, Agent
324 E. Front St.
Both Phones
L O. O. F.
Craad Traverse Ledge No. SOS
Meets every Thursday Evening in
their hall 221 E. Front sL at 8 o’clock
ED. MARTIN,
L. McMAHAN,
________ N. G.___________ Secretary
LAWN MOWER REPAIRINC
LAWN MOWERS-Rcpaired and
ground and kept la shape all summer.
Called for and delivered by
J. K. LONGWELL
Price 75 cents
Call 42 both phones or38 Citizens Dhooe
04STRUCTIWM
TRAVER3R riTY PRESS.
Doans SavedNy Life
“I Hi4 OlTM Dp Hope” Stpi Hi.
D«t.-'BitO>iii'iIlduTPUl>
Cml He PenuieitlT.”
L: -•
“Hr kidwr troabU beftn with baek<
actie. which nc oa
about a y^,” aar*
"
Bruaiwick, Qa. "Hr
bade fot K> I wa* at
—WbU to aU«>.
in a chair. Of
FAMOUS
AMERIi
Ti'T Afi
CUMBEIISTAIIIS
ONHERHimilS
TMDliWilkOpriih. Opnte
AM,!. Sm! Iir
A
-froB my if*
atripa. I lay there paatieg, and iuat
about able to catch mj breath. I had
ftre doetore; each one aatd it
^ken 'Doan’i Kidnej- Pille
tons before I began to feel better. I
kept on and wa» noon able to get op.
The ewalling'irrednally went away and
when I bad need elereti boxea 1 to
ootnpletely enred. I ha*a nerer bad a
hit of trouble unee. I owe my life and
nr health to Doan'a Kidney Pilla."
Cat DaasS ai Aar Staea. She a Baa
DOAN'S “p'fi.’l.V
POSmtAIUUkN CO« BUFFALO. N. Y.
PAST FLY KILLER
S£
TMT aknrty
Starry emblem of our
country rich in history
and honor
j4nd the grand
old banner will soon be making
more history andreceivinggreat
er honor on the battlefields of
Northern France and Belgium
lOrGH as yej the baby of natiooa. Ooclc Sam has rouny flag* of wblob he baa
reason to be proud. Moat of them are
In the possession of the gOTemroent, but
II few are owned by Individuals or
umiy posta.
One of ihetn. now kept at the statehouse at Annapolis. Md.. was carried by
the Maryland troops during the war of
the Ajnencun Revolution, and Is made In accord
ance with the act of congress. June 14. 1777. It 1#
iK>sltlvelv known to have been the reglmhotal
flag of the Third ManUnd regiment, commanded
by Col John Eager Howard, at the battle of Cowpens. S. C.. In January. 1778. In which light It was
held by WllllBro Bachelor. Bachelor was sent
home to Baltimore wounded and took bla flag with
him.
After Bachelor’s death tn March. 1781, the flag
remained In bis family, and when the British In
vaded Maryland In 1814 this same flag was carried
by wmiaro, Bachelor’s aon. In the battle of North
Point, aa a banner for the Twenty-seventh Mary
land reglmeoL This WUllam Bachelor died In 1885.
The flag, in IWT. was presented to the state of
Maryland and haa since then repowd In Its capital
building at Annapolis.
' ^
Another famous banner Is tBe battle flag ot Commsndant Oliver Haiard Perry, the same which
flew successively on the masts of his flagships,
the Niagara and the Lawrence. In the battle of
Lake Erie, September. 1818. This flag had been
made at Perry’s express command, but at the sug
gestion of Parser Hambleton. ha added the words ’
It bore. “Don’t give up the ship," the last uttered
by Captain Lawrence, killed tn the fight In JnnA
1813. between the EogUah and American forces.
These words have errooeously been attributed to
Perry, but are. In fad. an adoption of Lawrence’s
sentence to Perry's flag. The banner U a bnnUng
of one solid color bearing Its famoui mono in
large letters across Its face, and Is now kept at
the United Satea Nevnl academy at AnnapollA
A British Trophy.
In the same ehamber at the acadeay ts a gurgcons royal British stands^ whldi was captured
from the parliament bouse when the capital of
Canada fell, In 1818. Into Amerieon hands. It Is a
magnificent ensign with five qoartertngs. ell In
radiant tone*, the heraldic blasonry being such as
was used In the tliae of George 111. In one corner
Is a red lion poised In air, to denote Scotland; In
another Is the golden harp of Ireland: two other
quarters contain three golden rampant Uons for
England, while In the central quartering Is a com
bination of the arms of Saxony, Hanover, Bran*wick and Luneburg. with some emblems of the
Holy Roman empire.
In the National rouseoro In Washington Is (he
real Star Spangled Banner, the same flag whlrh
floated over Fort McHenry In September, 1814.
when It was attacked ,hy the British, and the one
aronnd which Key wrote his Immortal poem. ReIngSfl by28feet.il will hang from the second story
of a bullitlng to the first floor. In spite of time
It Is well preserved, and the stars and stripes
which “gleamed through the perilous fight" are
still plainly to be seen.
Mexican trophies are to be seen at the Naval
academy. These flags are all unique In design,
bearing the Mexican condor standing on a caiTna,
with a snake In its mouth. Tbew are several of
this war. one of them being the flag captured by
Ocn. Winfield Scott and Commodore Matthew Per
ry at the fall of Vera Crui in 1847.
In the antechamber to the rooms of the secre
tary of war. tn Washington. U the famous flag
which flew over Fort Sumter In April. 186L when
It was flred on by the Confederate battertsa. Thia
was the shot which opened the great war between
the states.
The flag of the Merrimac Is now owned by the
family of the late Capt Beverly Llttlepage. for
merly of Waahlngton.
Asother flag of the Merrimac Is In the posse*-
Ooo,,, I d>»ld
have an operuttom
and my friends
tbooghtlwouldDot
Uve to move into
oaroewbooM. My
dangbtar asked me
iMom newSmeu «M<i. oA
garden work, ibov^eddirt, *d__bBfld-
uj riAc TV as /auJiEVMr o/oa
first American flag that came Into existence after D. Bax ISO, Richmond, lad.
the enactment of congress. As evidence of the
theory they point to the 12 stars Instead of 18.
Had this flag had sn official predecessor the mis
Regan's Flag.
take in the niiinber of stars would hardly have
In the rooms of the Stevenson Post at Boxbury,
occurred.
Mass., is preserved one of the strangest banners
This historic sUndard. kept imai^by long and
the wortd haa ever seen. In a tobacco factory In
loving care, shows its age In mueb^frajM edges
Richmond, In Civil war times, many Federal sol
and worn patches. The 12 stars, arranged In
diers were prisoners, among them a Timothy J.
three parallel perpendicular roivs. still stand out
a great big.
WAR USES FOR FACTORIES
Regan. Began conceived the Idea of making a flag
Btancbly on their unstable foundation, for the
fnU. marnetl man ought to be
of Federal Stars and Stripes even In the cloae
bine field and the IS red and white stripea have
Into the armr Jost Che same as enrcooflaaineat of their prison. ‘There were about 20
grown pathetlcaUy threadbare.
body else?
Can Be Mad* la Their Plants in
men and they secretly got together the materUL
Hub—Mr dear, he onlr looks tall:
The National musenm contain* a coUeeflon of
Casa af Emervenoy.
A flannel shirt made the bine gronnd. s shin of
aa a aaner of fact, be is probabir
remnants of flags that participated In ntval en
white cotton famiahad the whits stare, end goodi
gagements from the time of tbe Revolutionary atar
ibort—Judge.
Here Is a paragraph, snipped not
were bought sufficient to make the red and whlto
to the war with Mexico: also tboee of foreign veean article by George Creel la Every
stripes. In biding, they worked at their task till at
eels of war captured by the navy during thoea
body's Magazine, which Bbowt the war
last It wui finished. It was thrown to the wind at
periodA ThU display of fragments ts quite inter
les to which various peaceful taaBOonce tn a place wUch was riiehered from the
esting. It was collected by Peter Force of Wash
icteriee can be subjected:
view of the guards, then torn Into strips and di
Manr a toHo’s wit is aharpened ou
ington. and preeented by him to the library of
“A manufacturing Jeweler v A atvided among the men. After the war. Regan, by
the gTlndatooe of porertrcongr«s, which transferred it to the NadonM
prised to learn that hla plant.. with
'
persistent effort, managed to get together sU the
museum.
a
few changes, could turn out pmlpieces and bad tbsm eewn Into a flag, which U
Among these remnants fa a piece of tbe Brit
acopee; a saah-chaln maker foond
now at Boxbnry.
ish flag of La Onerrtere. need daring her encoun
that
Ua
machines
were
adaptad
’
The flag of the Maine, the ship wboM sinking
ter with the Conatitntlon. and of the Java, worrted
precipitated the Spanlab-American war In 1888. Is
by the eaine indomltabte American, as well aa a to the produedon, at cartridge dlpa
kept at AnoapotlA Near by the banners captured
fragment of the flag of tbe Algerine brig Zonra. for rifles and mscalne guns^a i^doograph concern was discovered to be
by Dew^yTit Manila from the Spanish, as weU as
captured under Decatur.
well fitted for the manufacture of ceatropbias of the battle of SasUaga
A dlvialon of the mnseom's flag conectioo retaln deUcate sbeU part*; maken of
The banner which floated over the North polA
lates to the dm war. and tis most Interesting
underwear may be relied oa for hnnraised there April 6, 1800. by Commander Robert
of these is the garrison flag of Port Moultrie. In
dagea;
a manufacturer of muMe-toQa
E. Peary, now Ues for ttlekeeplng lo the vaults of
Charleston harbor. South Carolina. This flag was
for
gauges; a cream-separatorptaattor
n Mfe deposit company In WasblngtoiL It was
lowered December 28. 1890. when MaJ. Robert
made by 1^ Pa«£^ Stare being worked In
Anderson. First United States artillery, moved abell-primers; a sewing machina com
«» th* wind on the
his forces to Fort Sumter. The flag was secured pany for galnsa; a recording and eomshores of the Polar sea for more than a fourth
liv hl« second in eommtnfl. Capt. Ahner Double y«tlnc macblae plant for fnato; «n
of Its drcumfereoce. The bit* of white Vth
day. and remnlned lo his poM»««lnn urMi proa set- tnfanta’ food edneetn for AMI ptaga:
which It I* dotted indicate the fragments which
ed to the SmlthKonlen Instttutlon at Wn«hlngton- drug raanufaeturera and dye wotka tot
the explorer left with records st different pieces
In the Nstional museum also la the United high exploalTee; finished abril* nay be
Id hlB Jouruey. Some were deposited at Cape
States flag ralaed la New Orleans by the volunteer expected from candle-maken, flovMorris K. Jessup, the farthest northern point of'flag committee after the oedupadon In iwc. This mllleru, tobacco manofaetorera. and
land on earth; one was left at Cape Thomas Hubsilversmiths can make
was tbe flrat Federal flag ralaed by cltixen* of any
hard. another at the starting point of the dash
ballet jackeo, and
of the-Confedentac states after the commence
for the pole—Cape Colurabla-five bits are In the
a be mads la
ment of hostiUdea. Here. too. ts the flag of the caps; while abrapnM ^aa
lee of “Peary’s Farthest North," In 1908. and one
gas engine works, car faetortea, etaeUnited
States
ship
Kearaarge.
In
nae
at
the
dme
Is yet In the eternal «tlinea# of the North pole
of tbe surreader of the Confederate cruiser Ala trlc elevator worits. locomotive weeks,
Itself.
Store
fouodries
sad
machine
ships.”
bama.
Blao
the
flrat
United
Stetes
flag
raised
In
A proven women’s remedy,
Oldest Flag In Mosevm.
Richmond after the surrender. This was used as
which asmsts in regulating the
The oldest flag tn the National museum, at
Started Right In to Fight
heedquartera flag by Gen. E. O. C. OrdL U. 8. A.,
organs, and re-establiAing
Washington. Is the first United SUtes flag of
when be took possession of the city.
•They qasrreled ImmedUtely after
hemthy'Condition& Beecham’a
which there U authentic record. This Is the ban
The history of our war with Spain la mus- the wedding ewemony."
Pillg contain no haUt-forming
ner of John Paul Jones. On the very day the law
“That sol While the gaests w«a
was enacted estebllablnc a national flag for the
drug—leave no disagreeable
_____ ____________ There U here the Spanli
there?"
United States of America. June A 1777, congress
after-effects. They are—
“Tea, right tn the presence «f ev
garrlaoo flag used at Port San Crlstobgl. 8*
appointed John Paul Jones to be commander of
erybody. It seemed a dlsgiscsffBl
Juan. Porto Rico, daring tbe endre war, a*
the Ranger. History does not relate, with au
floated over tbe fort during the bombardment by thing to do until 1 caught the idea.** ,
thority. the exact date of the making of the
“What was tbe Wear
the American fleet May 12. 1888. There Ia too.
Ranger's flag, but It must have been very soon
flag lowered from the ensti
•Tt semned he wanted to conrioea
Bftgr the congressloael enactment, becense the
PoDce.
all of us that be was not matTyiag
A. Pc
plaza.
.. . Porto Blco. when It i
war department states that ’The ship Ranger,
t
the United States. Tbs> yellow stripe
In this flag her to escape war.”
hearing the Surs and Stripes and commanded
ve It a chance
(
was
painted
red
to
give
. Mb«..io«.saw
by Capt Paul Jonaa. arrived at a Freni* port
Identlflcadon. Another fleg here was taken from
Juat the Thing.
about Eiecember 1, 1TT7. and her flag received, on
the trenches before Sandago. end sdll another Is
“Where can I lean to ha an e
Febmary lA 1778, the first-ealnte ever paW to an
a guidon nsed by Spanish Infantry at Porto Rico. OD tear' “I suppose a samon
American flag by foreign naval vessels."
The ran*eam Is also custodian of the pennant would be the idea for you."
Later. Paul Jones set his loved ensign high
flown by Admiral Schley on the Brooklyn during
will reduce tofisned. gwcrflm
above the Bon Homme Richard and It waved trtJolata. Spralna. BruiMa. Soft
the battle of Sandago.
many «a .........
fierce eoconnter
with the
mphant
—
Bttocbw HeoM Bella, PoU
The United States Marine corps bas a number
tom
of the new country, "rhe most notable of
EwiL Qulttor. Flatola and
of flags of vital Import. Tt Is proud of Its
these
was
when
it
came
In
contact
with
the
Brit
lofecMd norm quicktr
ish
ship
Serepls
In
1778
and
went
down.
Oommoas it u « pocitirc antuepde
winning them. Tbe Marine corps possesses the
■ad fcnnieidt. PlaMHI »
dor Jones rescued his precious “starry flag" and
flrat American flag under Are In Cuba. Tbls flag
hoisted it over the captured Serapls, bringing It
was raised by the Marine battalion at Gnantahome covered with honor.
name,
the tenth of June. 1888. and flew during
The museum authorities believe this to be tbe
the hundred btmrs of cootlnuous fighting by
marines at that polnL After lu use In tWt
^
tU --T-—- Mtn Cl.00 SCI MM ■
■.In W Mwix. wm Id m MR ■ r« wm.
gagement It was btuied down end sent to head
quarter* at Washington.
^LF^rOoI»»?rD.T..WwXswiacla»d.Ba*A
Another noteworthy flag belonging to the corpe
visit to the tomb of th«
Is the signal flag used by Sergeant Quick at
The following account of the funeral cortege of
battle of Cuzco. During the engagereeDt the Beet
the Turklah crown prince Is given by Alexander
An,r a.
“ J!
Brody, who saw the ceremony:
was aerionsly endangering the unaeee msrtnea
and ProgresA’’ the Young Turk*. In Parisian dresa
On tbe scarlet covered cofito In whld> the body
land, who already had the Spaniards surroauded.
Some of the faces were milk white: now and then
of JusBUf IzzedtHa the crown prince of Tuikey.
A volunteer was requested to go out and sigDal
one saw a gray head among them.
who bad kUled himself In his harem, was carried
to the fleet to stop firing. Sergeant Quick fn>lu the eyes of the dervishes burned the Are of
to tbe grave Uy hi* fez. or “kalbag," to token of
medlately responded, aud In full view
.
the pest; to the Tounc Turk* that ofjhe future.
hi* military career.
enemy stood and wig-wagged the Dolphin tt etop
Which one IS approaching his last hour In the
The coflto was made of wood, for metal Is too
firing. The signal flag wt» rent In several places,
Ozman lands?
•eaive even for a prince, and it was borne by the
but
the
sergeent
escaped
Injury.
For
this
The bead of a more conservative Turk came In
wto love to gratify
of the royal honsehold. Jussul had been
received a medal and honorable mention.
view, that of the new heir to the snlian’s throna
Uad to hla aervantt although^.stern with 0»elf
children's desire hr
Among some later flags to come Into poa
Vabdeddln. of Persian type. »on«- narrow-nosed
of tbe Marine corps ts the large United Bute*
the game articles ct
features resembling Abdul Hamld'a
**A*gigandc negro with the eyes of a faithful
flag nsed by the marines during tbe slega of the
One may only eonject’jre coneernlug this
hound constantly smoothed the red cloth lest a
food and drink due
legation In Pekln«at the tlme’of the Boxer riots
sentatlve of ro^iey, grown up to the shade of the
wrinkle might dishonor the *eemUn« of the occa
It
may
be
recalled
that
the
guard
of
the
Oregon
harem
walls.'
In
constant
companionship
of
women
grown-ups use, fiad
sion. and he kept constant watch on the pallbear
served to Petdtxg. Tbls was their post flag and
of tbe Orient, who never divulge enythlag about
er The BOO burly negro eunuchs were as one tn
Wee
planted
on
the
Tartar
city
walk
where
It
_
their lords and maaterA The new crown pri^ Is
their grief. FoUowlng them were the chamber
jeolonsly
guarded.
Later
It
was
hoisted
oa
the
long past middle age. Behind him rode Prt^
and attrtidants of the household, with red
ruins of the Imperial Chian Men as a ffignal to
Medald. aged and worn: to fact the whole royal
rana on thMr bUA heada.
the allied fbrcaa. and tt has the honor of being
femlly has left y<wtb behind.
'
The coffin waa f«8tlr Uld oa the Mnaaala taaay.
A piamrel TO. mtOj epre to oerwy eowBSMr.
The first signal the latter bad that thatr trtendi
h. group of A^s came next The ra^ of ^
a
prayer
stone,
fragmenta
of
an
old
Greek
column
JUST WHAT TOO WAFT. PwOcokn FRO.
were stlU living. Tbe flag shows ita hard oaag*
cold
hpring
sunlit
threw
pale
gold
over
the
fancy
dating
back
to
the
daya
of
the
vlctortouB
wnperora.
A«dn«. WH. T. bOVX. LOMAX OiJWOq
at the hands of Its eoemleA bMng ton to eer.
coetumea of theae men of the,dee«rt
Tbe holy prayer waa chanted: “Btasm Blah Irraheral pUcea by voBcya of shot and abell assailnian, etoamd ve niahl, rebbl ul alemln" (“In tbe
tog It
of God. the merciful and gradous"). Then
Asother Qilsaae memento possessed by tbe Ma
jttit dko diing,
.(he holy men approached, dervlibes of all ranks,
rine
eorpa is a larga Imperial flag captured oa tbe
laerieTs and raputlA tbe monks wbo Impoae punwalls of Tteotmn by tbe marines whent they I
jMmMit on tbenmelveo by impoMng camel’adislr
taekad the dty. This it ■ large
two feet high on thMr beadA Tbo fsnstleal
^allfiiea. iru-tM.
SUM
Countless Women
find—
that whea sufiering from
nervousness, sick headache,
dizzjr spells and ailments
peculiar to their sex—
notlung affords sudi prompt
and wdoome rdief, as will
follow a few doses of
BEEEHAM'S
PHIS
Nature’s aid
to better Health
ABSWBIne
i2?S5?-£ir,tr;rsr-ss
uiokm
Mon of Mr. C. F.AJuhther of Chicago; this was the
first one raised, bat was shot away. The flag
owned by the Llttlepages Is the second one run np.
WTEWTSaSlgiSH
ruM lANis Bajwtjsaaa
FUNERAL OF TURKISH CROWN PRINCE
S^asfeSSr^-s’S
PARENTS
W Biacr&'isss”
Tlw Higb Cost of Living
and How to Reduce It
Instant
PosniH
OUraiseTeetli Bought
Itetb aong U heartrending. The green doth about
of some todlcatM that they bsve airtved
W. N. U. DETROIT, NO. Sfl-tli7.
Mlver. although they have no contempt for gold.
—New York Herald.
traverse city press
L T. COOPER Tir PROVE
VL)hdl*Vitell Dres;
HIS FAMOUS THEORIES
Women Will
Renowned Lecturer end Scieotist Will Prove Pamout
Heeltii Theoriea—Man Who Electrified Latter Cities
to Give People of Hiis Section Benefits of Smdy and
Medicine—Many Hiousands are Benefitted.
A S WAS MjnoTmoed in Ust week’s papera. Hr. L. T. Cooper, the Millumeire Philanthropist who «lectii£ed
larger cities of the 001111117
with his damonstration of practical philanthropy, health theories and cele
brated medidne, Tanlae, has been inrited to ridt Datroit and other Michi
gan dtiee.
TtuRuandi of the most i
peopte ia St LooU. Candanati. Dallas,
Memphis, Atlanta, ntnalodtaia, LootsvlUe, NadirUle and even the latter
dttes of the North end Base where
his celebrated medidne has been accompUahiof such remarkable resalts.
are ercB more enthusiastic over Tealac thaa Mr. Cooper himself.
It Is Mr. Cooper’s theory that nlaetenths of the dlseasee and ill-bealth
of the avenge person Is doe to 0
tarrhal Innajuiaatlob of the mucous
raembrene which produces faulty di-
In a recent Interview, Mr. Cooper
WBS asked if Taniac would relieve
Kidney trouble. Liver complaiut end
a doaen other allmeou end la this
conaectioii. said
“As I have repeatedly said, my med
icine acts directly 00 the mucous
membrane, stomach and blood, expel
ling from them cba_Jfflpnrltles and
todc polsona, end reudering to thei
a Btroog. healthy condition.
“I am convlnct^ that the stomach
regulates the coaditloc of the blood,
and Is the fountainhead of health or
disease, as the case msy be. My
medldae Is intended primarily for the
regulation of the stomach and catar
rhal tnflammetloo. but It la no uncom
mon thing for persons who have used
it to come to me and explain that It
baa relieved them of rheumatiam ond
many other ailments not generally
recogsftod as,having their origin In
stomach trouble.
’’Most of the ne-called stomach,
liver and kidney troubles." continued
Mr. Cooper, “are due almost entirely
to a catarrhal Inflammation of these
organs and it Is believed that Taniac
Is the first actually direct spedfic
therefor.
“Catarrh of the stomach, liver and
kidneys is the most frequent cause of
dysp^la and kidney disorders and a
catarrhal condition of the nose and
throat often leads to deafness. Freently the li
e extension
nation by way of the bronchial tubes
to the lung snbsunce. The mental
and physical state of the chrohtc catanti sufferers is indeed very unfortu
nate. -^4
*Tanlac has overcome this condldoh
in its most obstinate stages, and the
preparation, therefore, must be, as I
have alwaya contended, the one great
Temple of Solomon.
.•The Temple of Solomon was begun
In the fonrtb year of hie reign (B. C.
1012), and completed seven years
later. The whole area was Inclosed
by the outer walls and formed
square of alKiut eoo'feet. The front
of the porch was. supportefl by
great brasen pillars. One of these
was called Josebio nnd the other Boni.
D8NT WORRY ABOUT PIMPLES
----- :—
I
Cuticura Quickly Ramovss
Them—Trial Free.
SUMMERY mSHES.
rSl!!
|i;
i it;.It ill
ration has achieved throughout the
country proves conclusively that my
confidence in Taniac Is well placed.
“The ingr^ents or medicinal ele
ments which make Taniac come from
many remote sections of the earth—
the Alps, the Pyrenees, Russian Asia,
West Indies, mountain states near the
Rocky Mountains. Mexico and Peru
ore among the points from which prin
cipal parts of the preparadou are obtaioed. In the principal laboratory of
the Cooper Medicine Co., Inc,, under
the efficient dlr«.“CTion of e chemist of
note, those me<!lclnQl herbs, roots and
harks arc es-serobled In the rough nnd
palnstfiklngly developed so as to at
tain that high standard of efficiency
shown by the uniform preparation,
Taniac."
The wonderful success which Tanlac baa achieved seems almost Incred
ible. as over Seven Million bottles have
been sold and distributed since it was
placed on the market, something over
two years ako. and it Is now selling
at the phenomenal rate of approxi
mately Five Million bottles per year.
One retail firm, the Jacobs Pbarmacy Company, of Atlanta, has sold
at retail In their rfeveo Atlanta stores
the astonishing total of 64.000 bottles
within the past twelve months, break
ing all records for the sale of a pr<^
prietary medicine in the same length
of time.
within the past six months, and it Is
widely tolked of medi
cine In the world today.
There Is only one explanation for
this Nation wide popularliy and rec
ord breaking demand for Taniac and
that la very simple. The Inherent
purity and wholesomeness of the medIt In the minds of
the people and have made it a house
hold word throughout America.
The leading drug firms of Detroit
and other dues In this section are en
thusiastic over tlie wonderful success
the preparation Is making and In only
a few weeks time Tnnlac will be
placed on sale In every dty. town,
village and ham:
state of Michigan.
There Is a Taniac dealer In your
town.—Adv.
t be. tough to be lied for life was to give the
1 who insists on wearing off ' ,i(.iol<)ii of the sermon he would probhls grouches at home.
itcaL The peofie oflhewarid must
be fed and wheat near S2 a buaKd
offeis great profits to the farmer.
Canada’s InvitatioD is therefore
e^Mcisllr attractive. Sbe wanta
•enters to make money sad ban>y.
g^^Fousbometfor tbm^ves by
—
InC I ^
CARSsasa
--------- — ----- - ^-Ttwtebor l0 nelu*M
Ul•ts•-BMton 10101 Salts Go,
seOsHAve. nATtufraniTon Detroit
WRITE FOR CATALOG O.
m
m
m
look Uke paaoiers and suggest that a
udC
bag of the silk.
J f
#*'
■
Canadian Farmers
Profit From Wheat
The war’s devastation of
European crops has caused
an unusual demand for srain
ftesn the American Conti-
There la no more d^douS dessert
than a simpie layer of cake filled with
whipped cream
which has been
sweetened with
half
capful
a w berries
CTuabed with a cup
sugar ot
the berries.
Snow BallB.~Take t third of a cup
fnl of butter, add a half cupful of
sugar and half a cupful of flour sifted
with a half cupful of cornstarch and
three teaspoonfuls of baking powder,
two-ihirds of a cupful of milk and
(he beaten whites of four eggs. Mix
carefully and pour Into well-buttered
cups and steam In the oven a half
^ hour. Turn out. gently dust with pow.
j dered sugar and serve.
Strawberry Sauce.—Mix B table
spoonful of softened butter with one
half cupfuls of |K>wdere
De small box of strawberries,
washed.
Cherry Salad.—Take a quart of
heart cherries, carefully stone and fill
the cavities with put meats. Serve lit
lettuce cups nnd garnish with mayo
nalse dressing with nasturtium leaY
end blossoms for garnish.
Cherry and Pineapple Pie^Take
m or equal parts of fresh piDeapple
and cherries, sweeten, add the Juice
of a lemon and use as filling with the
following crust;
Pastry With Olive Oil—Take a cup
ful end a htOf of flour, a quarter of a
teaspooDful of ealc and a quarter of
a cupful of olive oil. Mir as usual.
Such a crust is much more easily di
Separate Skirts of All Sorts.
gested than that made of lard.
hat might be carried In otte and a
Now
Rasin Sauce for Ice Cream.—Boll
sweoier in the other. Mostly they are
skirt
cupful of seeded ral'kins witii two cup
street skins and^tub skirts ready fur poderately large, »K)uare-paicb pockets, fuls of water until soft. Kub the rais
tbe hot weather, that is overdue, tad and orcnslonally they are made Id a
ins through n colander.
Cook the
silk skirts for more dignified d^•»^. fanciful shape.
raisin liquor with two cupfuls of
While Colton gaberdine is liked for
Hardly a wardrobe but has an exami'le
gar for three minutes, ndd tbe raisin
of each of these. Tub sklna. In lifti'7 roony of the new sports skirts to be pulp and a half-cupful of chopped wal
with bright-colored sweaters.
eottous, are smanly tailored, with big
nut meats. Serve ice-cold on choco
patch |x>cketA buttous and msckiiu' Khalikl, with brass buttons uud fastened late Ice cream.
nakes the correct
uniform pockets makes
c<
stitching to give them the proper BiiIMi I unlft
Fondant
Dipped
Strawberriee.—
for street wear. They ore ^own In j "biting" skin. V“r country club
cloth, boake’MDd tfiere are white wash suUn. tub silk These delicious confections sell for a
dollar a pound and may be made very
ither heavy weaves. In the same klads I and heavy linen skirts.
^
of cloth, etripes and figured patterns' Machine stitching In vivid silks lends cheaply at home. Prepare the fond
give room for ploy of the dastgoer's
destgoer's ^ the requlr
required dash of color to white ant by boiling sugar and water tp
fancy in qwrts skirts.
silk, and bindings in coninistiug color getber with a little cream of tartar
Jb»t fancy appears to have
with large pearl buttons dlstinguiab or a tablespoonful of corn sirup to
keep tbe sirup from sngaring. Melt
pocketward and to have lingered ther& the linen models.
Espedftlly in sports skirts In a plain
Taffeta silk In black, or dark colors. the foudanc over bot water and dip
color the pocket's the thing that pro wl!h colored stripes, was introduced the berries Into It, draining them
waxed
paper. These delicious candles
nounces the skirt as destined for the early and remains popular for aftershore or camp or the link. Some of DiMQ skins. The skirt pictured Is must be oaten the same day or they
these pockets are so large that they shirred at the waist and has a soah will spoil.
Sugar for the Bablea
1 sidelight upon the economic
suffering caused by the sugar order In
the old coUDtry. many babies, says the
medical officer of health at Luton. BmIfordshlre. were suffering from the lock
of that faiteulng ingredient. The In
ability of the mothers In poor clrcumstsQcee to make purchases of a churocter to procure a ten-pound parcel of
sugar has suggested to the officer referred to .Uat .he oounell Sbouwi ,.urchase large quiintllies of sugar itiid
sell them to such mothers through
baby dimes. The suggestion has been
put into effect nnd proved the solution
of a problem tliut was assuming seri
ous proporiions.
On rising and retiring gently smear
the face wUb Cuticura Ointment. Wash
off the Ointment In five minutes with
Cuticura Soap and bot water, nslDg
Woman's Way.
“1 see the department stores ore4:0plenty of Soap. Keep your skin dear
by making Cuticura your every^y Ing to^ell Liberty loan bonds."
“But
remember,
dear, if you buy one
toilet preparationa.
Free sample each by mail with Book. you can’t go around the next day and
Address postcard. Cutlcnra, Dept. L. exchange It for something else."
Boston. Sold everywhere-—Adv.
of.tho earth: trath* an ool
tlM gsptho c< tbo theuglH.
Some Pretty Suits for Midsummer.
pocketless coats and others with the
widened, hip effect. Serge suits are
almost always very plaln.
The summery suit pictured Is of
chiffon taffeta In an iDdlsUnrt check.
The coat Is the nsual length, bn.
makes a new departure by Its turnedback fronts, trimmed Into lengthened
points at the bottom. The skirt IS
oaio a short yoke aod has a slight
drapery or fullness at tbe hips.
Light gray and oyster shell whits
are shown among tfle smartest Jersey
and silk suits. A cool-looking model
Is of oyster white tussah bordered
with a narrow hand In black and
white check.
The checks are large,
and a single Une-of them finishes tbe
rtctnre hat Increased In sise so that edges of tbe, coat and tbe sleeves.
h faUs over the top of the arm. but If They are not extended t>oBt the bot
trimmed Into sloping revere at the tom tf the coat, but cover the revera
Crent. There are attractive models of
<he<^ wool bound with braid. »ad
belts and patch po^ets remain much
In evidence.
But there are a few
Nothing can supplant the suit, so It
Is the earliest arrival in tbe fashions
of each new season end Its story is
a serial with a chapter added every
btUe whUe. But we have arrived at
the last Installment for the summer
of 1617 and rejoice In a happy ending.
Wool Jersey doth queens It over lu
comrades, but nevertheless serge, taf
feta, gaberdine, tnssab and some new
weaves in silk make a strong flnlah.
There Is no new depaitore In style
to record In the new snmmer suits,
but coets Indulge in a few little va
garies in cut of the coUar, adjustment
of poc^eu and ahaplng tf the skirt
Of all. earthly ntunlc that which
reaches farthest into hsaveo. Is the
beating of a truly loving heart.—H. W.
Beecher
The nppallng figures of 1700,000.000
worth of waste In food stares us In the
face nearly every day.
No few nor any group of
women can remedy this
evil. It must be the con
certed effort of large
numbers In each com
munity.
Wastes are so many
that It is possible to
tnenilon only ihe most glaring ones.
Many of these no doubt each reader
will refuse to ftdmll are found In her
kitchen, but perhaps some equally as
Uud bsve not bi-en mentioned.
We wfisio ciirlomls of food In pre
paring more itiuii Is ne<-<leil and not in
telligently making over dishes. Madeover dishes are never higlily gratifying
I and it Is muoh wiser to hiivc no left[ overs to rtlRpose of or make more exI pensive by 'be addition of costly food
I to utilize tbe leftover,
I The iivcrnge woman all over the
I country is ullling 10 conform to the re' quest to have bot three courses at dinI ncr even when enteWalnlng. Little
! dubs of food served lu eight or ten
courses either means a vast amount
of wiisto or. fully as Important, a human
engine clogged by too much fuel to dis
pose of, causing dlsea.se aod often sud: den death.
j Fat from meat, suet aod drippings
fat from soups ore wastefully thrown
' away nnd fresh lord, oils cad fats are
j used for fryingbutter is 40 to
00 cents a pound It should not be men
tioned as a frying fat even In the
homes able to buy IL It matters not
whether we are financially able to
suod the waste, somebody is going
hungry because of our extravagance.
The preparing of vegetables may
mean a great waste; careless peeling
of potatoes often done in haste at a
iat? hour when time ts more Important
than the potato, Is another great leak
which should be watched. In many
homes potatoes are cot peeled at all,
afid everybody seems to be perfectly
happy eating the wholesome vegetable
with all.Its vegetable adds and min
eral salts left In it.
I^ck tf forethought Is soother
source of wastefulness. Planning meals
days in advance will eliminate a large
expense. It only needs a good trial to
prove the advantage.
'HujoIc, 7)W irttC.
With the Fingers !
Says Corns Uft Out
Without Any Pain
Sore corns, hard corns, soft eons m
any kind of a core can aborUy ta
Uftad right out with the Angara K psa
will apply on the corn a few drop* tt
freesone, soya a Ondondti authorttff.
At Uctle cost one can get a small bs^
tie of freetone at any drug store. wtUA
will positively rid one's feet of ev^ry
corn or callus without pain or
ness or the danger of Infection.
ThU new drag is an ether compooM.
and drlM the moment It la applied oafi
docs not Inflame or even trritata thh
eurronndlng skin. Just think I To*
can lift off your coma and csOom
now without a bit of pain or nnimfi
If yonr dragglst basiv't freeeone he cam
easily get a small bottle for you tr««
bis wholesale drug house.—sdr.
The Desired Effect.
"Massah! I siii. is la a phodleky
muDt. sah." whined Brother SlewtooC.
"Mull cblld'ren has done got do
mumps, and got 'em so pow'ful poi^
pous dat yo' kin her'em cla'r aenot
de street. And 1 w1sh( you'd plesso
gtmroe ’boot baffer dollah. sa, to b*r
some medicine for 'em. When all dsa
eight child'en gits mumpin' st coco,
de sound—"
“I’shaw < Tod enn’t-bear the mnmp%
Slewfool, yqu are an alotnlnshte
liar:"
"Vassah!
And won’t yu’ pieus
gimme dat haffer dollah for belD' da
woRi ’bom’able liar yo’ has met dte
bright mawnln', aabl Ub-yawl Hnvf
liaw!”—Judge.
Twenty-Five Years’
Experience WitkTUe
Kidney IMlcIne
my Owde and they all speak very teva^
ably rvarding it. and eome friendt mli
it tf the beet medteine they have mr
lined. Tbe nle we have enjoyed eo ths
prepantiOD and tbe Fplesdtd repatatte*
that it feeli in a poctive proof that it Is
me of tbe
cne
the most
mort titnerilorionn i----the market. V«i
P. E. BRirrON, Droggi*Kov. astb. me.
Jonesboro. Ten.
Prove Wtet Swamp-Root WiD Do For Ts*
^nd un cenu to Dr. Kilmer A Oo,
BingbtintoD, N. Y., for a enmple sir^ hottie. It will convince anvonc. Yoo will
tleo receive a booklet of valuable mfeev
maUon.’telling about tbe kidaej-s and blad
der. When wntiDs, be rare and- meatkm
this paper. BKular fiftv-cent and ow^
dollar size bottles for sale at aO,^if
stores,—Adv^________________
Too Much.
George Ade said at Si woddtaff
breakfast at St. Joseph:
•'Once, in ptming on a new play tf
mine, the manager reMsed to bavo n
young married couple in the casL
"Til take on one or tbe otbss;
George.' he saJd. 'but not both.'
■‘•Why not bothT said L' Thqy***
both elver.’
'
■"That may t>e.' said he. tMt tfi*
public, tlw.rge. don't care to aeo •
wan making love 10 hl» own wife.’
" 'Looks too much like acting; «l»f_
«Id 1."
FRECKLES
Mew b (b*
BM •( now
Ttiu-r'i Be lOBfir Ihe •llibie*i
<S
itelliu ••bAmeG ot your IrrcXlea.
Ih*
prcecrlpiloB otblne — double oireBstb — Is
EVATeBieed IS,remove ibeoe hemeir iptta
Simplr Eel u ounce o( olbliii tiiiSIl
•IrenGtb—from }-our EruEEtAl. Bsd Ap*lr •
little of It nlEbt And morslBE Add rem
• bould poon oee thol even the »or»t froEHAB
bAve txsvb to aiAAppror. while the U«hU>
onef bAve VAslAbed entireir It lA AAldAm
IbAi mote tbAB one ounce lA needed to comploteir clenr the aKIs And eaIb a bAAaRM
eleAT eompleilon.
Be rare to aaK f
otblne,
money
AdT.
Long Enough snd Cold Enough.
The wliiier tiiat hus JUst closed was
tlie lougest and coldest alnter In fitf
years, so it Is announced by the “ol*
esi Inhabitiint In England." WeU. W
can easily I>e1leve him. but Isnt h*
CASToIUA. that famous old t
for infanta ana
and ennoren,
children, aou
aod see umi
Chat is
It
Bean the
Signature of ^ _
In Use for Orar so'Y'eara.
Children Crv for Fletcher’s Oagtoria
How Money Gets Into Circulstlem
Money Is sent from treasury to s^
treasuries and from these It is distill
uutl to bunkv It Is drawn out ot banks
to he used In payment of wages, «1Rries or exchange aud thus geta tates
circulation.
THE WORLD’S FIRST BILUOWAIM
without «blis^'oa to anyone who wB aad
Doesn’t Like Lap Dogs.
"What is your husband's pet ■
slonr’
"An aversion to pots."
If You Are the Mother of a Boy
Who is now in the Army or Navy, or if your husband is there, who bought a Suit of Clothes from us this
Spring, kindiy let me know and I will gladly refund HALF THE PURCHASE PRICE. It is my earnest de
sire that every man, whether he is registered or not, who buys a Suit of Clothes from me this year, shall
upon his entering the service,
^
Get Half His Money
Today and All Next Week
Will be Interesting Days in Our
-^”<1 Keep All the Rebate
Coupons Besides
RArIr
Today and All Next Week
Your Choice of Any 25c Article for Only
CLOTHING SECTION
12
We have plairiied to make these days of sp^ial interest and advanloi.'f to
men and young men. Our purpose is to set foHli numerous money saviiii! op
portunities in the men's departments at one time, Iwlieving. it will be helplul 10
men who require many different things right now, enabling them to supply Iheir
clothes needs at unusual savings.
Your Summer Suit Can Be Bought Now at a Price Decidedly in Your Favur -We
Call Special Attention to Two Groups; SUITS
WORTH UP TO *20.00 AT .... ........
$12.90 & $15.90
And with the “Fourth of July” but four days away, here's an uncqualed
opponunity to get “clothes ready" for the summer's biggest holiday.
Pick from blue serges—neat, quiet gray serges—splendid wearing worvlvds
—other patterned fabrics for summer. Belted English and Pinch-back models
for young men as Well as conservative models for business and general wear.
Sizes for all men. tall slender, short or stout up to size 50; *12.90 and *15.90.
Other Saits at $10.45, $18.45 and $22.50
MEN'S SUMMER FURNISHINGS, ready with the best in Underwear. Fine
Shirtr, Neckwear, Hosiery, etc. Splendid assortments and many items specially
cents
New Arrivals in Wash, Skirts
The Korrect Pre-Shrunk '
Featuring the very
latest style effects
and the best washa
ble fabrics
12
coupons
FIVE HUNDRED SOUVENIRS FOR CHILDREN
WILL GO FREE—one with every cuh purchase
of one dollar or over.
TWENTY-nV'E LADIES' AND MISSES' SUMMER
DRESSES-Newest styles, that were *7 50. *8.50
and 110.00 at..............
.......*6.00. *7.00 sod 18.00
Full gathered backs—side
open or pearl buttons down
front—loose belts- with or
without pockets—in gabar
dines, French pique, twil's,
waffle cloths, wide-whale
bedtord, beach cloth, khaki
and sport stripes.
All of those materialR are
thoroughly
pro • shrunk,
thereby assuring a perfect
fitting ^.kirl. regardle^ of
the number of times laun
dered.
FIFTY MISSES’ AND JUNIOR DRESSES, worth up
to *7.50 at...........................*2.95, *3.95, *5.00 and *6.50
At $2.50, $3.25, $4.50
and $5.00
FOUR NEW MODELS OF WIRTHMOR WAISTS and
many others at........................................ ................. I1;00
Ollier Wash Skirls at
HUNDREDS OF THE HIGHER PRICED WAISTS just
98c, $1.25, $1.50, $2
priced under present market values.
and
TWO HUNDRED MISSES' AND CHILDREN’S DRESES that were 75c, *1.25 and *2.00 wilt go at.............
.................................................................... . 48c,96e. *1.25
FIFTY’ LADIEL’ AND MISSES’ SUITS that were
*25.09 and *35.00 at.....................................*10, *15. *2)
in. at......................*1.95. *2AS, *3.96, *4.50 and'*6 00
J. H. STEINBERG
Too. Late to Classify:
Yes We’ve Got Them!
Tomatoes
Cucumbers
Asparagus
Radishes
Lettuce
Watermelons
Cantaloupes
New Potatoes
Pie Plant
FRUIT AND VEGETABLES
F. O. NICHOLSON
WANTEI>—Man to lake-entire charge
of our business if^is locality. Good
: business cstabii»be£, Straight salary
loF salary and commission. Grand Un
lion Tea Co.. Lansing.'.129 N. Washing
ton A\e.
3U-3
• WANTED—Second-hand Ford'”c8r in
•good condition, for cash Call Cilz.
, phone 701.
30tf
1
The first'one of the new refriger^ator display cases to be installed in a
Igrocery store in the ciiy hav been put
to F. 0. NichoLson's sum . bn Union
•into
•6tre«
It will be used fur ki eping fruit:
and vegetables in peril- i . i.ndiiioii for
the trade during the summer season.
I
Subscribe for the Press
Don't hesitate to call tl.e Piess of
fice whenever you have a ii,.ws iiein.
Walter N. Millard, the tuner.
Both phones No. 6. Over 35
years experience.
i
DOUBLE YOUR
SUBSCRIPTION
FOR THE
Traverse City
Auto Mfg’s.
Stock
CALL AT THE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
is
Sale of Samples of
Ladies’ Neckwear
Collars and Collar
and Cuff Sets
Underpriced Offerings of
Seasonable
WHITE GOODS
Bought at a libera! Discount
and to be sold at about
1-3 to 1-2 regular
values.
Linen Finished White
Suitings
Worth 15c and 18c yard. Very
desirable for white
1 *>*r
Wftshskirts. At yard ....l42«
Beauties and Bargains
25c Styles
29c Styles
35c Styles
All on sale at
50c Styles
59c Styles
65c Styles
AUon sale at
»c White Crepe
Very desirable for Underwear.
Aureal bargain at
19
39
Beautiful $1.00 Collars 00q
White Organdies
44 inches wide. Worth up to
A ....... 23c
Fine White Voiles
40 inches wide. Regular 25c
.......19c
Hosiery Special
Women's Fibre Silk Boot
Hose. Slight seconds of
24c
25c Curtain Goods
300 yards of plain and bor
dered Curtain Margui?ettes. In white and i-cru.
19c
Other Special
Values
Women's Union Suits 200
Boy's Ribbed H,«.
Women’s S125 Auto
ggc
3^^“Gimthams 25c
Globe Dept. Store
Si^ for what you want take some sub
scription blanks and secure your neigh
bors name.
This Slock will surely command a
premium by Sept. 1st.
You have always wished you had some
auto stocks. Now is your chance to in
vest in a clean proposition.
All Common - No Water - Noo Assessable - lust WhatYsii
Should Have.
ACT QUICKLY BEFORE IT IS ALL SOLO
TRAVERSE CITY AUTO
MFC. CO.
I
GRAND TRAVERSE
1
LSERCdiaN
f’S HOME NEWSPAPER
C^Y CIRCULATION-3000
HOW SHALL WE
RID OURSELVES
OF FOUL BROOD?
^
HTTy, iiro(.. TO
By CARRIER SI YEAR
at. f917
By mail s/.so
year
mP! HIP! HURRAH!
THREE CHEERS FOR
' IRMECmf
Further the price has oot advanced as
jother siuft has. In fact, the price of
honey reminds me of a certain picture.!
rr
one of the very hest and a head liner, *
w if.t
..
.
^
hut the price remains the ^anle, & t'nd
Mr. Hilbert Hands in One on'toc. Well, honey is always a bead linThe Bee Question—Very ■er, but the price seems to always
■main the same, like the picture show.
Important Topic
•Now Mr. Editor, this imporUnt industry]
---------.
.standsagood chance of being wipedi
Reel Sport is Shown Among
Traverse City People Over
New Industry
OF INTEREST TO EVERYBODY
NAPOLEON PLANT IS A SURE GO
;
forgotten to appropriate a few thousand]
June _M, lbl7.
to take care of it. It does seem strange^
There is very’ litfle question but what
Mr- Editor, Traverse City Press:
: but it is a fact that they did not forget:
the Napoleon Motor Car Co. will move
DeanSir:
to provide hundreds of thousands of>
jto Traverse Oily.
I enclose article for publication which doiiars for wha' looks, from t.'.e stand-]
T^e stock has been subscribed to a
seems very important to me and the poi.it of ilu-public.ian absolute wastepoint where fai'ure is almost impossi-l
public should be informed of the con- and tltr-y have had it all charged to dad
ble. Subscribers! large and small, have'
ditions as 1 found them,
to be i>aid m taxes next winter
warmed up to the proposition and ha^e
This article ism regiu-d to foul brood.
.Now, M-. Editor, I want to leil vou!
bought stock liberally. Several have
8 disease ..f the bees. E'or the Inform- somethmn m confidence. Ma was with!
I doubled their subscription and several
ationoi the public, I iwlt say that Foul me o„ ,j„s trip to look after Foul Brood.'
jlarge invesloi^s are '
Brood IS very .omagious among liees; Oh yes, 1 forgot to tell vou that raa is
jwith Mr Oauntletl. As Mr. Gaunllett
th;ii It spreads from one apiary to an- the wife of the wnler and I want to]
lexplained al the meeting last night.
other very last, and jf not controlled tell tou ma has been studying this p»l-'
' There is no question but what Travwould wipe ounhe whole industry of iiical game for a year or two. She has
»ree City will get the plant, but for -the
the Stale.
reading about these voles for w .
[ lall I I . infornii-d b\
igood of the concern it Is veiy- es-sential
ii'w.miaii how do you spell
proiiiineiil hee-kiepef that there led solTrage,
th^t we move quickly. Customers
alS It. Well, when w
nob pressing the Napoleon Co. for cars
bei-ii part ol a (arload of bees shipped !i,,iue, 1 c....»
„,b ..su
u.e.
and (he Napoleon plant is oot in shape
from Indiana 10 TravertseC-ny and tat- thmu'..,, her mind’"'sJ'w hen w’^eot
to satisfy* their demands.” To date,
en out on the p.-mnsula; that he had settled she sets: -Father,-she alv avs
better than 850,000 has been stibicribed.
viMif-d liw- apiary and found Foul calls n.e fnlhrr, ' do vou remember
^Tbe balance between •20,600%id..t25.
Brood; ihai-elie mau. u ilr. Frazier, ad- 1,^, re idina an ariiv-le in the Grand
1000 will be disposed of in a veiy shortmm.-d b.- had it 111 tile apiary.
Rapids Press about a bil' introduced bv
itime and investors who arejooking for
Wed^lhisspitiig I began to irnesli- a Senator Smith for a stale park, to cost
la square, clean cot deal had better get
gate. 1 liad an ai iicle published in the the* state IfiO.iMl: that the Senate and
'in the game now. It's a sure inj.esttiecord-Eagle, al-ol had Mr. Baker ot Mouse of Representatives bad passed,
jment: a boost for the town, a boost for
the .Siai- Bank make inquiries.
But the bill, but the ijoveruor, before signW- - didn’t i,eeui to get anywhere or gel i„g the hill, had sent an expert to look
, , „ n.-_i_.
'os®- Joi"
'oofi
iufoni.aiion The ohject was to have the land ot er and estimate its value and'
Ithe old town today, tomorrow may be
the houl Brood inspector that is eni- get whai other infoimaiion he could in
_______
! too late.
ployed h\ the State, come up here and regard lo same: that he reported to the'
.
.
.
.
7.
clean up itie disease.
Governor that Uie land in question was Farmer bothered With
Old Settlers had a ^rand day'
and.
for their picnic and enjoy
been f^
yeani. I netermined to in- mut the laxxtion value was placed
?d at''
protect property ,
ed themselves greatly
The remains of Mibs C. Hill, who
vestigatf. Mi on the 1 .th I drove out to HG.OOO and that the Gbvemor had vepassed away at Detroit Thursday night,
Did Mission and there got track of this toed the bill? "
apiary of Foul Brood. J. found ihe
And I savs, "Yes, ma. vour memory
W. B. Nelaon, whoresld«oo alPijA]
The Gi-and Traverse Old Settlers
brought to this city Friday night
bees had bewi located on a Mr. Holmes' is preitv good. There was such an art- farmwestoftbacity. has bad coBsd^ I have accepted the invitaUon of Archi-jJ"®® 29 on the 11:20 train. Mr. Hill
fruit farm; that Mrs. Holmes, an oldish cie in the Freis. tVhy? What about able trouble of Ute with tl>e
l^jButUrs of Charlevoix to Rave the t underwent *n operation for appcndicilady, had a small lot of bees, )6swarms,h?- Masays. ’Never mind wbatabout'
city. A fo«^.4Br«
annual pwnic and meeting in that:‘’>
‘^® ^°^P‘
ago from Which be
_________
she told me. and that she, on'.accountlitDOw'. Bof do you f«member.:;^u«
of lojt'
o^r dujea^^on^d
thR a inM|M)exir - ‘
at jsMpla qttfdwl .
reina^were t^en^to the tmnf-
DOGS MOLESTING
ANDirrWASA
PERFECT
FARMER’S PROPERtJ
4-
OB the Central school groutiJs
«hadia*n, Harid and
Tram!Wednesday Bad enjuyed'a welt planned:^'*'' hrothers. Geot^ A. and Norman
noUceasomettiog wrong with the bees a misUke somewhere, that the land in eity hereafter and «rfli
program in the afternoon.
.W, and a sister. Mrs. Frank Unllen to
that they were uoi doing well and that question war. verv valuable worth at ‘he owiu a of the canines.
there seemed to be a disagreeable smell k-ast V^9,«00; ihai the Governor recoA-,
"’!
The officers wen-elected as follows‘^eir loss. Mr. Hill
^president, .^n-hibaid Buttars, Charle->'®®rs of age and was well and favorably
La the hives; that she not knowing any sidered the mailer and finally signed DAV CfAIITC DPTHDM ACTCD
.\Tu.r~iuT.:—secretaiy,
Mrs. Harry'Nichols.
b®®" a mason by trade
thingofFouibrood. asked Mr. Frazier tb .b.r-"
'
™
what the trouble was and he replied
i says............................................
-Yes. ma. that v
.................
itN DAYS CAMrlNG TRIP Charlevoix; treasurer and Jmnoran, *"1^ ® resident here for 3C years. He
that the bi-u.-'d was stdrved. not enough Press, but whai lias that got lo do w.fh - About forty Boy Scouts made camp president. Wiiliani S. Anderson, this
"® ercatly among his large circle
honey to'nmig in. Well, the outcome this Foul Brood question?'
II the shore ol Green Lake rfear Inter'‘I®® P«’S'«l®''ts. Mi-s. W. L. Case.
fnends and the_ beraaved family
of an this v.«sttiat MfA Holmes lost all' ,rhi: will be continued n.
lochen and spent ten days in real camp Benzie county; Miss Irene J. Ueiiy, Kal- i>a'r iiie sympainy ol the enlire
week.
her Pees.
life.
Mr, Leland Scout Master and
««--Y A. Powei-*., Leelanau; L. munity Funeral services will be held
su watuli tor Uie ausi^er to itiis
Now last year these bees, what were
question; bm don't hold your physical training .teacher accompanied F- Ain^'®®Traverse; Mrs. F. •\V..«ro“’ th® heme Sunday at 3 p.
lefl of them, were nio\ed lo the Frank
breatii until then.'
fhe boys and instructed them as to the Mayne, Charlevoix; Robert Campbell
Edgecomb larm and some more shipped
Iproperwaysof making camp, cooking, Emmeti.
S. C. Despres, this city, i:
up and what is left is there now.
|elc. The boys were divided into groups historian,
that is, the h;vc*s and lixtures are there
of four. Each group was provided wiih
----------------------now. There are no bees in them. ii
,„d ov«„ ,„d did iu 0.. cooki LYRIC yhEATRE add
Summer Schedule effective June
whenever you find any
s*ems that this man Frazier bought u;most of the small lots of bees that were isfollcm;:
of your furniture that
I
The boys returned to the city last
VAUDEVlIif PROGRAM
North Bound;
on the Hepinsula. so that now 1 coulc
needs repairing.
5:10 a. m. Resort special Charle-i“‘”^‘‘*^'
besides having agood^ Traverse City's vaudev ille critics will
only l^ear_nf 2 stn-ill apiaries, a total ot j
vou- and Peloskey, Daily except,*’’"® ‘h®>^*‘*ve learned more about Boy be treated to some high class acts com- “A Stitch in Time------ ’*
15 swarta.-. One small lot owned by a
Monday
'
j Scout life,
meocing next week, at the Lvric. For
Mr. Fox, supposed to be all right at'
Lv, 5:45 a. m. For all points north.I
----------------------present, iliice acts will be run on
present, are loc-ited about liO rods'from
Connect
at
Bellaire
for
E.
Jordan.'
nrn
AnAAA
AIPPAA
niUH
these di5ca.sed h;ves. I found some
Datty except Sunday
RFfl CRIISX NEEDS FUND ^
"1.
? First Class Upholstering
old cans with diseased and dirty honey
Lv. l:4Up. m. Central Lake, E. JorWHUUU llUtWW I W
progra'hi wiH change daily as usual. It
Furniture Repairing
in them open for any stray bee to lick
-Arrive from North'
'
--------has always been the policy of the .Lyric
u > and carry the disease home will.
and Refinishing
Lm.
dan. Charlevoix, and PetoskevJ
.
#i n« non onn nBBMi
Daily except Sunday
' |
fOF. *1 00,000,000 OpCM photo plays obtainable at pnre-s which
Now- heie is an important industry
TlirOUgheUl CWIltry
*®'^
’*’“1
practicilly w.^ed ofi of Ihe map as fa. Ar. 11:)U 8.,m. From Petwkev, Charlevoix. E. Jordan and J-lk Rapids
______
charged m other parts of the state '
as the Peiimsula is cotu-eroed and lbal|
<
The management promises a conlinu
Daily except Sunday
isn't tiie end. Tne disease seems to
^f ihesc good pictures as weii as
Cilz. Phone R992
2 ou p. m. From Mackina-w i.'itv. New York and Chicago Wit! Otv« at
sialtvr Ilk-tn? wiiiJ anj only the eS
Laaat
$40.000.000—Every
Region
the
creani of vaudeville.
Petoskey, Charlevoix.' Boyne l'n>,
pert can handle and stop it and then, i<
MuBt Be Generous Now.
_____________
and East Jordan. Daily except
you save llie bees, you loose the honey
(PHENDGES
John Hendges
----
ANOTHER OLD RESIDENT CONE
Sunday.
fur tfne year that the bees
9 35 p-m Resort special from Pejveslo;D&cle Bam Is calling tor a Bed Croes
John K. Fush, for many years hack
luskey and I'harlevuix Daily ex fund of llOO.OOO.OOe to enable the Bad drivVr and bagragi man in this niy.
this IS not aU. The fruit grow j
cepi Saturday.
ei- iier-d* ihi-ie bees just as much ai
Cross to give the proper care to the passed away al the lu me ol his son in
’ South ^uund;
the bee k-ep,r d'Wr, -utlie D.-e is very]
sick and wonnded. the homelasB and .letroil. onThoi*>dn\ June 21 and was
Musk.
important to carry the pollen H-om"-v 5.|J 8. m. Saginaw,
skegoti,
desolate, when hlatmeiuget Into luried June '23 at ■ iH-iroit. Mr Busli
Flint
Grand
1 tapios. Chicago. Lan—
"
d Ra,
blu-soiM to b’i>sso:ii lo fertilize the fruii|
flgbua* la earaesu New York city was well know-,1 all over the city and
nd ii
f jr wiiiiout pollen tertili.-aii„n, no fruit j
sing and all poinis east and west. i,„ jttomptlj pl«l<ed luelf to "T»lee hi.s been sj;d. and \.-ry truly, of him,
Mr. F-ix with II..S small apiary so neai
Daily excepr Suuday.
one-fourth of whatever Bum la needed." [that aiivon,- gi.i>i;! the xame w*v Johnthe diseased hit of lu.-ps spoken of, i3:IU p. m. Saginaw, Bay City, Flint
la now collectln* the money. ChiBush was, rwrr had to walk, even,
very inu.'h c-tii-erned; he and others:
Ludiiigton. Grand Rapids, Chicago cago has been asked for aomettlc* be f thev didn't have the pnee ol i rid.- :
had tt-riiu-:i to the Foil Bro id Inspec and Detroit. Carnes Ciiu-a.;o Sleep- tween IB.OOO.OOO and 110.000.000, th* rle had been in failing health fur about:
er every'Saturday- Daily.
_ levy baaed on popnUMoa and credit
He will he pre-jtlv mi-.sed
or at Lansing, at first getting -no reply
but finally got a letter savin ; that ow- Lv 9:40 p m. Grand Rapidv Latisin,*. ^Ung.
I ihroiighojt the cilv
Detroit, Chicago, St Louis, Mo.
Mr. O. B. Towne has been appointed |
ing lo the fa I ihit there had been no
approprpMioi nia.e by the Stale fort
Carries day coach. Club car and by Waahlngton ai director of the Bed
thru sleepers to all above points, croaa war fund
for the canhis iravetim expe.ises. he was not ableDaily except Saturday.
t^ai divlelon. and haa opened a drive
!o come and atiend lo the matter.
I
Arrive from South:
I jor the money in nine ataiea.
Now for your information will say.
that some years ago I think abo.it Id. A*" 5:00 a. m. From Detroit, Toledo.' The money la being rataed by subLansing, Grand Rapids, Chicago and scrlptlon amoog the varlons chapters.
toe Bee Industry of t'.e state put the
St. Louis. Mo , With dsy coach and
*»*»
arranzed U»at each
milter up to the Wislatu-e and after a
sleepers from ali above poiu s <**Pl« «UU have oaefoorth
whallot of red tape fiadfly gn a Foul Brood
Dailv
except Mondav.
,
Towne ^pes,
law passed and one lone inspeeto-ap
pointed fo the great sU e of Ml b g i . A''
the natlottl orfaoUattos Us full
Saginaw. and^Grand Rapids. Dsily, | Jij,)i.OOO.OOO
^
The salary, as 1 understand is not large.
over and abovs what ths
ground $1500 to $2«K). But the powers Ar. IhZOp, m. From Chicago. Grand chaptgrs retain.
Rspids,
wit. T
'*-•--'s, Muskegon, Detroit.
Toled-.,
The Bad Oroas
4hat have charge are so busy looking
ipel
Saginaw Dail.v exce;itWunday
t»und
lu tugd from ^s people becaose It
after very important matters that Uiey..
has «o small an endowment fund—:
'forget fb appropriate any cash to take'
less than tt.MkOOIk—whlla Japan, tor
care of this important matler, especial-'
liNitaBce. haa iMre than tK.OOO.MiO In
ly this year of high prices on sugar and,
her r,,,^ p^alftci^e from’wblch
.rhii-h pays
wars Mr. Wilbur H. Pareee takes office of
.r.a Lher'fund',
all food products.
'
; 403 t. Front btreel will hold reguUir
eipen,!j^*^
Justice of Peace. July 4 for a term of'
I just want to call ydur especial at-: meetings. Wednesday and Saturday
The money U neccMary to keep up fouryears, to succeed k. B. Curtis. He
tentioo to the fact that honey has more'eveningSi also Sunday at -i p. m. and the
supplies
and
equipment
of
the
.
-- , base
, will oceup> his present office rooms at
food value, pound for pgund, than sug^ TiSOp. m. All are invitedtaplUl.. ut lo, nUoI .or, U> ««■
Sn,K
BoilO.OE.
1
cro,>
Drink a
AT
OUR FOUNTAIN
EVERY DAY
You will find it satisfying
and refreshing. We use
only the purest of fruit syr
ups at our fountain.
SANITARY
is the word
at
Wait’s
Soda Fountain
WEATHER
IS HERE
Order That Palm Beach
Suit Now—It’s Not
Too Late.
Sid Johnson
TAILOR /
226 EAST FRONT S-tREET
'
Vacation
Time
Send the things you %ill
need on your vacation to us4
You will find us dependable
and expert in laundering
everything from an ordina^
bundle washing to the,fin^
of fabrics and fancy ^irt
waists.
We specialize in Superior
Collar and Shirt work.
PROGRESS
LAUNDRY
Pony Votes
WHEN IN DOUBT AS TO NEW
CORRECT STYLES, IN
MEN’S and BOYS’
Clothing Hats and Furnishings
GOODS MADE OF Al QUALITY.
PRICES WITHIN REAt^H OF ALL.
GARLAND & CHAMPNEY’S
121 UNION STREET
$50.00 REWARD
TO :‘kNV PERSON for a medicine equal to Tieer Oil. according to the
testimony reported in "The Friend cf Suffering Man” abound each bot
tle of Tiger Oil. Again we challenge an equal to Tiger Oil far the core
of Che grealpsi number of diseases
-
SODA
tacklng
PASSED AWAY AT DETROIT
PERE MARQUETTE RAILWAY
VOL 2-NO. 81
Sold by druggists, grocers, agents,
National Grocery Co. and
DR. JOHN LESSON. CmBDoc. Mdi.
TRAVERSE CITV PRESS
AMERICANS TRAIN
FOR CONVOY WORK
Uave Ambulance Corps to Take
Up Army Transportation
Senrioe.
\ wen Mnpioyeti.
RiBIS ROUTINE IS FOUOWED
Cetirw ef Training 1i Racily cn *1tv
- tciMlvc Ccurw" to Fit Men In Shortest Foeelblo Tbm to Take Comtncnd of Trcneportc. ,
Paris.—FlftecD Americsss have exchanged the streonous life of the
bolaace Arid service (which had loterrals In Its strennoslty) to stody to
become officers In the French ermy
transportation service at a ecbool
where the coarse seems, to leave
opening for the proverbial finder of
employment for Idle hands.
This Bbcool was established
Meaox toward tbe eod of last March,
and bad 150 French pnplla, officers and
noncommissioned officers In training
when the American contingent'Joined
Q week ago. The course Is exactly
the same for French .and Americans,
bat the Americans are kept In a spe
cial class for the sake of those t^t
need EngUsh-speaking Instructors.
At S :S0 in tbe morning everyone
up and must be dressed, have made
bis bed and bad breakfast In time to
answer his name at roll call at 6:25.
As regards breakfast, the American
stomach found that It conid not do a
morning's herd work on th6 reguiatloD
French breakfast of coffee and bread,
so eggs and bacon have been adde<l
From B;S0 to 7:30 theory Is studiedT
and from 7:30 to 0:30 lectures on au
tomobile technique are given. foUowed
by practical work In tbe workshop,
such as soldering metals tempering
steel and all sorts of forge work.
'Busy SoMion In Afternoon.
Lnncbeon at eleven is taken in the
mess shed, and Js. like dinner later, an
excellent example of that proficiency
In cuisine for which FYance Is nnriTsled. At first the 15 Americans sat
together, but on the second day their
French comrades gave a dinner In
their honor, and after that the Ameri
cans (who still wear their field seccioo
uniforms) divided up omong the other
tables.'
From 12:45 to 5:30 p. ro. on three
afternoons a week, work Is done on tbe
bodies of camions (military' trucks);
they are dissected and put together
' again, etc. On tbe other three after
noons tbe ccnvol (train) of camions,
generally eight, are taken out as If
they were on actnal service. Each man
In turn Is named head of the section
(and Is In genbral chsrge'for the day).
Orders are given him to take a hypo
thetical load of munitions to some
point some miles away, and he has to
conduct his train by the map. set thk
pace, keep them together, and show
them how to overcome dlfficnllles that
arise. These difficulties are at present
chiefly Imaginary, but hypothetical
«Lses of broken axlea, of towing cars,
etc., are treate«l
' nie lieutenant attached to the Amer
ican group, Lieutenant de Kersauson,
whose long residence In Callfonile has
given him a perfect mastery of the
American langnage, accomp^es the
train, but gives no advice, only ob
serves. is the officer of the day mis
takes Us route, be has to find out
error end rectify It himself. After
the return at 5:45, the lieutenant gives
f half-hour' critldsm of tbe convol’s
work and points out mistakes made
and bow to avoid them.
Evening Spent In Study.
Dinner Is at 6:30. and more study
follows till lb p. m., when all Ugfata
are pu\ oul Sneh a program, with
plenty of maoual work in tbe open air,
provides enough exercise, bnt regular
anny drill is put Jn three times
EATS GOLD FISH IN POND
■
'J'
■
Ma-hA-ne«iKm. an Indian ntld
yenra of age, heard the call of
the wud and ran away, One momiag
a kMper In a Los Angrias park foand
Jhe glri beodlog over riie flab pond.
BsMde her on the bank was a gold flab
atmg^lng with Ita last ga^t. Ma-hflrae«i-oo had caught It with be- band.
•‘Whj CAUsb the gold flahr asked the
"Ma-ha-rac-ao-oD eat tUB,”
Mid ^ gilt as Bhe picked iQt the flA
and ran.away.
Sunday Is a day «f rest, or would
he. only that many-^ fact, all-4nd.
It necessaiy to catdi up tbe week's
work, read up notes, mske or finish
diagrams and such things, which they
have had only the Pme to do hur
riedly during the week.
The course is really an
DtODBlTe
coutst," somewhat forced, « it Is
hpped that after three weeb' study
the Americans will be prepared for examinatloas wbicb wUI allow tbem to
be made sublleulensnu Id the trans
port sendee and be put In charge.of a
section of 50 men. Five weeks Is the
time allowed their French comrades
for tbe same work.
SveryoDe knows what eutomobtle
transportation means In modem war
fare. and Its Importance has been plain
the least military mind ever since
saved Verdun. A seepon of 50 Amer
icans is already at work at tho front
conducting camions moving anuDonttloD from railhead to the ammunition
staPons, and the new school at Meaux
will provide Americans to officer these
seePons and the new ones that will
follow If Pratt Andrew, inspector gen
eral of the "American field service In
France,” is JnsPfied In his hope of eoehundred men arrive each week
from the States for this service.
Amerlean Flag on the Qata.
Tbe officers in charge of tbe a,ntoffloblle InstrucPon center et Meaux
(there are other schools for drlv^
mecbanica. etc.), from Colonel Bcrschoek down, are all keenly imereste^ In
the coming of the Americans, and the
colonel spokelilghly of the serious way
tlw had settled down to work. The
gne into the camp of 16 barrack
eheds has an American flag on one
post and a French one on the other.
When the New York Sun's corre
spondent visited the school recenilUy,
the convoy waa sent to the villagej«f
Crecy, where all tbe trucks were to
be parked In (he market place (drawn
up side by side, close together, at an
angle to the rnmn road so that they
could be started off again without de
ss do most French villages these days,
with noPilng but aged men, women
home. But it woke up
as the trucks 1
I In and took
up their appointed places.
"Are they English T' asked a woman
who appeared at her shop door.
“No I"
When she heard that they
Amarleaos, then abe beamed with con
tent It seemed as eaneet of the aid
that was coming, and evidently con
vinced P»e good woman that the Cnited States had declared war far more
vividly than anything abe had read or
heard aaid.'
Tbe military spirit la strong in tme
new band of fighters for France, a
salute and permission Ts asked from
tbe lieutenant to go and buy ciga
rettes at tbe shop, 20 yards sway, al
though the camions were all oow
perked In an Irreproachable line eM%
halt was being taken, ht a previoiu I
halt, when tbe officer of the day woe
deciding which road he ahould take,
and every driver had got down for a
few minutes, great was the dlscussloo
whether a cigarette could be smoked,
the “antis" holding that they were on
duty, when smoking Is barred, while
the "pros" agreed that a halt was a
break in tbe service.
Mllittry Etlgwatte Observed.
The captain of the center, who wat
conductlDg tbe New York Son's corre
spondent to see the convoy at practical
vfork. passed by the drtveta several
rimes, and this brought up the question
whether he should he saluted every
time or treated as being on doty with
tbem. when the first.salnte at meeUng
would suffice.
Bnt there was a deeper gnesrion diat
each was eager to discuss. Were they
doing the best they could for their
own country and for France? Should
they be where they were, or ought
they to be In their own country offer
ing It their services directly? They all
bad served with the American ambnlance sections M the front, and hive
aU succeeded In becoming heads of secdons. This experience has taught
them a useful knowledge of the French
langnage. Several have Uved yean
In France and know the language tboiv
oughly. It has taught them-much about
the Freoch army and trench warfare
end given them already a valnabli
training. They wonder whether they
are
this training to tbe best ad.vantage. or whether they ought to be
at home, where armies are forming
and mei with their quallUes are being
needed. Meanwhile they are working
hard end acquiring further training,
which will assuredly make them valu
able • officers for the first American
troops to t«ke tbe field In France
This firs; class of 15. training at
Meaux to become transport offleets. ti
composed of Charles Freeborn. Callfomia; Allan .Mnhr. Phllsdelpbte:
Henry Isetla Paris: George Struby,
Denver: A. Douglas Dodge New York;
B, Reed. New Jersey: William Bige
low. Boston; W. H. Wallace Bre
N. Y.; A. Henderson, New York: H.
ladelphla:
Barton. H. Houston, Fhiladi
‘
Ooiford.
Dows*Dunham. Boston,
New York: Thomas DoaghertyT Phila
delphia ; Balpb Blcbmond. Waltoo,
LEAVING THE TORPEDOED SONtAY AS SHE SANK
Hemarkable photograph showing the passenger* and crew of tbe French liner Sontsy taking to the lifeboats
after the vessel had been torpedoed by a German submarine In.the Mediterranean. The captain and 44 ottien
perished.
•
KING GEORGE VISITS AMERICAN liVARSHlP
r
0- V-
•
'
»
UNREST GROWING ^ AMONG GERMANS
As U-Boat Toll Decreases the
People Show Signs of
Dissatisfaction.
GLOWING PROMISES FAIL
England $hewt No Signs of Weaken
ing, but Seeme More Determined
to Preeeeute War More Bit
terly Than Ever.
don among the people et large with
the polldcsl results of the ruthle«
submarine campaign and the absence
of any tndlcndons that It has brought
tbe desired peace near to band.
During their long campaign for the
nnrestricmd use of submarines the ad
vocates of the measure made very defi
nite promises of immediate results.
"Two or three mouths" was the phrase
used everywhere In street and news
paper arguments In regard to the dme
It would take to bring England to ber
knees, ready for peace. Even though
the official propaganda since has de
clared tbe government bound Itself to
pardcular dme to produce results,
‘ prediedon that they would be obned In two or three months has re
mained In tbe minds of tbe people.
are now beard that, al
though four months have passed. Eng
land shows no signs of weakening, but,
the contrary, seems determined to
prosecute the wsr more bitterly th»i>
ever.
Reports of Franos DIseradItsd.
Smternenta that France has book
“bled white" and wlU he forced
dre from the war have been made so
often that they no longer attract the
slightest credence. Tbe entry of the
United States and BrasU Into the war
and the rupture of
Otrmany and the balk of the neutral
worid outside Buroi>e are now tsk
seriously and regarded with gloom.
Qnesdohs have been recendy asked
tbe correspondent by Germans here,
not In olBcisl posldona. who are dis
gruntled over the results of tbe sub
marine campalgu up to the iVcsciBt
ttme. with regard to what would be
tbe
In the. United States If tbe
submarine warfare were ahandoi '
Hm goverument, however, shows
signs of weakening and is now en
gaged In a vigorous puMldty. cam
paign to bolster up the waning confi
dence at home and quiet the com
plaints of neutrals.
It la a matter of knowledge to the
_____ ____________ ________
least____ mem
ber of rite German governiaat
commit himself to soy deflulte
dme limit for bringing Great Britain
Into a frame of mind to disenss peace.
In tbe correspondent's last Informal
conversation with Dr. ^fred Zlousermenu, head of the fot^gn office, a few
hours before news qf the rupture pf
reiadons with the United States
received In Berlin, the minister, who
on tenterhooks to know what the
Uqited. plates would do. declared InpulKlvely:
"U the United States will only keep
hands off and let us alone, two or
three months will be enough."
Then, noddng the correspoDdept
prick up his ear# at the foreign office
use of the stock phrase of the i
lessness advocates, he quickly amend
ed his estimate.
"Say six months,” be said, and then
reeding a further query In the corre
spondent's eyes, edfiedt
"Well, let us not fix any definite
dme."
Doctor Zlmmermann then went
with tbe argument that England and
the entente quickly would be made
amenable to the peace idea If the
United States would only refrain from
breaking relations or declaring war to
consequence of the proclamadon of
tbe unrestricted submarine campaign.
German naval writers for some time
have been preparing their readers for
a poBslble falling off in tbe monthly
figures of tonnage destroyed by sub
marines. Many of them farnlsb the
advance explanation that if It hap
pens. it will be due largely to the ab
sence of vessels to torpedo, or. In soma
articles, to the results of British meth
ods. No mentioD of any Increase In
losses of submarines Is made.
King George of Great Britain greeted the United States destroyers on their arrival la British wmeis and V
aboard several of the vessels. The photograph shows him inspecting one Of the big guns.
PRESIDENT MENOCAL INAUGURATED IN HAVANA
"ST
J'/K-lo-- .
(Jen. Mario Menocal was re-lnangurated as president of Cuba with considerable ceremony. Th* lUa*tra(lno
shows the inaugural parade on tbe famous Malecon In Havana, and. at tbe right. President Menocal and memberr of his cabinet reviewing the procession.
GERMAN WAR PRISONERS PUT TO WORK
r ^
: Seminary Graduates
Fast Leave for War.
.
;
,
'
;
New Yoik.—Only
• 20 at _
members of tbe gradnaOng
class of Union Theological
seminary were here at the commencement to receive their
diplomas. The others ted Joined
the colors.
Of the daases of »ir nod
1B18 of the seminary, u men
had gone as riiapUlns. ten
the Y. M. a A. field serriee. six
to Platttearg. either as student
officers or to do spiritual work,
and tour were In Europe with
Bev. Dr. Thomas C Hbii
Husband and Wife Enlist
Cffiester, Pa.-7-Urs. James B. Don
nelly led her husband to a naval
crulting station. After he signed
as a machinist she enlisted as a chltf
yeoman.
my -
I
■^1
Among the promising young office
of the American navy U Commandw
J. C Van de Carr, la command of Sub
marine dirislon
the
Oannan prisonen of war at the ToulouM a
of ammunition cases.
J
traverse city -PRF-SS
BE 1011*
»Mil tor Savlnj Brwden and
fttin Is Great
CROW
REDUCE
FERTILmf
Call Cr*|N Crn* Her ltij«ir« Land If
^Uirtfood la Net Raplaead—Mva
ItMk Will Kmp Up Rioh.
iMaa »f Soil
By OeOROE A. BROWN,
of Boot Huabandry, M. A. C.
Baat Laoatns. Mich.—In many »eo
OoM Of the atate the extremely hl^
prtcea preralllnc tbli sprin* for grain
and prorender. together with the poor
ovtlo^ tor the hay oop, are canMng
the aale of coomdeeable munhera of
yoong atock which now, if erer, should
be grown ont to the fuUeat extent poatfhle.
The fanner or Ure stock man In any
aort of ton(d> at all with agrlculttiral
and market coodltlooa doesn't hare to
kxA far for reasons why animals
tbonld be kepL In the first place the
cecesBlty for inmenalog our meat auppiy la urgent and coupled with this
Is the addltJooal fact that prospects
tor a continuation of high prices were
oarer belter. And we should bear In
odnd further that oar lire atock pop
ulation Is already far too small to
insure the malnteoanA of soil fer
tility and the production of bonodfal
crops lu the years to come. To appre
ciate this fully It U only neceaaary to
consider the Immense amonnt of fer
tility which Is sold with the rarions
oops.
Reallxatloo of this brings
borne the immense Importance of feed
ing ont erery •t<im«i possible.
Use Up to 400 to MO Pounds of Water
tor Each Pound of Pry
Matter.
Baat Lanalog. Hlc:i—The farmer
who Is looking out for No. 1 Uils sea
son. or lu any season, for that matter,
wlU see to It that weeds In com and
beans are klllod before they get a
start Early cnltlratlon. and eonUn®.
oBs pracBce ot It throu^out Me grow
ing season la the rmnedy. say farmcrops mm ot the Michigan AgilcultBtal eoB^
"Weeds." It (s Hid. “are the great
est crop eDsmiaa. aodMt U a mlsuka
to allow them to get up four or fire
inches before cuiaratlng. The Urn#
to hit them hardaat la Just when they
Stan.
‘Soon after planting, with both com
and beans the field should be gone
over alth a spike-tooth harrow, teeth
slanting slightly back. Tbe weeder la
excellent tool for eurty cultivation,
and can be used In
until the
plants are six or eight Inches high.
“The first cultivation with the culUrator Is usually made wbo“ Me
plants are up high enough so the rows
be easily toljowed. Tbls culUraUoD should be close to tbe plants and
fairly deep, though if the seedbed has
been preperly prepared, deep cultlraHon Is not necessary.
'The next eultlratlon usually comes
within a week or ten dayA This enltimtion abould not be quite so close
to the planu. or as deep. Later cul
tivations. with-either com or beans,
should be shallow—merely deep enougb
dislodge the developing weeds and
keep the ground In loose condition,
-ifter about S5 daya' growth, the roou
ora or bean plants completely interiace between the rows and come to
ultliln about two inches of the surface.
These surface roots are the <Mle( feed
ing** roots of the plant and deep cnltiratiou will cause a coualdereble Iom
ield by pruning them. Level and
low cultivation la' the best and the
of smaU ahovela. or small cultiva
tors equipped with blades or sweeps
Is advised. Qpep cultivation Is partlcnlariy the practice of “laying by".
Cultivating deeply at the Ian cultivaand throwing the earth from the
middle ot the rows should be avoided."
WIRE WORMS ARE SOD PESTS
I MuR Be Taksfi i
vent Its Attacking Cera end
Other Crops.
fitlCHlOAN WANBEABON.
The RIflbt Uas ef tha Marrow, and
Rropsf Cultivation, WHt Help to
Put the Held In This Condition.
An acre of oats yielding GO buabels
ot grain, by way of illnatratlon. will
remore from the soil In grain alone
approximately 81.BS pounds of nitro
gen. ISiie pounds of phosphoHc add
and 8.96 pounds of potash. To re
place this amount of plantfood by the
uae of commerdal fertiliser would cost
not leM than *6.84 per acre, even at
the prlees preralUng three yean ago.
But an kcre of com, yielding one
hundred^ baskets, or CO bushels of
shelled com remores stUl greater
guantltlea of dealmble elements Trom
the sou. The grain alone in the
temoved from an acre of land
tains 4CJ6 pounds of nitrogen, 1BB2
pounds of phosphoric add and 11.2
posnds of pota^ haring a fertiliser
rsdne of IB.69. The ftftlUxlng Ingre
dients In a too of dover hay are rai
ned at 1836.
When these figures are
nghtfuUj
d the farmer cannot bdp but
reaUse that he can hardly afford to
sell all the crops be raises. Ratber.
be abould derote only a set area To
crops and make It a fixed policy
to teed the remainder of his oops to
lire stock. Tbs animal utlUtea only a
small part of the fertlUslng Ingredi
ents In the faad. and those wUeh
aren't need are returned to the farm« in the form of manure. It Is safe
to say that where manure Is carefully
handled, full 80 per cenf of the fer
tility ralne of s feed finds Its way
Ack to the SOU.
Figuring on this
bsalB. an acre of oats If fed to stock
oo the farm, returns to the soil *8.47
worth of fertility. On the other hand
If the oats ere sold, ts.47 worth of fer
tility is remored from each acre. With
com the loss -through sale would be
•7.7G an sere, and In the case of a
ton of clover bay the loss through sale
would be r.48 worth of fertlUty.
reedlDg these crops returns these raloca to the land.
For each bushel of oats fed. we
back 11 cents worth of fertility
tor each bushel of com IGH cents
worth of fertlUty. The adrlaabUlty of
rising more Ure Rock becomes appa
rent even though part of the feed
must be purchased.
The: proAln^di feeds, which are
tb» ones most economical to boy. hare
a moth graatse fertlUty value thafi
the homegrown feeds. The fartlUS'
tag TBiue ce the maanre obtained from
the feeding eg a ton of bran la |6
Item a MB ag BvMd maal flTBS.
tnm a ton eg cotteaMsE maal E2S.?a
Both
tbs last named feads can be
fad la
feed* *i4 a BroEt obtalhed «a tbe Uvis
•tack peodnand. to ny doUIibe «E tbs
fbot tbt noaara mUtaBt tM
Mr foMtog la pcaetlc^ oqual t»
nlaa to «tm
bnada «C oan-
East Unsing, Mlcb.-Tbe wire
worm, at always, win bear watrtilng
in MlchJgaA. Wire worms
are yellowish broito larysA pceeH
sing hard polished sklos and bodies
slender and cylindrical la shape, meaeuHng from three-quarters of an Inch
an Indi In length. Tbe moR Injn*
rlous form In Michigan prefers low,
mucky, or poorly-drained soils, where
It feeds upon the roots of grassesv
grains and the llkt
Two or three
years Is feqnlred tor this pen to rea<^
itnrlty. which accounts, many timeA
r the damage done by it a year or
o after grass sod has been turned
under. The adult Is a brownish beetla
which from its habit of snapping Ita
body up In tbe air, is known as a
■•click beeUe."
Susceptible cropA like potatoea com
or root ciopA should not be planted
after plowing up gran sod. Prof. S.
A. Forbes of DHuoIa suggests that re
cently plowed up grass sod should be
kept In dover as much as practicable
for a few yeara as wire worms do not
thrive well In clover land. In planta
badly Infested with wire worms It
would be well to use some commercial
fertiliser. This will not klU the In
sect. bnt will aid the plant in over
coming Its work.
It Is sometimes advisable to drain
land and add Ume In order to make It
possible for the clover to establish ItsMf. and this has given rise to the
that tbe Ume Itself kills
e wire worms. As a matter of fact
MOVING PAY AHEAD FOR BEES
East Lansing. Mich.—The old box
hlva and ctoBSed-lrame htvea which
progressive bee men have so long rent
ed against, are headed for the junk
heap, for a new law which was passed
by the loR legislature and which Just
recently was signed by the governor,
makes tbe use of these relics a penal
set. After May 'l the state Inspertor
of apiaries will be privileged to order
the destruction of every one he finda
Accordingly there Is every prospect
there will before long be a genera]
moving day tor honey gatherers Id
those communities where bees are still
kept in the old-fashioned way.
The new act was passed In tbe tntereR of greater food production, tor
the box hive containing crooked combs,
have always been unproductive, be
cause in such blves It Is UnpossOtle te
examine and manipulate tbe brood
chambers. Good beekeeping, it U ex
plained by tbe state Inspector ot
aplarla at the coBegB reqnlrM that
every part ot tbe hive Aall be acceeslble to make It posMble to datRmlne
at all tinMs the condition of tbe col
ony.
By the time tbe new law beooBM* op.
etattve, bees now In old hlvee mutt bo
tranMemd to new. Methods for ma^
tag tbs Maasfer are explained la a
balMan ■nddeb may be had by beekMpen It ^ wlU write In to tbs
slate taspwtor cC aptartoe at tbe eab
LOCATION AND DESIGN OF VARIOUS ROADS
iD
BUILDiNG
GOOD ROADS NOW IMPORTANT
TruMportation of Raw Matariale and
Finished ProduRs of Farrauehtng towportanoe.
MOSS SECTlOe ShOR'INS IBM Wr« BUET UOVC SUMt
(Prepared by the Colted SUtes Depart
ment of Agriculture I
The minimum width to aocommoda'e
safely two lines of average b'ir-<edrawn traffic is 14 feet, sod for iiutomi.blle traffic the Vidth preferably
sh-Duld be not lets than 18 feet, th.'ugh
a width of 18 feet is used frequrnfly.
lu order to maintain the travel.-d way
to the required width and to ofTord
proper sefoguards against accldeui.*. It
Is necessary to provide a shoulder not
leM than^hree or four feel wide along
each Bide Of the roadway proper. The
er crown than the rest of the
surface, but they abould be sufficieotly
flat not to-endanger traffic using tl'cm
and really should constitute sn addi
tional width of roadway. This means
that the total width of roaduuy be
tween aide ditches never should I>c len
than 20 feet where horse-drawn traffic
predominates, and 24 feet where any
considerable volume of euiouioblle
traffic Is to be accommodated.
■ Where sharp curves occur In the
alignment It la dealreblo. though not
customary, to Increase the width of
the traveled way. A vehicle being
drawn along a curved road teoda to oc
cupy an appreciably greater width
than where the road is strsigbi. and
nnleH the width of the traveled wsy la
Increased cotreapondlngly. this ten
dency contributes materially to tbs
baaards that tnvarlahly acc&mpeny
sharp corvea. The minimum widths
given above Mould also he increased
oo embankments of any cooslderablt
d^th. so as to make malmcnanes
easier and at the same time dlmlnlMi
fKa danger of aecidenCA
The width of rtght of way required
to provide aU nseeasary area ter tbe
coadway. al<ves sad- dltchea varies
considerably with the nature of tbs
topography. '
In dsffignlag s pitirUe
where the road Is or Is expected to be
come of sufficient Importance to warrunt a highly Improved surface, tbe
mexlnmm grade usually la fixed with
reference to this feature about as fol
lows:
^
;
Coaeul
------ plain and pralrte regloJT^.jISH
• rolling couniry ................... 4 to 6
■ mountalooua regions...........e to 8
The question of minimum grade Is
of Imponnneo only as regards the aide
diicheA Those abould have adequate
fail to empty the water that collects
la them at a Riffldently rapid rate to
prevent damage to the road. Ordinar
ily It la desirable to give the aide
ditches a fall of about one foot per 100
feet of length, though a somewhat Im
fall has proved satisfactory sometimeA
Whererer changes in grade occur
the change sbonid be made by means
of a vRticai curve, and not by as
abrupt angle.
SlopsA
Tbe slope at which earth will stand
when faced up In a ent or pitted In as
embankment depends (1) on tbe chat^
acter of tbe Mrth and (2) tn the cUmatA In cuts, a good quality of nonslaking clay usually will stand on a
slope of about 46 degrees, or. as elope
U expreesed nanaUy. one horirootal to
one vertlcaL even where fairly deep
freeing occura, and in some of tbe
Soutbera states such msterlal has been
known to stand for many years on a
slope of leas than one^balf to ooe. Oo
tbs other hand, clay that slakes very
easily, may require a slope of three to
MA or even four to one, under tbe most
favorable condition of cKmatA but
this latter extreme la vety onnanal.
The usual tiope for clay In cuts Is one
to one In warm climates and one and
ooe-taalt to one la cold’cUmateA
While In the cum of embankmenta
ffiay usually can be deposited oo an
initial slope of about one to ooA this
steep Mope sMdom can be
ly la the question-dT
able grades. In deciding
this que^o^
.
ng thlB
tbe advantages to be gained by reduc- Ordinarily clay embankments should
log all of tbe steeper gradM on a par have a slope of about two to one in
cold dimates and at leaR one and oneticular road to a given maxli
should be wRgbed agalhR the addi hall to one In warm climates; and If
tional coR which the reduction in the day be of qoestiosable quality
these values should be Increased. Em
volves.
bankment slopes require more care in
. The following data and suggestloos
construction than excavation slopeA
are intended to aid tndlvldnal Judg
becauM any flattening of an embank
ment. which necesaartly must be tbe
ment slope by the action of weather
prime factor In solving this Unportaat
after the road Is completed Is very
problc
likely to damage the road surface;
1. The COR of average pleasure traf while the sliding In ot excavation
fic, horse-drawn and motor. Is precti- slcmea usually does do further damage
cally unaffected by grades of not more
side ditch*,
than 8 or 7 per cent <slx or seven feet
. reonened readily,
rise per 100 feet, measured horirontal-, ^
JvJSTqwll^ usually re
ly). provided tbe conditions are snch
Zo to one In
that It U unnecessary to apply the ,
one In embankments.
brakes to vehldes whM descending regardleM of climate.
Moderately
the gredeA But for traffic where loads coarse nnd mixed with gravel will
are as important as speod. even very stand on a steeper slc^te than fine
light grades may b6 of considerable sand, because the former is not moved
dlsadvantagA
so readily by the action of storm we2. Increasing tbe ste^sss of s er.
grade decreases In three distinct ways
Solid rock excavation usually can be
the load a boree can haul: (a) for the ;
^ average slope of about onesame character of snrfacA the required
to one except where the rock
tractive effort or puU per too of load secure la sloping strata separated by
Is increased by about 20 pounds tor; gu„p^
»
In the latter case
each per cent Increase In gndA (b) the
average slope may be as much as
the possible pull the hone can exert u oue-half to ooe or three-fourths to ooe.
decreased by an amount equal to the The faces of rock cuts usually are not
effort required to lilt his own weight dressed down to even aa approximate
through the rlSA This amount Is ap ly smooth slopA 88 is done tn earth
proximately equal to one one-hun cuts. In excavating solid rock only
dredth of the horse's weight for each such material Is moved as Is ectuall.v
per cent Increase In grade, (c) tbe ef necessary to obtain the desired width
fective pull of the horse Is reduced by at the bottom of the cut or as has been
the chutge lu the angle at which the loosened In blasting. Tbe faces shRifd.
pull Is applied.
of conrsA be cleared of all- material
8. The pull a horse can exert on a which is loosA oc„ which might be
level road varies grestly with thq. tn looeened subsequently by frost end
dlvldnal anlmaL and Is affected by the slide down upon tbe roadl Slone em
manner of hitching and tbe skill of the bankments usually will stand on a
driver. The character of the road alope of about ooe to one.
surface also may have an important
In order to prevent damage by waahInfluence by affecting the secutiU of log all earth elopes In either excavstbe horse's foothold.
tlon or Rnbankmeot should be protect
TeRs made by tbe office of public ed by a growth of grass as soon hs
roeds and rural eugineerlng Indicate practicable after they are formed.
that, on a level road, average farm
In many localities where the soli Is
horses untrained to the road can exert fertile and a good quality of grass is
a Ready pull tor several cousecutlve nativs no seeding of the slopes Is nec
hours equivalent to from 0.08 to O.lu essary. In other cases the soil may not
of their own welrfit without undue possess sufficient fmlllty to grow
fatigue, and that by resting at Inier- crass, even when the slopes are seed
valB of from 600 to 000 feet they can ed, sod in which event It may be very
egert a pull equivalent to about 0-28 desirable to cover the slopes with..cut
of their weight, provided the foothold sod. This Utter procoM usnallj U
U good.
very erpRislvA and should be em
A The tests retorrM to above also ployed only where It U known that
Inffleata that with u weU-constrncted thoroHgb seeding and fertilittng ^uld
wagou' the puB required to move a fall to sectfte a covering of sod.
«roM iMd of ooe too over a level road
vartee about as fMlows:
SUTT In order to prevent the washing
sway of 8i3»vatlon slope* U to Utercept water frMU the naturul ground
surface which otoe^vUe would flow
FItd sorth or HaA-May load................ <2 down over toe excaraaon MopA ThU
U done by means of a *n>erm" ditch
In geneaL the Judgment should be courtroeted well back from toe top of
fArsely InfluHesd. la fixing the maxi- the elopA' Mgnpe 2 niuMratoe a coodiaao whlA makM a ■^ma" diwfe
mum grads, by tbe t»jK)C«PbT of
Wflon which the rood traverseA A®- dsMruble and uUo sbowa bow raeh E
eordlhg to the heR current prscflcA ditch u ctmotrueted.
..........
Hl^way authorities are fadng a
new public demand which muR recelve at once the mo« careftfi study.
Every resource of tbe country muR be
utilized to the utmoR and all nnprt^
ductive expenditures of money and enbe foRered by greater efficiency among
those called upon to bear tbe financial
strain on our resources and to furnish
the labor and material needed to supfarm and factory must be supplied to
both nation and private consumer at
the loweR reasonable coR In order
that all may contribute their utmost.
Good Road Nur Chleuga.
whether It be-oall or lur^ to toe
national dafenaA nu trauRtortutlon
ii
before, tor tranapoita^on charg» form
a Urge part of the coR of many eoMotiaU.
UtiUty muR'be gives more weight
• uad Here en
astor
joyment, ortUsafUy-u legitimate ob
ject for s«ne expendltiire of public
toads. muR be relegated to toe back
ground for avtlfflA Our roads have ac
quired an importance as agendea in
which «vin« for
a mobUizatlOQ of our road buUders for
tbs greateR effiidency In the broad
transportation problems ot ths
Ill CM
Ho Rnandal OoprootioiL RiU
Hone Slim the War Btean.
------------------------ of an
Important Weotera dally pdpor raemit*
^made an extaadod vutt to WoRan
Oanada. and In euamlug up toe ra>
■nlta, after gotag thoroughly Into CAdltlons then, nays there u no an«f»fe«i
dRireeMoD in Canada, nor has tbera
keen anything of the Mrt Rnce toa
war begaa. AnyoM who has watched
too berometer of tradA Ad seen the
benk clearings oC the different dtlH
grow and continue to grow will hare
artved at toe same conclusion. The
«de sUtUties reveal a like situation.
The progress tost toe farmers are
making U highly Mtisfactory. As tbU
correspondent says: Tt U true toere
have been adaputions to meet new
conditions, and taxee have been re
vised. and that a very Urge burden of
added expense tn many tines has boa
assnmed. bnt It has alt been done me
thodically. carefully and with toll regard for the resources to be called on.
That this has been done fairly and
wisely u proved by the present com
fortable financlel position.
“With the exception of a restrteted
p«a Id the east, Canada U not an Innstrlel country. The greater portion
of the Dominion moR be classed as
agrlcnltural area, with only an InfiniteRmal part of It tolly developed.
“Lacking complete development the
agrlcnltural portion ot Canada bag
naturally pUced lU main dependence
upon fewer reeonrees than would be
the case lu tbe SUteA Even in peace
timsA bustnen would be subject to
more frequAt and wider finctaatieaa,
due to the narrower foudatibn opoai
wblto It reRu.
Thna, Canada bu been able to
come up to tbe war with effidHcy and
nffidency and to wipH-t* and even
advance Its dviUau octlvltleA
"Canada's firR element of fidaocUl
Rreogto lay U lU branch bank
tern. ThU syRem has two great advastagH: It makes tbe en«pi«i«i rw '
eourcM ot the Domlaln fluid m tost
auppUes of caplUl can ran qnlAly..
from the high spM to the low spotsi
also. It pUoM at tbe command of eaA
Individual bnndi the «amblned reeonreet of the whole tosOtutlon ue
that there U un eSdrat rafAUurd
agalnR Mvere Rnln at any om
pout.
“Here to Winnipeg, toe eB-Oanadu
hanking houses |natoUto big, straog
' ' and, aa cUewhere in the
Dominion, thsM held to an uttitode oC
eanraere and uoUdlty that praveBtud
even toe Ran OC Roy tetheUl d^
That bustnen geoerully U sow eoihtog strong oo an even keel U Uigety
due to tbe aboRote retoaal of thu
banks, both branch ud Independent,
to exhibit tbe sUghteR dgns of esdtemrat or ai^rehensIrmeeA
"For all Canada the nvlngs bunk
flgurH are astonUhlng. Beginning with
1918. they are. for tbe fiscal year end
ing March 81:
1918 .....................................
faMoea^en.
TO REBUILD COUNTRY ROADS 1814............................................ deSdBOJW
1915
fl8S,76I.4«8
Pthsu^, Rural ByRam Laid Out Hun 1916 .......................................... 788.169312
dred Years Ago—VaR Change In
1917 .......................................... 888.7BS3M
Traffic ConditlonA
There figures represent what CanodUns have pot away after paying the
Ths nation's rural road syRen Increased Uvtog cost whldi U about
needs replanning. Prof. Frank A. the same as In tbe SUtee. all toeraaoWan^ of the Masuchusetts Agricul es to tuxn end Imports of all kinds
tural coUege. Amherst. Mass,, today made necesHiy by the war and gen
told the delegates to the convention erous subtetlpBona to war bond
of the American Civic assocUtl<
“Prohihltlon has helped greatly la'
“Our present rural road system
planned years ago and In some sec- keeping the money snpplUs clreuUtr
tloDS they were laid out a hundred Ing to toe Donnal, nocensry ehannelA
years ago,” he Mid. Traffic condi TndesmM geureally attribute a Urge
tions were vastly different then, tbe pert of the good fiiuncUl condltloo to
automobile had not been Invented and the fact that the boore bm has ben
a Urge portion of the crops produced eliminated. Canada tak* Uw enforoomeat with true British serlousneoA
on each farm were consumed or i
/PlnancUlly. as to every other
ufactured at bon>A
“Up to the preseot time major Im spect Canada hat devMASd anffieleney. She has done It to Rrito of toUlal
provements have been confined ti
coodltlau which would not look pMBrect trunk lloee connecting Urge
term of popuUtion. Such roads, there lilag to tbe StntM and Rie has done U
fore, are espedelly valuable for the to a big. strong wsy.
"One of the best things we did." said
movement of heavy freight and are
now being used extensiTely by auto- one ot toe leading Winnipeg bankers
to me. "was to decide early In the
mobUe truckA*’
game that we simply would not borrow
DRAG IS FUNDAMENTAL TOOL troublA
"WeRarted In Ignorance of bow the
war would develop and without know
It Is SItnpleR and CheapeR ef All Im ing exactly what our resoorcH were,
plements—Net Difficult of
and had to find tbe way.
Operation.
‘And yet Canadians are not overbur
dened vrtto tax* nor are they cemEconomy in road building cslU for pUlsing of
For toe coBunod
consideration of tooU, coaRderatlon of people toere has been but a alight tax
operation, and comparison of resultt. totreare. If any. to a direct way. In
On all these points the R>llt4og drag direct payments, of eoursA are made
scores a bnll's-eyA It U the RmpleR to the shape of higher prices for Uvtog
and cheapest of all rood tooU. And It oommodltleA but the price advance on
U the cheapeR and eaaleR to operatA such Items U no heavier than in tbe
And. when assUted by farm imiJe. States to toe same period."—Advertise
ments, it can be mede to do anything moot.
that needs to be done in building the
average earth road; with resulU that
U is difficult to obtain with any other
Tbe straw hath reappearance led
tool, no matter bow expensive It may Barday Warburton. the PbUadelphU
newnaper owner, to aay:
"Before tbe war I often golfed at
BUmta. at the Cbambre d'Amour
Good roads are e
golf IMnka. looking ont over too Bay
of Bb
.
numGsrmsT
MUST KILL WEEDS EARLY
with malted milk, but toere U notoIng more certain to convert a cowpath into a hard-eurfaced highway
than btatoA pha money, plua con-
nan one day:
"Glorious view I (BorUBa vlav, ehr
" TSA Mr. Warburton.* said te TTs
what yon might call a vary fin*
TOBatBA'*
PafleM work with toe drag w
•Tur aeosHaiy during the Maaow wlB
Bean toore for our roads than wn
ttylag te boi^Usasa.
Ms Aapeot
Thera U oothtoc to that OMS btt
te held taota." Ttea hew mm te
icwyen epUt hetot mm RT
IMVERSE cmr PRESS
Priated TveidAyi and Fridiyi by«be
CURATING I 4th of July— Celebrate!
GOTHIC PRESS PRINTINO SERVICE
C. B. Uy«rs,
Oen. Uffr.
GOTHIC PRESS PRINTING SERVICE
Myers L Myers, - Sole Owners
312 South Union Street
Prices You Can Afford.
E. Hutchins
PUISLDC TOIR.UM J. 417
Barlow St.
These two lines we set in rage.
To finish up this pesky page.
Largest stock of FIREWOR^
wc have ever carried. Every
thing in coqipEance with the
State Safe and Sane Laws.
We peck and crate
household goods for
shipping so they “get
there" without break. age.
~^K»tehft9*ed !•#»
The City Book Store R
THE HO'BART CO., Prop s.
Phone 157
Help Your Boy or Girl
HuiaiES
Electric
anges
WIN A PONY
BY BUYING YOUR
GROCERIES FROM
Walker Grocery' Co.
539 W. Front St.
BOTH PHONES
WTO more cookmg by gueeework. Electric cooking ie
repladag guesswork with
an almost edentiBc euctDess. It
makes cooking successes the rule,
failures rare. It gives food a
richer, better flavor, a deliciousness
before unknown. The Hughes
Electric Range is setting this new
standard of cooking excellence —
making a nation of better cooks.
Th« abnlaiely even b~t el > HngbM
Electric Rang* gives a anVoniuty cf
results hithano impoaalbla.
ConnsM
waictiiog; is o
mrad in advancs.
The Haghea Blaetrie ovsa, with its
hesv^ly insutatad, hast ratsinint arslla,
savea ^aatly in meat shiinleaca end
gives tba mast a 6nar, battat fiavoi.
Cakes and bread rise avaolj and brawn
niurormty. bacanaa of tbs aronOarioPy
even bM tbnoghoat ttw even. Tban
no air enrrana to cany ofl tba rtcb
jo^.laa. nor gasaoos fotlias to winracalnere
iba food.
With such a raara as Aia, avaty wetnaa
can bccoDS a betur coot When to bar
cate In preparation la addad perfection
in cooldng, is it any wonder that Hngbaa
Elaotric Ranges are being bought by
tbouaanda, that avary range inataDad in
a neighborhood bacotnat Iba canter of a
gtoa-ing group af uaeta?
U< OS teU you more about tba dsanHoaas and convaniaoca <if tba Hngbsb
Eleotile Range, end abow you bow tnoeb
batter raaulta yoo can obtain with It than
with any otbar fooMng aatbod.
BUY
of
««•.'
It is^e energy that
ies you swi
ener—*-"
through
POWER makes vour car easy to drive on the Road or m Traffic.
Power makes you'forget
1 forget the ___________
mechanism ..
mechani
of your car. It meets the
noticeable effort, without
wi
emergencies of ti avcl and traffic without
Studehaker
............. That IS the way Sludebaker
has has made Studebaker cars the
most powerful cars on the market in ratio Jo weight.
^ They made them powerful by perfecUnp
four year^Stud^
and perfecting Studebaker motor designs, until today StuSebaker ia
the most powerful ear on the market, in ratio to size or cost.
At the same time it is economiially powerful. It gives you great
poWer with very reasonable gasoline consumption.
Prices F. O. B- Detroit.
THURSDAY, JULY 5
Makind a Nation
o/'Befier Gxks
ECONOMICAL POWER
POWER-Power is the very
“T1 JIBERTV”
ADRAHAOFTHE BOUR X
A Patriotic Serial
Different
from
the
Usual
Will be shown with the last episode of “Peg O’ The
Ring” at the
PALACE THEATRE
West Michigan Garage
116^118 State Street
Queen City Brand Coffee
30c lb.
SAVE COUPONS FOR ALUMINUM
■'
WARE PREMIUMS.
The Coffee Ranch
213 E. Front St.
Here’s the Way I am Going
to Share Profits With YoU
3^ for money ^Su must spend
EVERY WOSAN BAY NOW EQUIP HER KITCHEN
WITH HIGH QUALITY ALUBINUB WARE
Every time you make a Cash Purchase you
will receive a Free Aluminum Coup>on cor
responding to the amount of your purchase.
Save these and when you have the necessary
amount of coupons bring them to the store
and receive the Aluminum Ware they entitle
you to. absolutely FREE.
We know you will appreciate this as yon
may acquire a full set in this way of this
feautiful Sanitaiy Ware now on exhibition in
our window.
City klectric Light
242 E. Front St.
GET IN m PONY
CONTEST
YOU CAN JOIN
Any Day Next Week
McCormick, “of Course”
GROCERIES
Cltswu* Phon. 271 402 SOUTH UNION STREET Tr.ver.cCUy. Mich
Vacation Clothes
JULY THE FOURTH and vacation
" time is at hand. For camping, fish
ing. boating, tennis and golf you need
Vacation Clothes.
J^UXBAK SUITS, Khaki and Linen
Pants, Sport Shirts, Cool Under
wear, Swimming Suits, a comfortable
Fishing Hat, Soft Collars and Wash
Ties. Come in and talk it over with
us—we can help you get ready.
/-VUR SNAPPY SPORT SUITS are the ideal dress for going on a
visit to your friends. As soon as you come here and see these
Sport Suits, you’ll understand why this is true. They're the style for
styliiSi men: Belt all around, three-quarter belt and plain back—all
beaiioff the military “swing” so stylish now in men’s wear.
Prices, $7.50 up.
STORE WILL BE CLOSED ALL DAY. WEDNESDAY. JULY 4th
OopyrigMHHtM,^.
Hamilton Clothing Company
Style Leaders
The boys and girls who have enrolled
their names in the Dunlap Pony Con
getting busy gall.111,;
gathering in
m
|||t
votes, to such an extent Miat it has be
come bothersome to some of the merjrhants who are backing the contest and
Uie Press has found it Deoes.sary to ask
all children to not stay in front of the
stores asking for votes as the customers
come out. The Press appreciatea the
Tact that these vote getters are exiremly anxious to win the pony but they
should remember that they can get
many more voles by aakingtheir friends
to trade witb the merchants who give
pony votes and saving their votes for
Ithem. Any child who has enrolled can
[get post cards to mail to their friends
asking them to save their votes, by
|c»Hing at the Press office. They are
I neatly printed wiUi a picture of the
pony on one side and a letter asking
jfor votes is printed on the other side.
WTiile the contest has been under
headway for nearly two weeks there is
still room for some more contes^ts.
It costs you nothing to enter. The boy
- girl who wins the pony wili be the
I who has reel American pluck.
ENROLL TODAY and gel ypur pony
-otes at the following stores:
Walker Grocery Co., Foote's Old
Stand
Palace Theatre
Progress Laundry
Paris Sugar BowL Pine Candies
and lee Cream
A. V. Priedridi Shoe Stm
J. N. Martinek t Son. Jewelers
J. H. Steinberg, Dry Goods, Cloaks
and Clothing
Johnson Drug Co., the RexMI Store
Witaon Pnnutore Co!, .Fnn&a-e
and Floor Coverings
■.
Traverse City Press.
COSTS YOU NOTING TO m
Some child in Traverse City
will win a pony, A little r
hustle and ^oui, may . Win: ;,
JMODGETS
classified ads
RATES—One cent per word for first insertioa or three iaeues fer the price of two, excepttog Real Estate Ads which ran at one
cent per word per issue. SITUATIONS
Wanted run free of charge. '
[<piwrBaiiti!3tliiiiier»lpiji
at Aitiirrami’a
WANTED
BOYD’S
Service
Taxi, Transfer and Dray
_
-OfTh* pbooes-
Cit2 3uaad307
Bell u»
_____Res- R-108i Citixeno
tric lights, for sale cheap. Call Bell
WANTBD-Girl fer general house kw.
28.3
work. two in family. Good wages,
quire 481 W. Fifteenth. Cilz. Phone FOR SALE—Lawomower in good
fibs.
2S-8 condition. 18 inch cut. Cheap for wh
SAXON TAXI LIliE
KOY GUnmiE. Mgr.
Large Comfortable Cars
>'rompt Service Regulalion Prices
:TJ4 E. Kront Phone 11^4, Bell 13Gw
447 E. Front St.
WANTED—To exchange, 8 good or
gan for wall papering, paper furnished.
Apply 239 East Front St.
3
I GOLD COW BUTTER
I
Give
your Battery
a Cool Drink
j
Your battery gets as thirsty as you do this hot weather- and it
do»’t take Jong to make a thirsty battery a dead one.
Fill it with distilled water once a week—as often as you take a
hydrometer test.
If you haven’t pure water, or don’t want the trouble of filling :.-our
battery yourself—we'll do it for you.
Willard Service is good for any battery—v/.iether it pves it a
thorough overhatiling, or merely fills and t cri s it. And if your battery
needs repairs it provides a rental battery for your use whatever the
make or nwdel of your car.
Drop in next time you're dov.-r this way—and if ynv; haven’* r
already get a Willard Service '.jrd that entities yju to .'rec-----.•
monthly testiitg.
TRAVERSE CITY BATTERY SHOP
II5 EAST STATE STREET
TRAVERSE CITY, MICHIGAN
Traverse City Creamery
Minnetonna Home
Creamery
FOR SALE
FOR SALE—Houod pups of choice
breeding, < mo. old. Cheap If tMwa
al once. These pups wffl make good
general purpose dogs. E. A. Knowles.
WAKTED-SALESLADiES.
SUple 811 S. Union.
31^
articles, salary or commiasioo. Drop
card and I will call. W. fl. Ecabroad.
FOR SALE—Overland touring ear,
Traverse City.
overhauled, tires practically new, elec
I LOST—On Central School grounds at
lOldSetfler s picnic, bla^k crochet band
I bag with purse inside, about 82 mosey,
: two handkerchiefs and door key. Find• erldve at Press office.
Phone 314.
2^
FOR SALE—Completely equipped
motor boat at less than cost of engine.
Inquire Press office.
24tf
FOR RENT
FOR REOT—Modem bouse, close in.
Inquire at Press Office.
2T-3
HOW $1001)00,000
FUND WILi BE SPENT
ISfflsSiiess Gasnis
Red Cress Cheiraiea TeRi Of Ww
Relief nans
GERANIUMS
"'“PROFESSIONAL
DRS. TRUEBLOOD & TRUJ stLOOl)
teopathic Physicians. FITS-U classfitted. 40G Wilhelm.BuiliSrig,
DR. SARA ^ASE, 4(l7 State Bank
Block. Diseases of women and cbNd
The way in which the Red Cross
war council plana to upend the $100,000.0^ fund which ia being raised was
explained by Henry P. Davison, chair,
man. In a letter from him to the Red
Cross.
DR. W. J. HIGGINS - - DENUST
The purpose to use the bulk of the
GOOD Dentistry FINE Preparations
fund In the purchase of necessary
for Painless’^
snppllea was made clear in Mr. Dav
ison’s letter. He gave assurance that Snxith A Price Bids.
■only a small percentage of each dol
RB.KYSEUCA.M.D.
lar contributed would be required to
.ROOM 2
Dry Cleaning and Steam Pressing carry the relief to Ua destination,”
City Opera House Block
.
because of the volunteer character of
Both Phones
the best American talent In medicine,
Residence.
Office *
GEORGE F. ROWE, Prop.
sankatioo. transportation, construe- M3 So. Uoien SL
Telephone
Itlon welfare work, purchasing, comCite. 2»
Gite 519
I merclal hnslness, acconntlng and along
other llnesCONNINE & CONNINE
Baae hospitals will continue to be
organised, to he tamed over to the
401 Stale B^^uOdiag
army at once for service la Prance.
CItePhpaeSr* .
Untu fer military axLd navai mobUlgaE. H. Burrozvs & Son
Uon eampa wRl be proidded. Supplies
DRAYLIRBS
must be purebaaed. collected, trana
low E. Eighth
Citz. Phone 796 ported and stored. Hospital ships are
BENRU.SSCL
to be bought, equipped and manned. Ughi Dray A Baggage Lmm. Oin. Pbooe
A sanitary engineering corps will be 985. Re*. Pbewe 234.
formed. ITie extent of all this preps
be estimated, Mr.
BERrmULLEN
^
for
BEDDING PURPOSES
Porch boxes, baskeU. etc.
PADTS GREENHOUSE
- TRAVERSE CITV STEAM
UUNDRY
EAST SIDE TAXI LINE
MOBERN 7-ROOM HOUSE
-
FOR
.SALE
-
whether
AT A BAKOAIN
CREAM ar
PHOTO-PLAYS
HOME OF GOOD PICTURES, PERFECT VENTIUTION AND THE $5,000.00 PIPE ORWN
CHANGE OF PICTURES EVERY DAY.
MATINCE DAILY AT 2:15
EVENING AT 7:00
,/x K. oi
ob.jej^nings
The Press, lOc month
'
Jisge
m
MONDAY
Bryant Washburn and Marguerite Clayton, in
s
Admissions a lo cents
“The Prince of Graustark"
w^TSllv
If Chummy Roadster
and Two Act Keystone Comedy
TUBS.
WED.
'A Lasky Paramount picture. Another notable
Fannie Wari-Lasky Achiovi-ment
“THE* DERELICT"
and a Good Black Diamond Comedy
and Hearst Pathe News Weekly
Adults IS cents
*
The car that combines all the
patterns of aR ordinary road
ster with the conveniences of
a touring car.
A iiiolure with a moral
and Irene Fenwick and Owen Moore, in “A GIRL LIKE THAT”
Children 6 ceot.
422 Rose SL
Alice Brady, in “DARKEST RUSSIA"
A Metro Wonder Play of the Womao Redeem
ed, in five acts.
and Hearst Pathe News Weekly
at these pricrt In t|ie Slat* ^ MtcbigaB.
Saxon Chummy Roadster
••PLENTY OF ROOM FOR FOUR PEOPLE"
SUN.
SSiSSSrSH
lhc.se prices: Adults 10c.
Children be.
10c for adult*. Tburs•brceacts of high class
•Dd b^st sbflVr
rS7^/r-;/; a ‘B'lg^ealure Gvery^Dayl
716
' Phone R547
LODGES
Five Beel Peerless Screen Version of n Mc^drams Showine Conditions in Russia thal llaspily
SAT. '
All work
HENRY L GROESSER
Painting and Paperhangiitg
Satisfaction gearaoteed
EXTRA - THREE Aas OF REHNED VAUDEVILLE - EXTRA
and Barton Holmes Travels, “THRU CANADIAN CANYONS.”
D. H. DEVENDORF
Painter and Paperhanger.
Ready for nif now? Best of work.
\ Paramount picture that i'- diUercnt; in five acts
and the last chapter of “THE 6REAT SECRET" with Francis Rushman
______________ and Beverly Bayne.
FRIDAY
EDWARD MARTIN
Painter and Paperbenger. Estimates
cheerfully giveB. 219 E, Tenth St,
Citz. Phone H011
12-9
FRANK HUNT
I Painter and Paperhanger.
Pbont
;iG6H6. Residence 861 East Eighth St.
children 5 cents,
THURSDAY
Mme. Petrova, in
*en,issio,. n«loe
“WAITING SOUL”
Plumbioi; and Repair werk. Estimates
cheerfully furnished. Res. 91S-WTishinglon Sf- atz. Phone R397.
12-1?
fuaranleed. Samples on request.
W. Seventh. CiU. Phone 401.
EXTRA - THREE ACTS OF REFINED VAUDEVILLE - EXTRA
Adu«.«cent.
247 Cite Phone
511 E. EXgfatb
PLUMBING AND REPAIRINC
J. D. SMITH
PAIPrnNG >ND PAPERHANGWG
In five acts from George Darr McCutch.-on’s Novel
Fanny Ward, in
Admb.ioni loc
“BETTY TO THE RESCUE"
MARK CRAW^
For light draying and baggng;G calls.
Phone Number Forty.tw’o
48-4
If you want rubbish hauled, gardens
plowed er any kind of dra^c
CONTINUOUS
YOU CAN COME AS LATE AS 9:30 AND SEE A FULL SHOW
PROGRAM FOR THE WEEK OF JULY 2nd to JULY 8th
Light and Heavy -Dray. HoiBebofrt
Goods Moving a Specialty. Auto Truck
Service.
Phones. Cil2. Office 3^
Res ^1096
NOW $935 f- fc- DETROIT
— FOR SALE BY —
Saxon Agency
F. C. RICE, Agent
324 E. Front St.
Both Phones
L O. O. F.
Craad Traverse Ledge No. SOS
Meets every Thursday Evening in
their hall 221 E. Front sL at 8 o’clock
ED. MARTIN,
L. McMAHAN,
________ N. G.___________ Secretary
LAWN MOWER REPAIRINC
LAWN MOWERS-Rcpaired and
ground and kept la shape all summer.
Called for and delivered by
J. K. LONGWELL
Price 75 cents
Call 42 both phones or38 Citizens Dhooe
04STRUCTIWM
TRAVER3R riTY PRESS.
Doans SavedNy Life
“I Hi4 OlTM Dp Hope” Stpi Hi.
D«t.-'BitO>iii'iIlduTPUl>
Cml He PenuieitlT.”
L: -•
“Hr kidwr troabU beftn with baek<
actie. which nc oa
about a y^,” aar*
"
Bruaiwick, Qa. "Hr
bade fot K> I wa* at
—WbU to aU«>.
in a chair. Of
FAMOUS
AMERIi
Ti'T Afi
CUMBEIISTAIIIS
ONHERHimilS
TMDliWilkOpriih. Opnte
AM,!. Sm! Iir
A
-froB my if*
atripa. I lay there paatieg, and iuat
about able to catch mj breath. I had
ftre doetore; each one aatd it
^ken 'Doan’i Kidnej- Pille
tons before I began to feel better. I
kept on and wa» noon able to get op.
The ewalling'irrednally went away and
when I bad need elereti boxea 1 to
ootnpletely enred. I ha*a nerer bad a
hit of trouble unee. I owe my life and
nr health to Doan'a Kidney Pilla."
Cat DaasS ai Aar Staea. She a Baa
DOAN'S “p'fi.’l.V
POSmtAIUUkN CO« BUFFALO. N. Y.
PAST FLY KILLER
S£
TMT aknrty
Starry emblem of our
country rich in history
and honor
j4nd the grand
old banner will soon be making
more history andreceivinggreat
er honor on the battlefields of
Northern France and Belgium
lOrGH as yej the baby of natiooa. Ooclc Sam has rouny flag* of wblob he baa
reason to be proud. Moat of them are
In the possession of the gOTemroent, but
II few are owned by Individuals or
umiy posta.
One of ihetn. now kept at the statehouse at Annapolis. Md.. was carried by
the Maryland troops during the war of
the Ajnencun Revolution, and Is made In accord
ance with the act of congress. June 14. 1777. It 1#
iK>sltlvelv known to have been the reglmhotal
flag of the Third ManUnd regiment, commanded
by Col John Eager Howard, at the battle of Cowpens. S. C.. In January. 1778. In which light It was
held by WllllBro Bachelor. Bachelor was sent
home to Baltimore wounded and took bla flag with
him.
After Bachelor’s death tn March. 1781, the flag
remained In bis family, and when the British In
vaded Maryland In 1814 this same flag was carried
by wmiaro, Bachelor’s aon. In the battle of North
Point, aa a banner for the Twenty-seventh Mary
land reglmeoL This WUllam Bachelor died In 1885.
The flag, in IWT. was presented to the state of
Maryland and haa since then repowd In Its capital
building at Annapolis.
' ^
Another famous banner Is tBe battle flag ot Commsndant Oliver Haiard Perry, the same which
flew successively on the masts of his flagships,
the Niagara and the Lawrence. In the battle of
Lake Erie, September. 1818. This flag had been
made at Perry’s express command, but at the sug
gestion of Parser Hambleton. ha added the words ’
It bore. “Don’t give up the ship," the last uttered
by Captain Lawrence, killed tn the fight In JnnA
1813. between the EogUah and American forces.
These words have errooeously been attributed to
Perry, but are. In fad. an adoption of Lawrence’s
sentence to Perry's flag. The banner U a bnnUng
of one solid color bearing Its famoui mono in
large letters across Its face, and Is now kept at
the United Satea Nevnl academy at AnnapollA
A British Trophy.
In the same ehamber at the acadeay ts a gurgcons royal British stands^ whldi was captured
from the parliament bouse when the capital of
Canada fell, In 1818. Into Amerieon hands. It Is a
magnificent ensign with five qoartertngs. ell In
radiant tone*, the heraldic blasonry being such as
was used In the tliae of George 111. In one corner
Is a red lion poised In air, to denote Scotland; In
another Is the golden harp of Ireland: two other
quarters contain three golden rampant Uons for
England, while In the central quartering Is a com
bination of the arms of Saxony, Hanover, Bran*wick and Luneburg. with some emblems of the
Holy Roman empire.
In the National rouseoro In Washington Is (he
real Star Spangled Banner, the same flag whlrh
floated over Fort McHenry In September, 1814.
when It was attacked ,hy the British, and the one
aronnd which Key wrote his Immortal poem. ReIngSfl by28feet.il will hang from the second story
of a bullitlng to the first floor. In spite of time
It Is well preserved, and the stars and stripes
which “gleamed through the perilous fight" are
still plainly to be seen.
Mexican trophies are to be seen at the Naval
academy. These flags are all unique In design,
bearing the Mexican condor standing on a caiTna,
with a snake In its mouth. Tbew are several of
this war. one of them being the flag captured by
Ocn. Winfield Scott and Commodore Matthew Per
ry at the fall of Vera Crui in 1847.
In the antechamber to the rooms of the secre
tary of war. tn Washington. U the famous flag
which flew over Fort Sumter In April. 186L when
It was flred on by the Confederate battertsa. Thia
was the shot which opened the great war between
the states.
The flag of the Merrimac Is now owned by the
family of the late Capt Beverly Llttlepage. for
merly of Waahlngton.
Asother flag of the Merrimac Is In the posse*-
Ooo,,, I d>»ld
have an operuttom
and my friends
tbooghtlwouldDot
Uve to move into
oaroewbooM. My
dangbtar asked me
iMom newSmeu «M<i. oA
garden work, ibov^eddirt, *d__bBfld-
uj riAc TV as /auJiEVMr o/oa
first American flag that came Into existence after D. Bax ISO, Richmond, lad.
the enactment of congress. As evidence of the
theory they point to the 12 stars Instead of 18.
Had this flag had sn official predecessor the mis
Regan's Flag.
take in the niiinber of stars would hardly have
In the rooms of the Stevenson Post at Boxbury,
occurred.
Mass., is preserved one of the strangest banners
This historic sUndard. kept imai^by long and
the wortd haa ever seen. In a tobacco factory In
loving care, shows its age In mueb^frajM edges
Richmond, In Civil war times, many Federal sol
and worn patches. The 12 stars, arranged In
diers were prisoners, among them a Timothy J.
three parallel perpendicular roivs. still stand out
a great big.
WAR USES FOR FACTORIES
Regan. Began conceived the Idea of making a flag
Btancbly on their unstable foundation, for the
fnU. marnetl man ought to be
of Federal Stars and Stripes even In the cloae
bine field and the IS red and white stripea have
Into the armr Jost Che same as enrcooflaaineat of their prison. ‘There were about 20
grown pathetlcaUy threadbare.
body else?
Can Be Mad* la Their Plants in
men and they secretly got together the materUL
Hub—Mr dear, he onlr looks tall:
The National musenm contain* a coUeeflon of
Casa af Emervenoy.
A flannel shirt made the bine gronnd. s shin of
aa a aaner of fact, be is probabir
remnants of flags that participated In ntval en
white cotton famiahad the whits stare, end goodi
gagements from the time of tbe Revolutionary atar
ibort—Judge.
Here Is a paragraph, snipped not
were bought sufficient to make the red and whlto
to the war with Mexico: also tboee of foreign veean article by George Creel la Every
stripes. In biding, they worked at their task till at
eels of war captured by the navy during thoea
body's Magazine, which Bbowt the war
last It wui finished. It was thrown to the wind at
periodA ThU display of fragments ts quite inter
les to which various peaceful taaBOonce tn a place wUch was riiehered from the
esting. It was collected by Peter Force of Wash
icteriee can be subjected:
view of the guards, then torn Into strips and di
Manr a toHo’s wit is aharpened ou
ington. and preeented by him to the library of
“A manufacturing Jeweler v A atvided among the men. After the war. Regan, by
the gTlndatooe of porertrcongr«s, which transferred it to the NadonM
prised to learn that hla plant.. with
'
persistent effort, managed to get together sU the
museum.
a
few changes, could turn out pmlpieces and bad tbsm eewn Into a flag, which U
Among these remnants fa a piece of tbe Brit
acopee; a saah-chaln maker foond
now at Boxbnry.
ish flag of La Onerrtere. need daring her encoun
that
Ua
machines
were
adaptad
’
The flag of the Maine, the ship wboM sinking
ter with the Conatitntlon. and of the Java, worrted
precipitated the Spanlab-American war In 1888. Is
by the eaine indomltabte American, as well aa a to the produedon, at cartridge dlpa
kept at AnoapotlA Near by the banners captured
fragment of the flag of tbe Algerine brig Zonra. for rifles and mscalne guns^a i^doograph concern was discovered to be
by Dew^yTit Manila from the Spanish, as weU as
captured under Decatur.
well fitted for the manufacture of ceatropbias of the battle of SasUaga
A dlvialon of the mnseom's flag conectioo retaln deUcate sbeU part*; maken of
The banner which floated over the North polA
lates to the dm war. and tis most Interesting
underwear may be relied oa for hnnraised there April 6, 1800. by Commander Robert
of these is the garrison flag of Port Moultrie. In
dagea;
a manufacturer of muMe-toQa
E. Peary, now Ues for ttlekeeplng lo the vaults of
Charleston harbor. South Carolina. This flag was
for
gauges; a cream-separatorptaattor
n Mfe deposit company In WasblngtoiL It was
lowered December 28. 1890. when MaJ. Robert
made by 1^ Pa«£^ Stare being worked In
Anderson. First United States artillery, moved abell-primers; a sewing machina com
«» th* wind on the
his forces to Fort Sumter. The flag was secured pany for galnsa; a recording and eomshores of the Polar sea for more than a fourth
liv hl« second in eommtnfl. Capt. Ahner Double y«tlnc macblae plant for fnato; «n
of Its drcumfereoce. The bit* of white Vth
day. and remnlned lo his poM»««lnn urMi proa set- tnfanta’ food edneetn for AMI ptaga:
which It I* dotted indicate the fragments which
ed to the SmlthKonlen Instttutlon at Wn«hlngton- drug raanufaeturera and dye wotka tot
the explorer left with records st different pieces
In the Nstional museum also la the United high exploalTee; finished abril* nay be
Id hlB Jouruey. Some were deposited at Cape
States flag ralaed la New Orleans by the volunteer expected from candle-maken, flovMorris K. Jessup, the farthest northern point of'flag committee after the oedupadon In iwc. This mllleru, tobacco manofaetorera. and
land on earth; one was left at Cape Thomas Hubsilversmiths can make
was tbe flrat Federal flag ralaed by cltixen* of any
hard. another at the starting point of the dash
ballet jackeo, and
of the-Confedentac states after the commence
for the pole—Cape Colurabla-five bits are In the
a be mads la
ment of hostiUdea. Here. too. ts the flag of the caps; while abrapnM ^aa
lee of “Peary’s Farthest North," In 1908. and one
gas engine works, car faetortea, etaeUnited
States
ship
Kearaarge.
In
nae
at
the
dme
Is yet In the eternal «tlinea# of the North pole
of tbe surreader of the Confederate cruiser Ala trlc elevator worits. locomotive weeks,
Itself.
Store
fouodries
sad
machine
ships.”
bama.
Blao
the
flrat
United
Stetes
flag
raised
In
A proven women’s remedy,
Oldest Flag In Mosevm.
Richmond after the surrender. This was used as
which asmsts in regulating the
The oldest flag tn the National museum, at
Started Right In to Fight
heedquartera flag by Gen. E. O. C. OrdL U. 8. A.,
organs, and re-establiAing
Washington. Is the first United SUtes flag of
when be took possession of the city.
•They qasrreled ImmedUtely after
hemthy'Condition& Beecham’a
which there U authentic record. This Is the ban
The history of our war with Spain la mus- the wedding ewemony."
Pillg contain no haUt-forming
ner of John Paul Jones. On the very day the law
“That sol While the gaests w«a
was enacted estebllablnc a national flag for the
drug—leave no disagreeable
_____ ____________ There U here the Spanli
there?"
United States of America. June A 1777, congress
after-effects. They are—
“Tea, right tn the presence «f ev
garrlaoo flag used at Port San Crlstobgl. 8*
appointed John Paul Jones to be commander of
erybody. It seemed a dlsgiscsffBl
Juan. Porto Rico, daring tbe endre war, a*
the Ranger. History does not relate, with au
floated over tbe fort during the bombardment by thing to do until 1 caught the idea.** ,
thority. the exact date of the making of the
“What was tbe Wear
the American fleet May 12. 1888. There Ia too.
Ranger's flag, but It must have been very soon
flag lowered from the ensti
•Tt semned he wanted to conrioea
Bftgr the congressloael enactment, becense the
PoDce.
all of us that be was not matTyiag
A. Pc
plaza.
.. . Porto Blco. when It i
war department states that ’The ship Ranger,
t
the United States. Tbs> yellow stripe
In this flag her to escape war.”
hearing the Surs and Stripes and commanded
ve It a chance
(
was
painted
red
to
give
. Mb«..io«.saw
by Capt Paul Jonaa. arrived at a Freni* port
Identlflcadon. Another fleg here was taken from
Juat the Thing.
about Eiecember 1, 1TT7. and her flag received, on
the trenches before Sandago. end sdll another Is
“Where can I lean to ha an e
Febmary lA 1778, the first-ealnte ever paW to an
a guidon nsed by Spanish Infantry at Porto Rico. OD tear' “I suppose a samon
American flag by foreign naval vessels."
The ran*eam Is also custodian of the pennant would be the idea for you."
Later. Paul Jones set his loved ensign high
flown by Admiral Schley on the Brooklyn during
will reduce tofisned. gwcrflm
above the Bon Homme Richard and It waved trtJolata. Spralna. BruiMa. Soft
the battle of Sandago.
many «a .........
fierce eoconnter
with the
mphant
—
Bttocbw HeoM Bella, PoU
The United States Marine corps bas a number
tom
of the new country, "rhe most notable of
EwiL Qulttor. Flatola and
of flags of vital Import. Tt Is proud of Its
these
was
when
it
came
In
contact
with
the
Brit
lofecMd norm quicktr
ish
ship
Serepls
In
1778
and
went
down.
Oommoas it u « pocitirc antuepde
winning them. Tbe Marine corps possesses the
■ad fcnnieidt. PlaMHI »
dor Jones rescued his precious “starry flag" and
flrat American flag under Are In Cuba. Tbls flag
hoisted it over the captured Serapls, bringing It
was raised by the Marine battalion at Gnantahome covered with honor.
name,
the tenth of June. 1888. and flew during
The museum authorities believe this to be tbe
the hundred btmrs of cootlnuous fighting by
marines at that polnL After lu use In tWt
^
tU --T-—- Mtn Cl.00 SCI MM ■
■.In W Mwix. wm Id m MR ■ r« wm.
gagement It was btuied down end sent to head
quarter* at Washington.
^LF^rOoI»»?rD.T..WwXswiacla»d.Ba*A
Another noteworthy flag belonging to the corpe
visit to the tomb of th«
Is the signal flag used by Sergeant Quick at
The following account of the funeral cortege of
battle of Cuzco. During the engagereeDt the Beet
the Turklah crown prince Is given by Alexander
An,r a.
“ J!
Brody, who saw the ceremony:
was aerionsly endangering the unaeee msrtnea
and ProgresA’’ the Young Turk*. In Parisian dresa
On tbe scarlet covered cofito In whld> the body
land, who already had the Spaniards surroauded.
Some of the faces were milk white: now and then
of JusBUf IzzedtHa the crown prince of Tuikey.
A volunteer was requested to go out and sigDal
one saw a gray head among them.
who bad kUled himself In his harem, was carried
to the fleet to stop firing. Sergeant Quick fn>lu the eyes of the dervishes burned the Are of
to tbe grave Uy hi* fez. or “kalbag," to token of
medlately responded, aud In full view
.
the pest; to the Tounc Turk* that ofjhe future.
hi* military career.
enemy stood and wig-wagged the Dolphin tt etop
Which one IS approaching his last hour In the
The coflto was made of wood, for metal Is too
firing. The signal flag wt» rent In several places,
Ozman lands?
•eaive even for a prince, and it was borne by the
but
the
sergeent
escaped
Injury.
For
this
The bead of a more conservative Turk came In
wto love to gratify
of the royal honsehold. Jussul had been
received a medal and honorable mention.
view, that of the new heir to the snlian’s throna
Uad to hla aervantt although^.stern with 0»elf
children's desire hr
Among some later flags to come Into poa
Vabdeddln. of Persian type. »on«- narrow-nosed
of tbe Marine corps ts the large United Bute*
the game articles ct
features resembling Abdul Hamld'a
**A*gigandc negro with the eyes of a faithful
flag nsed by the marines during tbe slega of the
One may only eonject’jre coneernlug this
hound constantly smoothed the red cloth lest a
food and drink due
legation In Pekln«at the tlme’of the Boxer riots
sentatlve of ro^iey, grown up to the shade of the
wrinkle might dishonor the *eemUn« of the occa
It
may
be
recalled
that
the
guard
of
the
Oregon
harem
walls.'
In
constant
companionship
of
women
grown-ups use, fiad
sion. and he kept constant watch on the pallbear
served to Petdtxg. Tbls was their post flag and
of tbe Orient, who never divulge enythlag about
er The BOO burly negro eunuchs were as one tn
Wee
planted
on
the
Tartar
city
walk
where
It
_
their lords and maaterA The new crown pri^ Is
their grief. FoUowlng them were the chamber
jeolonsly
guarded.
Later
It
was
hoisted
oa
the
long past middle age. Behind him rode Prt^
and attrtidants of the household, with red
ruins of the Imperial Chian Men as a ffignal to
Medald. aged and worn: to fact the whole royal
rana on thMr bUA heada.
the allied fbrcaa. and tt has the honor of being
femlly has left y<wtb behind.
'
The coffin waa f«8tlr Uld oa the Mnaaala taaay.
A piamrel TO. mtOj epre to oerwy eowBSMr.
The first signal the latter bad that thatr trtendi
h. group of A^s came next The ra^ of ^
a
prayer
stone,
fragmenta
of
an
old
Greek
column
JUST WHAT TOO WAFT. PwOcokn FRO.
were stlU living. Tbe flag shows ita hard oaag*
cold
hpring
sunlit
threw
pale
gold
over
the
fancy
dating
back
to
the
daya
of
the
vlctortouB
wnperora.
A«dn«. WH. T. bOVX. LOMAX OiJWOq
at the hands of Its eoemleA bMng ton to eer.
coetumea of theae men of the,dee«rt
Tbe holy prayer waa chanted: “Btasm Blah Irraheral pUcea by voBcya of shot and abell assailnian, etoamd ve niahl, rebbl ul alemln" (“In tbe
tog It
of God. the merciful and gradous"). Then
Asother Qilsaae memento possessed by tbe Ma
jttit dko diing,
.(he holy men approached, dervlibes of all ranks,
rine
eorpa is a larga Imperial flag captured oa tbe
laerieTs and raputlA tbe monks wbo Impoae punwalls of Tteotmn by tbe marines whent they I
jMmMit on tbenmelveo by impoMng camel’adislr
taekad the dty. This it ■ large
two feet high on thMr beadA Tbo fsnstleal
^allfiiea. iru-tM.
SUM
Countless Women
find—
that whea sufiering from
nervousness, sick headache,
dizzjr spells and ailments
peculiar to their sex—
notlung affords sudi prompt
and wdoome rdief, as will
follow a few doses of
BEEEHAM'S
PHIS
Nature’s aid
to better Health
ABSWBIne
i2?S5?-£ir,tr;rsr-ss
uiokm
Mon of Mr. C. F.AJuhther of Chicago; this was the
first one raised, bat was shot away. The flag
owned by the Llttlepages Is the second one run np.
WTEWTSaSlgiSH
ruM lANis Bajwtjsaaa
FUNERAL OF TURKISH CROWN PRINCE
S^asfeSSr^-s’S
PARENTS
W Biacr&'isss”
Tlw Higb Cost of Living
and How to Reduce It
Instant
PosniH
OUraiseTeetli Bought
Itetb aong U heartrending. The green doth about
of some todlcatM that they bsve airtved
W. N. U. DETROIT, NO. Sfl-tli7.
Mlver. although they have no contempt for gold.
—New York Herald.
traverse city press
L T. COOPER Tir PROVE
VL)hdl*Vitell Dres;
HIS FAMOUS THEORIES
Women Will
Renowned Lecturer end Scieotist Will Prove Pamout
Heeltii Theoriea—Man Who Electrified Latter Cities
to Give People of Hiis Section Benefits of Smdy and
Medicine—Many Hiousands are Benefitted.
A S WAS MjnoTmoed in Ust week’s papera. Hr. L. T. Cooper, the Millumeire Philanthropist who «lectii£ed
larger cities of the 001111117
with his damonstration of practical philanthropy, health theories and cele
brated medidne, Tanlae, has been inrited to ridt Datroit and other Michi
gan dtiee.
TtuRuandi of the most i
peopte ia St LooU. Candanati. Dallas,
Memphis, Atlanta, ntnalodtaia, LootsvlUe, NadirUle and even the latter
dttes of the North end Base where
his celebrated medidne has been accompUahiof such remarkable resalts.
are ercB more enthusiastic over Tealac thaa Mr. Cooper himself.
It Is Mr. Cooper’s theory that nlaetenths of the dlseasee and ill-bealth
of the avenge person Is doe to 0
tarrhal Innajuiaatlob of the mucous
raembrene which produces faulty di-
In a recent Interview, Mr. Cooper
WBS asked if Taniac would relieve
Kidney trouble. Liver complaiut end
a doaen other allmeou end la this
conaectioii. said
“As I have repeatedly said, my med
icine acts directly 00 the mucous
membrane, stomach and blood, expel
ling from them cba_Jfflpnrltles and
todc polsona, end reudering to thei
a Btroog. healthy condition.
“I am convlnct^ that the stomach
regulates the coaditloc of the blood,
and Is the fountainhead of health or
disease, as the case msy be. My
medldae Is intended primarily for the
regulation of the stomach and catar
rhal tnflammetloo. but It la no uncom
mon thing for persons who have used
it to come to me and explain that It
baa relieved them of rheumatiam ond
many other ailments not generally
recogsftod as,having their origin In
stomach trouble.
’’Most of the ne-called stomach,
liver and kidney troubles." continued
Mr. Cooper, “are due almost entirely
to a catarrhal Inflammation of these
organs and it Is believed that Taniac
Is the first actually direct spedfic
therefor.
“Catarrh of the stomach, liver and
kidneys is the most frequent cause of
dysp^la and kidney disorders and a
catarrhal condition of the nose and
throat often leads to deafness. Freently the li
e extension
nation by way of the bronchial tubes
to the lung snbsunce. The mental
and physical state of the chrohtc catanti sufferers is indeed very unfortu
nate. -^4
*Tanlac has overcome this condldoh
in its most obstinate stages, and the
preparation, therefore, must be, as I
have alwaya contended, the one great
Temple of Solomon.
.•The Temple of Solomon was begun
In the fonrtb year of hie reign (B. C.
1012), and completed seven years
later. The whole area was Inclosed
by the outer walls and formed
square of alKiut eoo'feet. The front
of the porch was. supportefl by
great brasen pillars. One of these
was called Josebio nnd the other Boni.
D8NT WORRY ABOUT PIMPLES
----- :—
I
Cuticura Quickly Ramovss
Them—Trial Free.
SUMMERY mSHES.
rSl!!
|i;
i it;.It ill
ration has achieved throughout the
country proves conclusively that my
confidence in Taniac Is well placed.
“The ingr^ents or medicinal ele
ments which make Taniac come from
many remote sections of the earth—
the Alps, the Pyrenees, Russian Asia,
West Indies, mountain states near the
Rocky Mountains. Mexico and Peru
ore among the points from which prin
cipal parts of the preparadou are obtaioed. In the principal laboratory of
the Cooper Medicine Co., Inc,, under
the efficient dlr«.“CTion of e chemist of
note, those me<!lclnQl herbs, roots and
harks arc es-serobled In the rough nnd
palnstfiklngly developed so as to at
tain that high standard of efficiency
shown by the uniform preparation,
Taniac."
The wonderful success which Tanlac baa achieved seems almost Incred
ible. as over Seven Million bottles have
been sold and distributed since it was
placed on the market, something over
two years ako. and it Is now selling
at the phenomenal rate of approxi
mately Five Million bottles per year.
One retail firm, the Jacobs Pbarmacy Company, of Atlanta, has sold
at retail In their rfeveo Atlanta stores
the astonishing total of 64.000 bottles
within the past twelve months, break
ing all records for the sale of a pr<^
prietary medicine in the same length
of time.
within the past six months, and it Is
widely tolked of medi
cine In the world today.
There Is only one explanation for
this Nation wide popularliy and rec
ord breaking demand for Taniac and
that la very simple. The Inherent
purity and wholesomeness of the medIt In the minds of
the people and have made it a house
hold word throughout America.
The leading drug firms of Detroit
and other dues In this section are en
thusiastic over tlie wonderful success
the preparation Is making and In only
a few weeks time Tnnlac will be
placed on sale In every dty. town,
village and ham:
state of Michigan.
There Is a Taniac dealer In your
town.—Adv.
t be. tough to be lied for life was to give the
1 who insists on wearing off ' ,i(.iol<)ii of the sermon he would probhls grouches at home.
itcaL The peofie oflhewarid must
be fed and wheat near S2 a buaKd
offeis great profits to the farmer.
Canada’s InvitatioD is therefore
e^Mcisllr attractive. Sbe wanta
•enters to make money sad ban>y.
g^^Fousbometfor tbm^ves by
—
InC I ^
CARSsasa
--------- — ----- - ^-Ttwtebor l0 nelu*M
Ul•ts•-BMton 10101 Salts Go,
seOsHAve. nATtufraniTon Detroit
WRITE FOR CATALOG O.
m
m
m
look Uke paaoiers and suggest that a
udC
bag of the silk.
J f
#*'
■
Canadian Farmers
Profit From Wheat
The war’s devastation of
European crops has caused
an unusual demand for srain
ftesn the American Conti-
There la no more d^douS dessert
than a simpie layer of cake filled with
whipped cream
which has been
sweetened with
half
capful
a w berries
CTuabed with a cup
sugar ot
the berries.
Snow BallB.~Take t third of a cup
fnl of butter, add a half cupful of
sugar and half a cupful of flour sifted
with a half cupful of cornstarch and
three teaspoonfuls of baking powder,
two-ihirds of a cupful of milk and
(he beaten whites of four eggs. Mix
carefully and pour Into well-buttered
cups and steam In the oven a half
^ hour. Turn out. gently dust with pow.
j dered sugar and serve.
Strawberry Sauce.—Mix B table
spoonful of softened butter with one
half cupfuls of |K>wdere
De small box of strawberries,
washed.
Cherry Salad.—Take a quart of
heart cherries, carefully stone and fill
the cavities with put meats. Serve lit
lettuce cups nnd garnish with mayo
nalse dressing with nasturtium leaY
end blossoms for garnish.
Cherry and Pineapple Pie^Take
m or equal parts of fresh piDeapple
and cherries, sweeten, add the Juice
of a lemon and use as filling with the
following crust;
Pastry With Olive Oil—Take a cup
ful end a htOf of flour, a quarter of a
teaspooDful of ealc and a quarter of
a cupful of olive oil. Mir as usual.
Such a crust is much more easily di
Separate Skirts of All Sorts.
gested than that made of lard.
hat might be carried In otte and a
Now
Rasin Sauce for Ice Cream.—Boll
sweoier in the other. Mostly they are
skirt
cupful of seeded ral'kins witii two cup
street skins and^tub skirts ready fur poderately large, »K)uare-paicb pockets, fuls of water until soft. Kub the rais
tbe hot weather, that is overdue, tad and orcnslonally they are made Id a
ins through n colander.
Cook the
silk skirts for more dignified d^•»^. fanciful shape.
raisin liquor with two cupfuls of
While Colton gaberdine is liked for
Hardly a wardrobe but has an exami'le
gar for three minutes, ndd tbe raisin
of each of these. Tub sklna. In lifti'7 roony of the new sports skirts to be pulp and a half-cupful of chopped wal
with bright-colored sweaters.
eottous, are smanly tailored, with big
nut meats. Serve ice-cold on choco
patch |x>cketA buttous and msckiiu' Khalikl, with brass buttons uud fastened late Ice cream.
nakes the correct
uniform pockets makes
c<
stitching to give them the proper BiiIMi I unlft
Fondant
Dipped
Strawberriee.—
for street wear. They ore ^own In j "biting" skin. V“r country club
cloth, boake’MDd tfiere are white wash suUn. tub silk These delicious confections sell for a
dollar a pound and may be made very
ither heavy weaves. In the same klads I and heavy linen skirts.
^
of cloth, etripes and figured patterns' Machine stitching In vivid silks lends cheaply at home. Prepare the fond
give room for ploy of the dastgoer's
destgoer's ^ the requlr
required dash of color to white ant by boiling sugar and water tp
fancy in qwrts skirts.
silk, and bindings in coninistiug color getber with a little cream of tartar
Jb»t fancy appears to have
with large pearl buttons dlstinguiab or a tablespoonful of corn sirup to
keep tbe sirup from sngaring. Melt
pocketward and to have lingered ther& the linen models.
Espedftlly in sports skirts In a plain
Taffeta silk In black, or dark colors. the foudanc over bot water and dip
color the pocket's the thing that pro wl!h colored stripes, was introduced the berries Into It, draining them
waxed
paper. These delicious candles
nounces the skirt as destined for the early and remains popular for aftershore or camp or the link. Some of DiMQ skins. The skirt pictured Is must be oaten the same day or they
these pockets are so large that they shirred at the waist and has a soah will spoil.
Sugar for the Bablea
1 sidelight upon the economic
suffering caused by the sugar order In
the old coUDtry. many babies, says the
medical officer of health at Luton. BmIfordshlre. were suffering from the lock
of that faiteulng ingredient. The In
ability of the mothers In poor clrcumstsQcee to make purchases of a churocter to procure a ten-pound parcel of
sugar has suggested to the officer referred to .Uat .he oounell Sbouwi ,.urchase large quiintllies of sugar itiid
sell them to such mothers through
baby dimes. The suggestion has been
put into effect nnd proved the solution
of a problem tliut was assuming seri
ous proporiions.
On rising and retiring gently smear
the face wUb Cuticura Ointment. Wash
off the Ointment In five minutes with
Cuticura Soap and bot water, nslDg
Woman's Way.
“1 see the department stores ore4:0plenty of Soap. Keep your skin dear
by making Cuticura your every^y Ing to^ell Liberty loan bonds."
“But
remember,
dear, if you buy one
toilet preparationa.
Free sample each by mail with Book. you can’t go around the next day and
Address postcard. Cutlcnra, Dept. L. exchange It for something else."
Boston. Sold everywhere-—Adv.
of.tho earth: trath* an ool
tlM gsptho c< tbo theuglH.
Some Pretty Suits for Midsummer.
pocketless coats and others with the
widened, hip effect. Serge suits are
almost always very plaln.
The summery suit pictured Is of
chiffon taffeta In an iDdlsUnrt check.
The coat Is the nsual length, bn.
makes a new departure by Its turnedback fronts, trimmed Into lengthened
points at the bottom. The skirt IS
oaio a short yoke aod has a slight
drapery or fullness at tbe hips.
Light gray and oyster shell whits
are shown among tfle smartest Jersey
and silk suits. A cool-looking model
Is of oyster white tussah bordered
with a narrow hand In black and
white check.
The checks are large,
and a single Une-of them finishes tbe
rtctnre hat Increased In sise so that edges of tbe, coat and tbe sleeves.
h faUs over the top of the arm. but If They are not extended t>oBt the bot
trimmed Into sloping revere at the tom tf the coat, but cover the revera
Crent. There are attractive models of
<he<^ wool bound with braid. »ad
belts and patch po^ets remain much
In evidence.
But there are a few
Nothing can supplant the suit, so It
Is the earliest arrival in tbe fashions
of each new season end Its story is
a serial with a chapter added every
btUe whUe. But we have arrived at
the last Installment for the summer
of 1617 and rejoice In a happy ending.
Wool Jersey doth queens It over lu
comrades, but nevertheless serge, taf
feta, gaberdine, tnssab and some new
weaves in silk make a strong flnlah.
There Is no new depaitore In style
to record In the new snmmer suits,
but coets Indulge in a few little va
garies in cut of the coUar, adjustment
of poc^eu and ahaplng tf the skirt
Of all. earthly ntunlc that which
reaches farthest into hsaveo. Is the
beating of a truly loving heart.—H. W.
Beecher
The nppallng figures of 1700,000.000
worth of waste In food stares us In the
face nearly every day.
No few nor any group of
women can remedy this
evil. It must be the con
certed effort of large
numbers In each com
munity.
Wastes are so many
that It is possible to
tnenilon only ihe most glaring ones.
Many of these no doubt each reader
will refuse to ftdmll are found In her
kitchen, but perhaps some equally as
Uud bsve not bi-en mentioned.
We wfisio ciirlomls of food In pre
paring more itiuii Is ne<-<leil and not in
telligently making over dishes. Madeover dishes are never higlily gratifying
I and it Is muoh wiser to hiivc no left[ overs to rtlRpose of or make more exI pensive by 'be addition of costly food
I to utilize tbe leftover,
I The iivcrnge woman all over the
I country is ullling 10 conform to the re' quest to have bot three courses at dinI ncr even when enteWalnlng. Little
! dubs of food served lu eight or ten
courses either means a vast amount
of wiisto or. fully as Important, a human
engine clogged by too much fuel to dis
pose of, causing dlsea.se aod often sud: den death.
j Fat from meat, suet aod drippings
fat from soups ore wastefully thrown
' away nnd fresh lord, oils cad fats are
j used for fryingbutter is 40 to
00 cents a pound It should not be men
tioned as a frying fat even In the
homes able to buy IL It matters not
whether we are financially able to
suod the waste, somebody is going
hungry because of our extravagance.
The preparing of vegetables may
mean a great waste; careless peeling
of potatoes often done in haste at a
iat? hour when time ts more Important
than the potato, Is another great leak
which should be watched. In many
homes potatoes are cot peeled at all,
afid everybody seems to be perfectly
happy eating the wholesome vegetable
with all.Its vegetable adds and min
eral salts left In it.
I^ck tf forethought Is soother
source of wastefulness. Planning meals
days in advance will eliminate a large
expense. It only needs a good trial to
prove the advantage.
'HujoIc, 7)W irttC.
With the Fingers !
Says Corns Uft Out
Without Any Pain
Sore corns, hard corns, soft eons m
any kind of a core can aborUy ta
Uftad right out with the Angara K psa
will apply on the corn a few drop* tt
freesone, soya a Ondondti authorttff.
At Uctle cost one can get a small bs^
tie of freetone at any drug store. wtUA
will positively rid one's feet of ev^ry
corn or callus without pain or
ness or the danger of Infection.
ThU new drag is an ether compooM.
and drlM the moment It la applied oafi
docs not Inflame or even trritata thh
eurronndlng skin. Just think I To*
can lift off your coma and csOom
now without a bit of pain or nnimfi
If yonr dragglst basiv't freeeone he cam
easily get a small bottle for you tr««
bis wholesale drug house.—sdr.
The Desired Effect.
"Massah! I siii. is la a phodleky
muDt. sah." whined Brother SlewtooC.
"Mull cblld'ren has done got do
mumps, and got 'em so pow'ful poi^
pous dat yo' kin her'em cla'r aenot
de street. And 1 w1sh( you'd plesso
gtmroe ’boot baffer dollah. sa, to b*r
some medicine for 'em. When all dsa
eight child'en gits mumpin' st coco,
de sound—"
“I’shaw < Tod enn’t-bear the mnmp%
Slewfool, yqu are an alotnlnshte
liar:"
"Vassah!
And won’t yu’ pieus
gimme dat haffer dollah for belD' da
woRi ’bom’able liar yo’ has met dte
bright mawnln', aabl Ub-yawl Hnvf
liaw!”—Judge.
Twenty-Five Years’
Experience WitkTUe
Kidney IMlcIne
my Owde and they all speak very teva^
ably rvarding it. and eome friendt mli
it tf the beet medteine they have mr
lined. Tbe nle we have enjoyed eo ths
prepantiOD and tbe Fplesdtd repatatte*
that it feeli in a poctive proof that it Is
me of tbe
cne
the most
mort titnerilorionn i----the market. V«i
P. E. BRirrON, Droggi*Kov. astb. me.
Jonesboro. Ten.
Prove Wtet Swamp-Root WiD Do For Ts*
^nd un cenu to Dr. Kilmer A Oo,
BingbtintoD, N. Y., for a enmple sir^ hottie. It will convince anvonc. Yoo will
tleo receive a booklet of valuable mfeev
maUon.’telling about tbe kidaej-s and blad
der. When wntiDs, be rare and- meatkm
this paper. BKular fiftv-cent and ow^
dollar size bottles for sale at aO,^if
stores,—Adv^________________
Too Much.
George Ade said at Si woddtaff
breakfast at St. Joseph:
•'Once, in ptming on a new play tf
mine, the manager reMsed to bavo n
young married couple in the casL
"Til take on one or tbe otbss;
George.' he saJd. 'but not both.'
■‘•Why not bothT said L' Thqy***
both elver.’
'
■"That may t>e.' said he. tMt tfi*
public, tlw.rge. don't care to aeo •
wan making love 10 hl» own wife.’
" 'Looks too much like acting; «l»f_
«Id 1."
FRECKLES
Mew b (b*
BM •( now
Ttiu-r'i Be lOBfir Ihe •llibie*i
<S
itelliu ••bAmeG ot your IrrcXlea.
Ih*
prcecrlpiloB otblne — double oireBstb — Is
EVATeBieed IS,remove ibeoe hemeir iptta
Simplr Eel u ounce o( olbliii tiiiSIl
•IrenGtb—from }-our EruEEtAl. Bsd Ap*lr •
little of It nlEbt And morslBE Add rem
• bould poon oee thol even the »or»t froEHAB
bAve txsvb to aiAAppror. while the U«hU>
onef bAve VAslAbed entireir It lA AAldAm
IbAi mote tbAB one ounce lA needed to comploteir clenr the aKIs And eaIb a bAAaRM
eleAT eompleilon.
Be rare to aaK f
otblne,
money
AdT.
Long Enough snd Cold Enough.
The wliiier tiiat hus JUst closed was
tlie lougest and coldest alnter In fitf
years, so it Is announced by the “ol*
esi Inhabitiint In England." WeU. W
can easily I>e1leve him. but Isnt h*
CASToIUA. that famous old t
for infanta ana
and ennoren,
children, aou
aod see umi
Chat is
It
Bean the
Signature of ^ _
In Use for Orar so'Y'eara.
Children Crv for Fletcher’s Oagtoria
How Money Gets Into Circulstlem
Money Is sent from treasury to s^
treasuries and from these It is distill
uutl to bunkv It Is drawn out ot banks
to he used In payment of wages, «1Rries or exchange aud thus geta tates
circulation.
THE WORLD’S FIRST BILUOWAIM
without «blis^'oa to anyone who wB aad
Doesn’t Like Lap Dogs.
"What is your husband's pet ■
slonr’
"An aversion to pots."
If You Are the Mother of a Boy
Who is now in the Army or Navy, or if your husband is there, who bought a Suit of Clothes from us this
Spring, kindiy let me know and I will gladly refund HALF THE PURCHASE PRICE. It is my earnest de
sire that every man, whether he is registered or not, who buys a Suit of Clothes from me this year, shall
upon his entering the service,
^
Get Half His Money
Today and All Next Week
Will be Interesting Days in Our
-^”<1 Keep All the Rebate
Coupons Besides
RArIr
Today and All Next Week
Your Choice of Any 25c Article for Only
CLOTHING SECTION
12
We have plairiied to make these days of sp^ial interest and advanloi.'f to
men and young men. Our purpose is to set foHli numerous money saviiii! op
portunities in the men's departments at one time, Iwlieving. it will be helplul 10
men who require many different things right now, enabling them to supply Iheir
clothes needs at unusual savings.
Your Summer Suit Can Be Bought Now at a Price Decidedly in Your Favur -We
Call Special Attention to Two Groups; SUITS
WORTH UP TO *20.00 AT .... ........
$12.90 & $15.90
And with the “Fourth of July” but four days away, here's an uncqualed
opponunity to get “clothes ready" for the summer's biggest holiday.
Pick from blue serges—neat, quiet gray serges—splendid wearing worvlvds
—other patterned fabrics for summer. Belted English and Pinch-back models
for young men as Well as conservative models for business and general wear.
Sizes for all men. tall slender, short or stout up to size 50; *12.90 and *15.90.
Other Saits at $10.45, $18.45 and $22.50
MEN'S SUMMER FURNISHINGS, ready with the best in Underwear. Fine
Shirtr, Neckwear, Hosiery, etc. Splendid assortments and many items specially
cents
New Arrivals in Wash, Skirts
The Korrect Pre-Shrunk '
Featuring the very
latest style effects
and the best washa
ble fabrics
12
coupons
FIVE HUNDRED SOUVENIRS FOR CHILDREN
WILL GO FREE—one with every cuh purchase
of one dollar or over.
TWENTY-nV'E LADIES' AND MISSES' SUMMER
DRESSES-Newest styles, that were *7 50. *8.50
and 110.00 at..............
.......*6.00. *7.00 sod 18.00
Full gathered backs—side
open or pearl buttons down
front—loose belts- with or
without pockets—in gabar
dines, French pique, twil's,
waffle cloths, wide-whale
bedtord, beach cloth, khaki
and sport stripes.
All of those materialR are
thoroughly
pro • shrunk,
thereby assuring a perfect
fitting ^.kirl. regardle^ of
the number of times laun
dered.
FIFTY MISSES’ AND JUNIOR DRESSES, worth up
to *7.50 at...........................*2.95, *3.95, *5.00 and *6.50
At $2.50, $3.25, $4.50
and $5.00
FOUR NEW MODELS OF WIRTHMOR WAISTS and
many others at........................................ ................. I1;00
Ollier Wash Skirls at
HUNDREDS OF THE HIGHER PRICED WAISTS just
98c, $1.25, $1.50, $2
priced under present market values.
and
TWO HUNDRED MISSES' AND CHILDREN’S DRESES that were 75c, *1.25 and *2.00 wilt go at.............
.................................................................... . 48c,96e. *1.25
FIFTY’ LADIEL’ AND MISSES’ SUITS that were
*25.09 and *35.00 at.....................................*10, *15. *2)
in. at......................*1.95. *2AS, *3.96, *4.50 and'*6 00
J. H. STEINBERG
Too. Late to Classify:
Yes We’ve Got Them!
Tomatoes
Cucumbers
Asparagus
Radishes
Lettuce
Watermelons
Cantaloupes
New Potatoes
Pie Plant
FRUIT AND VEGETABLES
F. O. NICHOLSON
WANTEI>—Man to lake-entire charge
of our business if^is locality. Good
: business cstabii»be£, Straight salary
loF salary and commission. Grand Un
lion Tea Co.. Lansing.'.129 N. Washing
ton A\e.
3U-3
• WANTED—Second-hand Ford'”c8r in
•good condition, for cash Call Cilz.
, phone 701.
30tf
1
The first'one of the new refriger^ator display cases to be installed in a
Igrocery store in the ciiy hav been put
to F. 0. NichoLson's sum . bn Union
•into
•6tre«
It will be used fur ki eping fruit:
and vegetables in peril- i . i.ndiiioii for
the trade during the summer season.
I
Subscribe for the Press
Don't hesitate to call tl.e Piess of
fice whenever you have a ii,.ws iiein.
Walter N. Millard, the tuner.
Both phones No. 6. Over 35
years experience.
i
DOUBLE YOUR
SUBSCRIPTION
FOR THE
Traverse City
Auto Mfg’s.
Stock
CALL AT THE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
is
Sale of Samples of
Ladies’ Neckwear
Collars and Collar
and Cuff Sets
Underpriced Offerings of
Seasonable
WHITE GOODS
Bought at a libera! Discount
and to be sold at about
1-3 to 1-2 regular
values.
Linen Finished White
Suitings
Worth 15c and 18c yard. Very
desirable for white
1 *>*r
Wftshskirts. At yard ....l42«
Beauties and Bargains
25c Styles
29c Styles
35c Styles
All on sale at
50c Styles
59c Styles
65c Styles
AUon sale at
»c White Crepe
Very desirable for Underwear.
Aureal bargain at
19
39
Beautiful $1.00 Collars 00q
White Organdies
44 inches wide. Worth up to
A ....... 23c
Fine White Voiles
40 inches wide. Regular 25c
.......19c
Hosiery Special
Women's Fibre Silk Boot
Hose. Slight seconds of
24c
25c Curtain Goods
300 yards of plain and bor
dered Curtain Margui?ettes. In white and i-cru.
19c
Other Special
Values
Women's Union Suits 200
Boy's Ribbed H,«.
Women’s S125 Auto
ggc
3^^“Gimthams 25c
Globe Dept. Store
Si^ for what you want take some sub
scription blanks and secure your neigh
bors name.
This Slock will surely command a
premium by Sept. 1st.
You have always wished you had some
auto stocks. Now is your chance to in
vest in a clean proposition.
All Common - No Water - Noo Assessable - lust WhatYsii
Should Have.
ACT QUICKLY BEFORE IT IS ALL SOLO
TRAVERSE CITY AUTO
MFC. CO.
I
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