Traverse City Press, July 13, 1917

Dublin Core

Title

Traverse City Press, July 13, 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

1917-07-13

Contributor

Traverse Area District Library, Traverse City (Mich.)

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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

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PDF

Language

English

Type

Document

Identifier

tcp-07-13-1917.pdf

Coverage

Grand Traverse County, Michigan

PDF Text

Text

The Traverse City Press
GRAND TRAVERSE RECION*lHOME NEWSPAPER

BY CARIUER 91 YEAR

CITY CIRCULATION-8000

HOW SHALL WE
RID OURSELVES
OF ^L BROOD?

TRAVF.RSB CITY. MICH. JULY B. f9j7

|D

BY MAIL U.50 YEAR

lUNTY ’
WILL GIVE ____

RFD (Mss ESTABUSH
TRAVERSE
,‘ —headquarters ROME

”rc=r.=v..r

Sir-£ '"S-?™

know what^you would do If you wcre^£Y^Q|^£

VOL. 3--NO. SS

CITY
GUARDS
ARE VERY ACTIVE

Save The
Products

the cows and do the chores and mai
DCnCD ATtAN DirUIPi
^lahlished perweet to mfxup »inebbicuiUforBup-l
tljDLlulllvIl I
*‘,*a<*'l“arters in the basement
I®! the jgdies' Library building on Cass
per. for she kswits-I am -very fond of
Mr. Hubert Hands in One on hot biscuits and boney for ma is a fam­
—of—
The Bee Question—Very ous cook. Wdl. when I got .hack from
the chores I smeU apmething burning
Important Topic
of Gleaner Pnnciples
haveturie* they must seeure voiun
Members
and sure enough ma bad buf*nl the bis­
cuits, but she had fixed upa'iot of other
teer workers and make arrangements
as to when they can come to work.
'nice things, so 1 didn't say anything a;
Traverse City has a great amount of i
1 could see she had something else on
It is important that we save tbi
her mind —
and —"V
while we -c.c
were eating
be a„ne
done ,-e
in making hospital Fifty of Traverse City's leading cit­
(CoDtinucd front last week)
...............A Counlv Federation Picnic will be work to he
fruit and vegetable crop this year.
,he Silver Lake Inn. one mile supplies for our boys at the front.
“Well, ma, that is a pretty hard ques- supper she says. “Father, I have beenlg^yen
The government has urged us
izens have been drafted by the T. C.
thinking this Foul Brood matter
and s
north of Qrawc. on Tuesday, July Uth,
tioD to answer as so mUch depends
Home Guards to make a canvass of the
do it.
the man and bis future career a.s Sena­ and I am afraid if it gets on this side of under the direction of the Keystone
city next week to get memberships in
tor. If 1 was one of the old-fashioned the bay. il'sgoinglo make you all kinds Arbor.
the Home Guaros. Men in all occupa­
of trouble and I can tell you wby there
The p>ogram which has been arrang­ Frink Furtsch. a well-known and tions fire taking active part. Every
Senators and this came up for
appropriatioB made for the In-' ed by th? Keystone Arbor is in part
detennioe, I should first find out
EVERK.EEP
respected citizen of Traverse City, was citizen in this city will be asked to join.
spector 10 take care of it. You see. follows: Beginning a( 10;:i0 there will
whether the people who elected
bom in Bohemia, September 26. 1836. If for some reason or other you feel
CANNING TABLETS
and paid the hill wanted the park- if it don’t you, the slate park cost you be games and amusements of all kinds.
that you would not care to train in the
JC0,000,
the
county
agent
matter
$80;000
was a good thing for the ccmimunity
such as boys’ foot rate, girls’ race, fat
Unjop St. at 5 o'clock Thursdav, Armory' you will be excused but the
also 1 should u-ant to know whetber.il and if all these other Senators got as woman’s race, three legged rare, sack
His wife passed away six. Home Guards need your financial sup.much or half as much you can easily
and contain no Benzoate.
was worth »W).000;if 1 found that it
pie eating contest, etc., and the
He leaves two soos, JacobiPO^'ll nothing
Vou can pledge
therc- would be nothing left for Keystone Arbor challenge any one of this city, and Samuel of New York. yourself for 25c-50c-^ or Sl.OO
only taxed for tUl.tUU. I shcwld cons
lOc package cans 5 quarts.
r
Foul
Brood
Inspector's
traveling
that there was something wrong and
Arbor for a tug-of-war. Pnzes wiU be
Furtsch moved here in 1874. and bv month.
Payments are to be made
am afraid 1 should have to turn it down .expenses. Can't you see that you and given for all races. A picnic dinner
manner made a host of monthly for a period of one year.
flat.
your farmer friends and taxpayers
will be served at noon and at ooe-thirly , fiends.*
Remember- EVERY CENT you subOn the other hand if 1
jiaying the bills abd what are you get- sharp the afternoon program will start. PuneM services will be held from
remains in TRAVERSE CITY to
these new up to-date Senators 1 should ing out of it? All this gives me a tired which consists of music, songs, recitaj,oSe. Sunday afternoon at 3K»|help Traverse City people. Not one
consider the matter from a different feeling. You men sit around and tt-ll tiotis. drills andytiJlR given by the dif-.o-cioek. Rpy. Demas Coclilin officiating. Ipenny goes to any other place. Calls
angle. First. 1 should consider m> stories and run out of your way to shake fervnt arbors. A speakei from Detroit
Masonic order will have charge ofl’or help have come to the secretaryfamily, as my first duties should be foi hands with these polilteal friends
has been engaijed to talk on some of the serffces at the cemetery. Buriar*'’'^®
'his week.
tbair care and protection. If they were called) and while you are hoeing corn Ihe questions which are of vital impmrt
- •'
,
...
a very extravagant family I should have they are getting all their friends an of­ ance to all American farmers. There
to think the matter over very carefully fice and fixing up their political fences. are new issues arising daily and the,
Those who join and care to train 'Wit.
also I should have (o consider my polit­ a.s they call themja lillle ring inside of Gleaners are meeting them
be invited to come to the Armory every
ical friends who helped me get the
a big ring. Oh. 1 know all about it.
The object of the picnic
p
is to bring
Tuesday night. Those whoreceive the
inatioo. I would probably owe them You mep aren't fit to go to the poles tojjnto closer touch the
*
N.
E.
R.
R.,
have
changed
farmers of Grand
e farmc
training and take active part would in
M>me;favors and the chances are good vote. If we women could handle IhejTraverse and give them a better and
trains and also taken one no case be called out of the county.
tbat I should get all that was possible situation n year or two, the state wouldibroader view of Gleanerism. ito princiway daily, taking effect Don’t Be a Slacker—sign up when the
out of it for all bands.’’
^[toins No. 1, arriving solicitor calls ou you.
be fit to live in again. You men have pies and its purposes.
The building occupied by the Qiffofd
“W'ell, father, does It seem right that let il^get^o bad Uiat even your little
' No. 4, leaving
Electric Manufacturing Company, on
Everyone is most cordially invited to
w« should discuse these thmgsV You town papers daren't publish anything attend the picnic and program although
diacimtoped.
Ave. between Eighth airf
. see kStkleBeiiator is a pretty high o(- of real interest to the public. They are the evening session is for Gleaners
here MW
tieCsL" - “That is all right, ma, be is afraid of these political gangsters and only. Ever>'one is also urged to bring
tto.a««tti
*ttf *fnvntuisway. W£,1he people publish only what they coosRler safe.
well-filled basket.
eieptM -'Um and pay him. Tbts
This Rwas
Yes, 1 can see things
you don't see or
_:you
our sMey he wu appropriati
don't want to see and I can see, as yon
ilSajDaCdida't b«kiBg to him and « callit..that If this coatioues yon .ara
perfect ri]^t to criticize. You going to be Kddwtfdr taxes and
ibis waaiiieArst teimand
to to
to do4fa« best he coAild to tUa
aL bone. * ^ni tfae tai

OF mTERESI TO EVERYBODY

PROGRAM OF MUSIC. AND GAMES

MONEY WILL BE USED AT HOME

Garden and
Orchard

FRANK FURISCH

Wait’s
Drug Store

A N.LR.R. SCHEDULE

$2,000 HRE AT GIFFORD
ELECTRIC MANUFACimtlNG
COMPANY PLANT

co«m

(TO TO SHOW

f

_

Sfene' Romans here at home
if they look close enough next term.
But i would just like to know who got
tbu leo.oou if It was only wortli tlG.OOti
or *20,0tl0.'’- I let my pipe go out and
looked at ma and says, "now look here
ma, ere you going to insinuate that
Senator Smith—''
Just then ma came back with “I
not iDsioualing anything. I don’t know
Seoator Smith, bull know you and

CRATING
We pack and crate
household goods for
shipping so they “get
there” without break­
age.
Prices You Can Afford.

J. E. Hutchins
417 Barlozv St.
Phone 157

DATE IS SET FOR TOES., JULY 24

but! am going^ bed."
Next moming, ma had iH^akfast early
pancakes and honey and 1 could see
The Big Circus IS coming. Yep! Cook
had something else on her mind,
Brothers. This show will come by bwin
gave
long searching look and sbe bright and eaily, with a long siring of
cf those little smiles on which handsome steel cars, and will bring
I had seen so often. Finally, she says retinue of the world's biggest an
"Father, you wouldn't be a bad looking sirangest wonders,
old man if you would dress up a little
The Advei-tis;ng Cars and Advance
more. Wby don't you tog up a little ^Agents have been to town and have
and j)ut a clean shirt on when you go;billed this attraction very heavily for
to town; get acquainted and shakeltwo performances to be given at Travhands with all kinds of people and use.erse City on Tuesday. Julv 24.
a little Diplomacy sod you micht get a, .There will be exhibited for the first
nice public office, too."
time raaav new animal features, but
Well, Mr. Editor, 1 began to smell,u,c monkeys are the same, and the
something and it was not ma’s burnt'elephanls too. as in the days of long
biscuits either. It beats all how a wo ago.
The F.questnan and Riding Seals and;
Sea Lions are also among the new nov-'
I
Iree to get into this political game and cllii-s tins season.
[no kmming uliere It nil going to end.
The big show program is rich and!
Of course I alw.-iys knevmawasam- fairly tc“<-ms with the tmesi .American'
' bilious but 1 jneveffhiiUgUt it would and foreign leaiurc aenalists, acrobats,;
'etiJ ui> like this. Well, I am just going jugglers, coniurlioiiists, eqeilihnsts and I
to lay low snd if there is anything r
general performers.
turns up and I Imve the qme. 1 will tell
The clowns are a predominating al-|
lahout It next week.
traction and they are beiler than ever,
with a routine of new funny sci-nes.
;
Yuurs truly,
Circus day will begin with a grand]
James Hilbert.
flee street parade at 10:30 a m. wilbt
liipen dens nl wild b«-8sls, gorgeous
'Tableaux, Ri:hly Robed Riders. Clowosi
land otliei leaiures, a most tilling introIducUoii to the worlds largest wild,
faniinal cirrus.
[

THE NECESSARY ITEMS
for Canning are here

SEALF.AVT riM'IT J.ARS—pints, quarts and two (juarts
CAN TORS ■
MONSTER JAR RINGS-Kxtra thick Ibc. 3 dozen for 25c.

Groceries

-

Fruits

Vegetables

McCormick, “of Course”
CROCEIUES
ixau. Phon. 271 402 SOUTH UNION STREET Trwvar»«Cilr.

$50.00 REWARD
TO ANY PERSON for a medkiue equal to Tiger OU, according to the
teatimony reported in "The Friend <f Suffering Man " around each bot­
tle of Tiger Oil. Again we chaUeage an eQual to Tiger Oil fer the cure
■of the greatest number of disease

Sold by druggists, grocers, agents.

Nationa] Grocery Co. and

DR. JOHN WESON, CadOac, Mich.

Our country is in sadness.
With birile on every side.
And our b.i>s ur,- lea.ing one by one.
To save „ur .Nation's pride.
To save the flag, our stars and stripes
Of freedom's cu.blem true,
.And answer the call to arms again.
Like the honored boys in blue.
We wonder why the battle cr>-.
Is sounding far and near.
And taking our dear ones from our
homes,
And leaving them dark and drear.
i
Our Father knows, and that is why
'
Those who trust in Him can say good-1
bve.
Without a sigh to dear ones as they go
To fight OB baud or sea aud bravely
meet the foe.

News from Style

Headquarters

Military Sport Suits the Order of the Day
YOU’RE
new

going

to like

the

military sport suits.

Th^’re trim, comfortable, sty­
lish,

and very becoming to the

average American figure.

Hart, Schaffner & Marx
have provided us with a number
of variations of these popular
models.

The belts go all around

or have three-quarter Belts; some
have patch pockets; others haven’t.
The

fabrics are all-wool

ready

for

Here's

long

a

and

service

military

idea

in

neckwear-"Regimental stripes”
—the newest in neckwear,

HamiltonClothing
Company
- 5ry/c Leaders
Truvene Qty Home of Hart. SebaAher A Marx Oothe*

®“S'j»hed ourtears at the mid-nighi
And with ihe moming light.
Cheer our soldiers brave op land or
wave.'
Aud help them win the fight.
Mrs Lou Wilkins.
331 West 14th St.

New stock Edisoo Disc and
Amberole records, just receiv­
ed. Scott’s City Drug Store.

>EE the display af Auto Togs
^ in our west window.
Copyrigii! Hart SchaSner & Man

TRAVERSE CITY PRESS

CHANCE FOH HIGH SERVICE IN ARMY
Uways an Opportunity for &>•
listed Men to Secure
Commissions.

WELL rJUD AND CARED FOR

”BsrLr,r.st:
««aot sod ssalstsnt leader. tnlUtary
Additional Pay Per Month.

Po«d. Clothing, Lodging and Madleal
Attendance Provided—Many Who
Have Entered Service aa Priv.
atee Have Qalnwl High Rank.

J

By EDWARD S. CLARK.
Waahla^tMk.—“In tbe regnlar army,

or

Burglcst^yeUj^t'............................................

«

nua Une la from a aooc lu pralae of
the regnlara vUcb la aa oM as
«rmy Itself. It la the pride of the
iregulars to say that they are oltraye
tv&dy end It would seem to the clxlllun
who reads the history of the aconding
army that the pride Is not mlspluced.
win Additional Pay.
There seems, to t>e thruuKlwut
Oil the first ro-eiiilstiiiont roch priv.
ooimiry a aisuudersmnUiug ouucernliig
enlib-tinents In the regular army today are in the mii.-d .>^u..es army gets M
The re^strstlon of men hctweeu th« u.ldlii..n:il I'li.v purh m.mih. and lids Is
in.-rt-iis.-.l f--r earh stictv.'rtiug enllstmeul. It will be s.-en from the table
that men who qualify ns good shots,
new national urniy di>et not lu any
prevent the registered man from enlist- or who, b.-e«use of their enpabllllleS.
log today in the regular army, the navy are given certain posltl-ns, receive an
or the Marine con>«. There la sUII
chance for u nuiii to become a volun­
teer and by becoming one to enter
ranks of an army whfeh has mode his­
tory and will coDtlone
Ions hs American fighting men take the
fieidIn the regular army the enlisted man rating of ariatlon raechanldan.
la assured of a fine quality of leader­
ship. He Is ander the command of
men who know the war game from Us
barely 500 In number. Prior
beginning to lu end and who undertime there was a force, the
suod thoroughly how to Inatlil a strict
discipline which Is good for the men units of which were paid by the dif­
and for the service because, while ferent rtates. or It might almost be
colonies, for It was not until 17S8
necGssartly stHcL it has for lu spirit
a kindly eonal.-JeratloD end a knowl­ that the United State* as the United
edge of the needs of the soldier. More­ States came into existence. The fed­
over, the regular army officers know eral government took over a part of
bow to carp thoroughly for the health these state forces and formed the origal regular army.
,
of their men.
The regulars fought Indians from
Thoroughly Trained Leaders.
.e very start of their existence as an
It must not be understood from this organlied body. They made a fine
that tlie new national array will not record for themselves small as were
be well led sod well .cored for. but In ! their numbers In Uie war of 1812. Later
the reg^ar service the eaUre person-;
guarding the
— - -ie o>mn.I..loj.,d mou i, 0...
„„j

guidance
•a. ...
.of .those who shell be
- ..under
their control. In the national army In
each organlzatloo there wiu be some
regular offlcecg, whose duty It wUl be
to Impart to the newer officera the
thing! wblchlhey have learned by long
Otperteaca. Both eervlcM wUl be. of
the hlgheif order.
The yonagABaa vo etiUMs lo the reg­
ular •enrtes' has every chuee of pr»mottoc. He enters aa a private, bnt
there Is an opportunity for him while
etill an enlisted man to seenre a posi­
tion which wUI pay him S81 a month
In addition to hla entire support so far
as food, clothing, lodging and medical
attendance are concerned. The govenusent gives all these things gratia
There la always an opportunity for
enlisted men of the United States
army who are menuily and physically
alert to seenre commissions, and there­
by to pass from the ranks of an enlisted man to that of sn officer, and
be assured of a prl.fe-^^.lua for lli«.
rest of his life. Enlisted men who re­
main enlisted men In the army can re­
tire after 80 years service with good
pay and allowance.
Pay In the Army.
In order chat the young man who
desires to become a volunteer through
enlistment In the United States army,
for probable first service to the field
of the present war, may know Just
what bis pay will be, the foUowlng
table Is given by which he can de­
termine almost at a glance what bis
“monthly money" will amount no. and
while studying the table he should re­
member that the government takes It
Qpon Itself to keep him In food and
dothlng,-tb give him lodging and med­
ical attendance and. In fact, to provide
for him every necessary of life free of
cost Here Is the table:
Privi
PTiVI

de
Prt.
Cor

lepan= S-.Zo.t'So.rSS-U:-,
. Chief
Musician.
™rsw,"'.SJS“s..A“.sK
ficrxaant. artlller
Biahle aercaaoi,
.........
try, oavi^. Supply sergeant. Infan,U7, cavalry, artillery. Mess serTtanL Infantry, cavalry, artlllefy.
Cook. HorMsboar. Radio serswuit.
Ftreman. Band corporal. Muslelas
, McoBd clasB. Infantry, cavalry, vtlli%rf. fJflDMn. .Musician, ipird
iwtWL. enrln^, ortnjmoA .sigial H
ply ssrgcaoL

_________

Band ssrteaDL MusMSaa. Sm oUm.

_ba»d leadOT ..........................
t mMor.
^ stmply
sei«eui iBBWr,
ssolor grads. Qnartarmaslsr ssrtaanL Q. U. empa Ordnaaos sargsast. Fliat Bsrgeant. Ttart.ii^. s«r.
•sast major, anstnaers.
anpply tarsrant. anMneam. ffia^
nal eorps Atslstam aoglsaer
. dan, ftrat clam. mlBt^aca* siHC: |

«' a-'oiloo to ami, and ol
jjj
fields BO far removed from dvillzntloD that the people
never reallied what thetr little force
was doing for them. To the dact that
the high work of the regulars was done
for ao many years In remote llMdi was
due the lo^ yl the people’s amredaCton of the heroism of their standing
LongUatof H
It was the regnlart who suffered lo
the Fort Dearborn massacre on the
dte of Chicago over a hundied years
: It waa the regulars under Major
Dade who to Florida, bopeleealy outonmbered and ambosbed. fought until
almost the last man was killed, the
Seminole Indians under the fine leader­
ship of one of Osceota'a chieftains. It
the regulars who went to death in
the country of the Bosebud under the
white chief, Custer; It was a little
In 1890 and
log losses. It was the regulars who,
fought Bed Ooud. Crazy Horse, Chief
Joseph, and who followed Gerfinimo,
The Kid. and other savage Apaches,
Into the moubtalo fastnesses of MexlIt was the regulars who from the
beginning until the present day have
dared everytlilng for their country.
Their record la a magnificent one.
The regular army U n<^- being
brongbt up to a war standard of
strength. When the ranks are full
there will be following the colors as a
part of the negular establishment some
285.000 Xroebcans. Any young Ameri­
can today has en opportunity to beby volunteering a member of this
devoted band. It means service, and
bard service, but It also means high
serrlce. and In all human probability
glorious service. Hardships there will
be in plenty; dangers, a multitude, but
there are the compensatlonB of service
that is senrlce. and of a sense of
patriotic dnty done In a field of Ilfs
Into which devotion to country calls
the young American.
of the Army.
The organisation of the army today
Is different from the organisation of
other dayx In the old days there was
ariarioD eemee and little or no
signal, service of any kind. The med­
ical service was crude; the artillery
become the great factor In
warfare that It la today, and there was
Qpn along all lines of
less I
milita
Let us take the AmerlcaB army as It

military power. ^
&f COQTW '*
It
In adflBoo
to the regular army we shall have the
great new Dational army, the NaOaoal
Ouardsmeo, tiie navy and the Hartna
_e to help ua win in the fight for
the liberty of the wortd.
The regular army of the United
Btataa upon the present war footing
cooriats of 64 reglmeotB of Infantry,
25 reginsnta of cavalry; 28 rvlmeota
of SMd artillery, a coast artillery corps,
bri^te, dlTtotan, army eorpa. and amy
baaiSqBTTiaii. with thrir detachmwtt
of troops: x .general etaff corps, an
adjutant cmenTs departmesL an i»qiaetor generaTa depaf«a«BL a Jodge
adswate geseraFs dapartmenL a quartaraaster'e corpa, a madleal depanM«t, a corpa of sagloaeia. aa oed-

nance departmeuL a algnel corps, th*
offleen of the bureau of insular affairs,
a military bureau, the regular army reservA the corpx of cadets at We«t
Point and other smaller orgtnlsatioiu
used for dladpUnary grod^ service
schoolA and record depot dettcbmenti
and for some other purposes.
How It Is Commanded
army la a huge body of men gath­
ers together for fighdug purposes in
different units of organltatloo. ao
army when It passes a certain streogih
usually Is oommand'ed by a geoemi.
Today there la no general lo the Unit­
ed States army, but It la probable that
within a few montha congreaa wlll.rethe rank and name some officer,
who, taking the title of general, shall
have supreme command of all the fightIng forces In the field.
army Is composed of army cortw.
There may be twe or three or more
corps In an army. Sometlmca wheij
there is a huge number of troops In
(he field one general Is put lo suprerae
comtuund while hls forces are dlvldeq
Into several armies, each one In coliiiiiind of a lieutenant general. It I.llkH} thut <xingress soon will muke
.Miij, <'>f-n. John J. Pershing-a lleutenwilt gi-oeral and put him In conimutnl
of (lu- First corps, ctnislstlug of seve.-tJ
divisiiuis of troops, to see serMce lo
Fraure.
/i division of troops is commnnded
by u major goiieml. It is composed
of several brigades, each one of whu-ti
Is commanded by a brigadier gcueml.
It Is possible for a brigade to consist
of a combination of cavalry, Infantry
and artillery, but frequently each bri­
gade Is composed of regiments all of
the same branch of the service. The
typical Infantry brigade, for Instacci-.
consists of a headquarters andr three
leglmenu of infantry, while a typical
cavalry brigade eouslsts of a heodquarters and three regiments of cav­
alry.
Composition of the ReglmenL
Each reglinenl Is comiutiodwli by a
leutPiicolonel, who has under him
ant colonel, whose dudes are rath.-r
Don<lescri[d. although hls chief i^uty Is
to take the place of the colonel In hls
absence or In case be la wounded or
killed In battle.
I^ch regiment Is divided into bmtallons, and each battalion Is com­
manded by a major. A battalion evoslsts of two or more companies, troops
or batteries, and each company Is eotumanded by a captain. In each com­
pany there Is a first lieutenant end a
second lleutenanL and complete com­
plement of noncommissioned officers,
first sergeontB, duty scEgeflnts, aafi
cqrporalA
The company Is divided into squads
for purpows of Instruction. dlsdpliQA
cootiol and order, each sqnad consist
of a corporal and aen
corporal Is the aqnad
When absent M
nated private.
tnBB tb* .
only of a coiporal and seven private*,
the whole formation of aa army Is ds^
vdoped and In a aeoae regulated. The
squad Is a small base unit from which
amles take their growth by a series of
Men who enter the. United Sute*
army as recruits have the same chance
that men had years ago not only to be­
come commissioned officers, hut to
reach the high place of command of
all the armies of their country.
Does this seem to be an exagger­
ated .statement? Only recently there
died a UeutenaDt general of the United
States army who commanded all the
forces of Uncle 9am. He entered the
service aa an enlisted man of regulars,
going to a recruiting office Just as any
boy of today can go to a recruiting
office there to don the uniform of a
private, later to enter the ranks, and
If It is in him to work hls way up to
the top.
Private Goes to Top.
On July 22, 18G1. Ueut. Gen. Adna
R. Chaffee apirfled for enlistment us a
regular In the army of the United
Slates. There was nothing to differ­
entiate him from other young men who
applied dally at the recruiting office.
He was assigned as a private to Trooi>
K of the Sixth cavalry, an orgaaltbtJoQ
which exists today and In which John
J. Pershing, now commanding our
forces In France, saw hla first hard
fighting duty. General Chaffee roee
from private to sergeanL to first -ergcant. to second lieutenant ind
through the rest of the ranks jntil
be was made lieutenant general of the
United States army, the ranking officer
of Uncle Sam's forces.
Chaffee was a soldier of the highest
order. Hla career In the SpanishAmerican war was markedly effidenL
He fought at San Juan and later went
to the Philippines. While there be was
ord««d to take command of the Amer­
ican forces which were to join the al­
lied forces In their march on Peking
the forbidden dty. That was one of
the most successful and hard-working
expeditions ever dispatched by tha
C»ltq4 StPtes. Chaffee won fame for
his serrtee. ^Jtfaln ^ qpmp^
EU years In the army benad een-ed iq

WESTERN GIRLS TRAIN FOR AIR SERVICE

i

J

,
[
'
I
'
j
\
:
^

W^W{.
I M

\s ''2a' ?.

These six young women of Los Angeles, Cal- have formed an aviation corps iand offer their serriees and machines
(0 the government for coast patrol work. Miss Alice La ChapellA leader of the gliiris and a finished avlatrlx. la the one
seated on the airplane. The others af' '

. .
right Zanette
Whiting, Mrs.
A. _
B. Cochran, Mr*. William Duffy, Dolores Francis and Vea KlCchin.

LATEST MODEL OF FRENCH WAR TANK

rVniMa 0 th,']

MY BE AN AMBASSADOR

IN THE PUnSBURG TRAINING CAMP

Ki

B'if
1
r

Mi

Mr. Ekl Ulokl, vice preoldem of
Xmerlcan-Japan society of Tokyo, who
probably will be the next Japanese a»bassador to the United States.

In Caee of Danger.
When biz deuchment came to relieve
A small advance party on the firing
line somewhere on the weeteru front
Lieutenant' K. naturally took possesMon of the only shelter be could find—
a sort of but rudely contrived by hls
predecessor amid the blackened and
battered ruins of one of the houses In
the blasted vtUgge, still swept night
Gd day By a furion?
^
aid ahelL The only roof waa a piece
Bfii~aad riddled with bullet
Of the three living tleutuant gen­ halA while toride a pile of muddy
erals of the army, aU of whom are on straw did dnty aa a couch. Over the
the retired UsL not one waa a gradnats
rtra* bM* • »>“
and fatof West Pt^L They all came up. if toned to the tffioln was a scrap of panot from the ranks, at least from the ^^Doo which was scrawled In £be
lowest commiasioQed oOceo. worklag ^dwrltlng of the former tenant thcM
thrir way by merlL until they received
-Alarm beU. Do not poll the
the hV^est milltazy hooor poealbto un­ ^ except in coae of dangar.der then existing law, t^omotloo ta
yamacd of the army with tte rank
Hotm ClM«nuta oa Feed.
6l lleotenant gettecaL
AO effort la being made to edept the
The fact that all young nea beteeai , 7", -ieatnut to the human dietary.
the ages of twe&ty-one and ftltty-«M S^Touta are more than batf etorch
ore registered for possible service does
«axar. with some proteld and teL
not prevent thMr volonteering for sere- t^a^ntritioua. Ttielr vMoe chiefly
lee tn the regular army, the navy «
oo <1. ---------ottmaottoo ot O,. MV
rMV oa
DM Marine corps. There Is a chuos t^emeots and the ti
for high servlee *Tn the rwnlor inha glueoridea.
army. O.'

Scene 111 the ortlcervi' tralnJog camp et Plattsburg. N. T.; practicing sig­
naling from the top of a boxcar. Inaened la a photograph of Colonel Wolf,
U. S. A. In command at the comp.

oiTrANiirT^^

This is the American steuuhlp aiver ShML on oU tanker owned m —L
Frondaeo, which fought and Mnk a OceMn
^
lietttai^^M
on Decoretioc day. limerted U a itetsgrai^ «< 0M»t a«hn
PhOndelphla, commosdw of ttm flDver MkeB.
m

TRAVERSE CITY PRESS

CHANCE FOH HIGH SERVICE IN ARMY
Uways an Opportunity for &>•
listed Men to Secure
Commissions.

WELL rJUD AND CARED FOR

”BsrLr,r.st:
««aot sod ssalstsnt leader. tnlUtary
Additional Pay Per Month.

Po«d. Clothing, Lodging and Madleal
Attendance Provided—Many Who
Have Entered Service aa Priv.
atee Have Qalnwl High Rank.

J

By EDWARD S. CLARK.
Waahla^tMk.—“In tbe regnlar army,

or

Burglcst^yeUj^t'............................................

«

nua Une la from a aooc lu pralae of
the regnlara vUcb la aa oM as
«rmy Itself. It la the pride of the
iregulars to say that they are oltraye
tv&dy end It would seem to the clxlllun
who reads the history of the aconding
army that the pride Is not mlspluced.
win Additional Pay.
There seems, to t>e thruuKlwut
Oil the first ro-eiiilstiiiont roch priv.
ooimiry a aisuudersmnUiug ouucernliig
enlib-tinents In the regular army today are in the mii.-d .>^u..es army gets M
The re^strstlon of men hctweeu th« u.ldlii..n:il I'li.v purh m.mih. and lids Is
in.-rt-iis.-.l f--r earh stictv.'rtiug enllstmeul. It will be s.-en from the table
that men who qualify ns good shots,
new national urniy di>et not lu any
prevent the registered man from enlist- or who, b.-e«use of their enpabllllleS.
log today in the regular army, the navy are given certain posltl-ns, receive an
or the Marine con>«. There la sUII
chance for u nuiii to become a volun­
teer and by becoming one to enter
ranks of an army whfeh has mode his­
tory and will coDtlone
Ions hs American fighting men take the
fieidIn the regular army the enlisted man rating of ariatlon raechanldan.
la assured of a fine quality of leader­
ship. He Is ander the command of
men who know the war game from Us
barely 500 In number. Prior
beginning to lu end and who undertime there was a force, the
suod thoroughly how to Inatlil a strict
discipline which Is good for the men units of which were paid by the dif­
and for the service because, while ferent rtates. or It might almost be
colonies, for It was not until 17S8
necGssartly stHcL it has for lu spirit
a kindly eonal.-JeratloD end a knowl­ that the United State* as the United
edge of the needs of the soldier. More­ States came into existence. The fed­
over, the regular army officers know eral government took over a part of
bow to carp thoroughly for the health these state forces and formed the origal regular army.
,
of their men.
The regulars fought Indians from
Thoroughly Trained Leaders.
.e very start of their existence as an
It must not be understood from this organlied body. They made a fine
that tlie new national array will not record for themselves small as were
be well led sod well .cored for. but In ! their numbers In Uie war of 1812. Later
the reg^ar service the eaUre person-;
guarding the
— - -ie o>mn.I..loj.,d mou i, 0...
„„j

guidance
•a. ...
.of .those who shell be
- ..under
their control. In the national army In
each organlzatloo there wiu be some
regular offlcecg, whose duty It wUl be
to Impart to the newer officera the
thing! wblchlhey have learned by long
Otperteaca. Both eervlcM wUl be. of
the hlgheif order.
The yonagABaa vo etiUMs lo the reg­
ular •enrtes' has every chuee of pr»mottoc. He enters aa a private, bnt
there Is an opportunity for him while
etill an enlisted man to seenre a posi­
tion which wUI pay him S81 a month
In addition to hla entire support so far
as food, clothing, lodging and medical
attendance are concerned. The govenusent gives all these things gratia
There la always an opportunity for
enlisted men of the United States
army who are menuily and physically
alert to seenre commissions, and there­
by to pass from the ranks of an enlisted man to that of sn officer, and
be assured of a prl.fe-^^.lua for lli«.
rest of his life. Enlisted men who re­
main enlisted men In the army can re­
tire after 80 years service with good
pay and allowance.
Pay In the Army.
In order chat the young man who
desires to become a volunteer through
enlistment In the United States army,
for probable first service to the field
of the present war, may know Just
what bis pay will be, the foUowlng
table Is given by which he can de­
termine almost at a glance what bis
“monthly money" will amount no. and
while studying the table he should re­
member that the government takes It
Qpon Itself to keep him In food and
dothlng,-tb give him lodging and med­
ical attendance and. In fact, to provide
for him every necessary of life free of
cost Here Is the table:
Privi
PTiVI

de
Prt.
Cor

lepan= S-.Zo.t'So.rSS-U:-,
. Chief
Musician.
™rsw,"'.SJS“s..A“.sK
ficrxaant. artlller
Biahle aercaaoi,
.........
try, oavi^. Supply sergeant. Infan,U7, cavalry, artillery. Mess serTtanL Infantry, cavalry, artlllefy.
Cook. HorMsboar. Radio serswuit.
Ftreman. Band corporal. Muslelas
, McoBd clasB. Infantry, cavalry, vtlli%rf. fJflDMn. .Musician, ipird
iwtWL. enrln^, ortnjmoA .sigial H
ply ssrgcaoL

_________

Band ssrteaDL MusMSaa. Sm oUm.

_ba»d leadOT ..........................
t mMor.
^ stmply
sei«eui iBBWr,
ssolor grads. Qnartarmaslsr ssrtaanL Q. U. empa Ordnaaos sargsast. Fliat Bsrgeant. Ttart.ii^. s«r.
•sast major, anstnaers.
anpply tarsrant. anMneam. ffia^
nal eorps Atslstam aoglsaer
. dan, ftrat clam. mlBt^aca* siHC: |

«' a-'oiloo to ami, and ol
jjj
fields BO far removed from dvillzntloD that the people
never reallied what thetr little force
was doing for them. To the dact that
the high work of the regulars was done
for ao many years In remote llMdi was
due the lo^ yl the people’s amredaCton of the heroism of their standing
LongUatof H
It was the regnlart who suffered lo
the Fort Dearborn massacre on the
dte of Chicago over a hundied years
: It waa the regulars under Major
Dade who to Florida, bopeleealy outonmbered and ambosbed. fought until
almost the last man was killed, the
Seminole Indians under the fine leader­
ship of one of Osceota'a chieftains. It
the regulars who went to death in
the country of the Bosebud under the
white chief, Custer; It was a little
In 1890 and
log losses. It was the regulars who,
fought Bed Ooud. Crazy Horse, Chief
Joseph, and who followed Gerfinimo,
The Kid. and other savage Apaches,
Into the moubtalo fastnesses of MexlIt was the regulars who from the
beginning until the present day have
dared everytlilng for their country.
Their record la a magnificent one.
The regular army U n<^- being
brongbt up to a war standard of
strength. When the ranks are full
there will be following the colors as a
part of the negular establishment some
285.000 Xroebcans. Any young Ameri­
can today has en opportunity to beby volunteering a member of this
devoted band. It means service, and
bard service, but It also means high
serrlce. and In all human probability
glorious service. Hardships there will
be in plenty; dangers, a multitude, but
there are the compensatlonB of service
that is senrlce. and of a sense of
patriotic dnty done In a field of Ilfs
Into which devotion to country calls
the young American.
of the Army.
The organisation of the army today
Is different from the organisation of
other dayx In the old days there was
ariarioD eemee and little or no
signal, service of any kind. The med­
ical service was crude; the artillery
become the great factor In
warfare that It la today, and there was
Qpn along all lines of
less I
milita
Let us take the AmerlcaB army as It

military power. ^
&f COQTW '*
It
In adflBoo
to the regular army we shall have the
great new Dational army, the NaOaoal
Ouardsmeo, tiie navy and the Hartna
_e to help ua win in the fight for
the liberty of the wortd.
The regular army of the United
Btataa upon the present war footing
cooriats of 64 reglmeotB of Infantry,
25 reginsnta of cavalry; 28 rvlmeota
of SMd artillery, a coast artillery corps,
bri^te, dlTtotan, army eorpa. and amy
baaiSqBTTiaii. with thrir detachmwtt
of troops: x .general etaff corps, an
adjutant cmenTs departmesL an i»qiaetor generaTa depaf«a«BL a Jodge
adswate geseraFs dapartmenL a quartaraaster'e corpa, a madleal depanM«t, a corpa of sagloaeia. aa oed-

nance departmeuL a algnel corps, th*
offleen of the bureau of insular affairs,
a military bureau, the regular army reservA the corpx of cadets at We«t
Point and other smaller orgtnlsatioiu
used for dladpUnary grod^ service
schoolA and record depot dettcbmenti
and for some other purposes.
How It Is Commanded
army la a huge body of men gath­
ers together for fighdug purposes in
different units of organltatloo. ao
army when It passes a certain streogih
usually Is oommand'ed by a geoemi.
Today there la no general lo the Unit­
ed States army, but It la probable that
within a few montha congreaa wlll.rethe rank and name some officer,
who, taking the title of general, shall
have supreme command of all the fightIng forces In the field.
army Is composed of army cortw.
There may be twe or three or more
corps In an army. Sometlmca wheij
there is a huge number of troops In
(he field one general Is put lo suprerae
comtuund while hls forces are dlvldeq
Into several armies, each one In coliiiiiind of a lieutenant general. It I.llkH} thut <xingress soon will muke
.Miij, <'>f-n. John J. Pershing-a lleutenwilt gi-oeral and put him In conimutnl
of (lu- First corps, ctnislstlug of seve.-tJ
divisiiuis of troops, to see serMce lo
Fraure.
/i division of troops is commnnded
by u major goiieml. It is composed
of several brigades, each one of whu-ti
Is commanded by a brigadier gcueml.
It Is possible for a brigade to consist
of a combination of cavalry, Infantry
and artillery, but frequently each bri­
gade Is composed of regiments all of
the same branch of the service. The
typical Infantry brigade, for Instacci-.
consists of a headquarters andr three
leglmenu of infantry, while a typical
cavalry brigade eouslsts of a heodquarters and three regiments of cav­
alry.
Composition of the ReglmenL
Each reglinenl Is comiutiodwli by a
leutPiicolonel, who has under him
ant colonel, whose dudes are rath.-r
Don<lescri[d. although hls chief i^uty Is
to take the place of the colonel In hls
absence or In case be la wounded or
killed In battle.
I^ch regiment Is divided into bmtallons, and each battalion Is com­
manded by a major. A battalion evoslsts of two or more companies, troops
or batteries, and each company Is eotumanded by a captain. In each com­
pany there Is a first lieutenant end a
second lleutenanL and complete com­
plement of noncommissioned officers,
first sergeontB, duty scEgeflnts, aafi
cqrporalA
The company Is divided into squads
for purpows of Instruction. dlsdpliQA
cootiol and order, each sqnad consist
of a corporal and aen
corporal Is the aqnad
When absent M
nated private.
tnBB tb* .
only of a coiporal and seven private*,
the whole formation of aa army Is ds^
vdoped and In a aeoae regulated. The
squad Is a small base unit from which
amles take their growth by a series of
Men who enter the. United Sute*
army as recruits have the same chance
that men had years ago not only to be­
come commissioned officers, hut to
reach the high place of command of
all the armies of their country.
Does this seem to be an exagger­
ated .statement? Only recently there
died a UeutenaDt general of the United
States army who commanded all the
forces of Uncle 9am. He entered the
service aa an enlisted man of regulars,
going to a recruiting office Just as any
boy of today can go to a recruiting
office there to don the uniform of a
private, later to enter the ranks, and
If It is in him to work hls way up to
the top.
Private Goes to Top.
On July 22, 18G1. Ueut. Gen. Adna
R. Chaffee apirfled for enlistment us a
regular In the army of the United
Slates. There was nothing to differ­
entiate him from other young men who
applied dally at the recruiting office.
He was assigned as a private to Trooi>
K of the Sixth cavalry, an orgaaltbtJoQ
which exists today and In which John
J. Pershing, now commanding our
forces In France, saw hla first hard
fighting duty. General Chaffee roee
from private to sergeanL to first -ergcant. to second lieutenant ind
through the rest of the ranks jntil
be was made lieutenant general of the
United States army, the ranking officer
of Uncle Sam's forces.
Chaffee was a soldier of the highest
order. Hla career In the SpanishAmerican war was markedly effidenL
He fought at San Juan and later went
to the Philippines. While there be was
ord««d to take command of the Amer­
ican forces which were to join the al­
lied forces In their march on Peking
the forbidden dty. That was one of
the most successful and hard-working
expeditions ever dispatched by tha
C»ltq4 StPtes. Chaffee won fame for
his serrtee. ^Jtfaln ^ qpmp^
EU years In the army benad een-ed iq

WESTERN GIRLS TRAIN FOR AIR SERVICE

i

J

,
[
'
I
'
j
\
:
^

W^W{.
I M

\s ''2a' ?.

These six young women of Los Angeles, Cal- have formed an aviation corps iand offer their serriees and machines
(0 the government for coast patrol work. Miss Alice La ChapellA leader of the gliiris and a finished avlatrlx. la the one
seated on the airplane. The others af' '

. .
right Zanette
Whiting, Mrs.
A. _
B. Cochran, Mr*. William Duffy, Dolores Francis and Vea KlCchin.

LATEST MODEL OF FRENCH WAR TANK

rVniMa 0 th,']

MY BE AN AMBASSADOR

IN THE PUnSBURG TRAINING CAMP

Ki

B'if
1
r

Mi

Mr. Ekl Ulokl, vice preoldem of
Xmerlcan-Japan society of Tokyo, who
probably will be the next Japanese a»bassador to the United States.

In Caee of Danger.
When biz deuchment came to relieve
A small advance party on the firing
line somewhere on the weeteru front
Lieutenant' K. naturally took possesMon of the only shelter be could find—
a sort of but rudely contrived by hls
predecessor amid the blackened and
battered ruins of one of the houses In
the blasted vtUgge, still swept night
Gd day By a furion?
^
aid ahelL The only roof waa a piece
Bfii~aad riddled with bullet
Of the three living tleutuant gen­ halA while toride a pile of muddy
erals of the army, aU of whom are on straw did dnty aa a couch. Over the
the retired UsL not one waa a gradnats
rtra* bM* • »>“
and fatof West Pt^L They all came up. if toned to the tffioln was a scrap of panot from the ranks, at least from the ^^Doo which was scrawled In £be
lowest commiasioQed oOceo. worklag ^dwrltlng of the former tenant thcM
thrir way by merlL until they received
-Alarm beU. Do not poll the
the hV^est milltazy hooor poealbto un­ ^ except in coae of dangar.der then existing law, t^omotloo ta
yamacd of the army with tte rank
Hotm ClM«nuta oa Feed.
6l lleotenant gettecaL
AO effort la being made to edept the
The fact that all young nea beteeai , 7", -ieatnut to the human dietary.
the ages of twe&ty-one and ftltty-«M S^Touta are more than batf etorch
ore registered for possible service does
«axar. with some proteld and teL
not prevent thMr volonteering for sere- t^a^ntritioua. Ttielr vMoe chiefly
lee tn the regular army, the navy «
oo <1. ---------ottmaottoo ot O,. MV
rMV oa
DM Marine corps. There Is a chuos t^emeots and the ti
for high servlee *Tn the rwnlor inha glueoridea.
army. O.'

Scene 111 the ortlcervi' tralnJog camp et Plattsburg. N. T.; practicing sig­
naling from the top of a boxcar. Inaened la a photograph of Colonel Wolf,
U. S. A. In command at the comp.

oiTrANiirT^^

This is the American steuuhlp aiver ShML on oU tanker owned m —L
Frondaeo, which fought and Mnk a OceMn
^
lietttai^^M
on Decoretioc day. limerted U a itetsgrai^ «< 0M»t a«hn
PhOndelphla, commosdw of ttm flDver MkeB.
m

OIYUBRARY

lot between the depot and the Jackson
Skirt Co’s, plant. A little money ex­
ie following new books .of Fiction
pended on improvements of this kind
goes a long way toward making a dty good for the summer reading are now
Pi inted Tuesdays and Fridays by the
beautiful and, besides increasing the in UieLihnuy:
GOTHIC PRESS PRINTING SERVICE
Bachellcr, Irving—The Light in
Mrs. John Helfrich, Maple Street, re­ value of the property itself, creates a
Clearing,
very.favorable impression with the
turned Wednesday evening from
CL E. Myers,

Gen. Mgr.
Bailey. Temple—Mistress Anne.
.le passing thru the city.
tliree weeks visit with her -daujrlitc
Bellamy, F. R.—The Balance.
Mrs. Amandus Evers, of Charlevoix.
Gothic press printing service
A new f25 room hotel, to be built at Brownp, P. E.-rScars and Stripes.
Buckrose, J. £,—11)6 Matchmakers.
The Companion Sewing Society ♦iU the cost 'bf $100,000 has lean planned
^ers & Myers. • Sole Owners
Burnett, Mrs. Frances H.-Tbe White
meet with Mrs. H. C. Gore, S»lh W. for TVaverse Cily. Ihe structure will
312 South Union Street
People.
five stories, with the Uirce top
Ninth St. Thursday aflemoon. July 19.
Ladies are requesttd to bring their floors arranged so that they may be
cut off dtiring the winter seasoo, leav­ DeMorgao, Wifa.—Joseph Vance.
Ddedlcwbrk.
ing the two lower floors for winter; Farnol. Jeffrey-The Definite Object
Ford,.Sewell—Wat Thou. Torehy.
The marriage of Miss Ida Richie and transient trade. Tlie exact location is
Foster. Maximilian -Shoestrings.
Herman LaCure, Ca.ss Strem. lertjMr. Wns H. Mason was quietly solemn-, not known at present but it will be in
Gregory, Jackson—Short Cut.
Thureday for a visit with his mother injjjcd at ftc parsonage of the Christian the down-town district. Ji-e capital
Grey, Zane-Wildfire.
has been subscribed locally.
• Detcpit.
church at 8:30 Saturday evening by
Hall, Gertrude—Aurora the Magnifi­
--------- ;------------iReV. Fold A. Ellis. They were nttendcent.
Miss Vera McCormick. Union Street, jed by Mr. and Mrs. Roy Richie and
Howells W. D.-'The Leatberwood God.
How It Works Out.
is spending the week end with-friendsj,vii! reside at 210 State Street,
Irvine,
Akxander—My Lady of the
•Ptret Coal Doalcir—"How much profit
at Acme.
• .
-I
------- -----------------iin^eyklorner.
a» yon making, on a ton now?" Sepond Coal Dealer—"Tweniy.flTe per Jacobs, W. W.—The Castaways.
cent.* -Why ihafs a good de.il more Kelly. Eleanor—Kildaros of Sturm.
than 1 am makiag.” "But you seU to Koit, Sophie—The Blue F.nvelope.
sclka grocery.

;lst; a comedy act Paul IJow.-ns, Iht- the rich in large lots. i sell to
Krychatiovskaya, V. I.—Torch-bearers
^ •
'Human Freight Train, ancTLittlo Atden poor In pailfuls.’’—LUo.
of Bohemia.
. Miss CTeota Conklin. Fifteenth Street and Pen Abdiz in a novelty whirlwind
Lefevre. Edwin—To the Last Penny.
isspendinga w^k with friends a! Bcii-Jgnn spinning and iron jaw- act. BeLullon. ElizatSeth M.—Cracker Box
ubie 8
lah, her old home..
jsidos the vaudeville the regular pictur;
School.
Wife—’Tn order that I mav got fho
—-----------------pro.jram Ls run.
mone.v on this check, do tlio people at I.ynde, Frances—StrandeJ, in Arcady.
The dirt streets rif the city a.-e beii g^
-----------the bank have to know me?" Hus­ Mi Fcc, Win.—Casuals of the Sea.
jgreatly improved upon by the city scar-1 The P. M. Railway Co. Invc just fin- band—’ Yes, tbey have to know yon. Martin. Mrs. Helen R.-"nicisc Fitzeii
'ished grading and sodding the vacant but noV. as well as I do; otherwisr
bergers.
ificr and road roller.
they wouldn’t give yon a cent.’’— Mason. A. E. W.-Four Feathers.
3.' 'n.
' V .
.
. ■'a. .
Judge.
Norton. Roy—The Unknown Mr. Kent.
SUITS SPONGED AND PREvSSED EOR 50c AT
Ogden. G. W.—Rustler of Wind River.
Oppenheim, E. P.—Kingdom of.
Java’s Death Plant
Blind.
The "death plant” of Java has flowire which continually give off a per­ Partridge, E. B.—Subc Cane.
327 S. UNION ST.
PHONE 910
fume .so powerful as to overcame, If [’ier, .V S--Jerry.
-sjc.
Inhaled for
...M......
.... ......
any length
.....e-u ..t
of time,
L1U4C. -fc
a fullLuu- Poole; Ernest—His
tta JIUIJJ
family.
grown mau. and which kills all forms [Roche. A. S.—Plunder,
of Insect life that come under lu In- Roe, Vingie-Tlie Primal Lure.
Rohmer, Sax—The Yellow Claw.
A Lapse of Memory
Kolland, Romain—Jean Christophe, 3
often happens when a child is
olumcs.
Born Tired.
sent to the store on an errtind..
“He wuz bo’n too tired ter git outen Royle, E. M.—Peace and Quiet.
In such cases we help the
his own tray," said the old colored Ruck, Berta—Girls at His BillcL
youngster all we can, but
brother. "Do only exercise he ever Ruck, Bert—In Another Girl's Shoes.
gits Is failin’ from ^ce. an’ alter he Scott, J. R.—Cab of the Sleeping Horacr
never give a child what we
falls, please God, be'e tod tired ter git Siierwood, Margaret—The Worn Door­
would not give ilsparent. We
up!"—AUanU Constitution.
ii.avea straight method of doing'
step.
'
busincs.'-and you can send a
Tobenkin, Elias-.Witte Arrives.
child here and feci certain that
Suspicious Man.
Wallace. Edgar—Clue of the Twisted
they wjll lie as wcll and faith­
•'Unless my plans are frustrated,'’
Candle.
fully attended to as youwould
says ^ke Van Quentin, "I shall marry Weston, Gcoige—Oh. Mary be Careful:
be, and given the best Grocer­
lall, slender girl, who has a- bt, Whitaker, Herman—Over the Border.
fat sister, 'men I will have reaadm
ies only.
.
able assurance that the clothes 1 see
my fiancee In ate her own."
Old BuperstlUona.
IB certain parts of the Slav t___
511 Uoioa St.
a bride bows to the fire on the
Knabe piano io-Walnot case tries
hearth when ebe first enter* her i
at Grinaell Bros., $250..
home. In parte of BobemU families
^1 not pemlt a brand- to be takes
tnia the hearth by an outsider or for
the use of ailotha- tantUy. In Mh«nia,
sothtng. andean ts thrown into the
fire. Also nn«r the hirth. of a child,
tety days mart eta^ betore a brand
nay b« taken tram the fire for tte nee
of ecuther houeehnid.

TRAVERSE OTY PRESS

Sunday and Monday saw some real
black bass fishing in Elk River. Near­
ly everyone carried away the limit, of
ten fish.

ipmsue

MEEBOER’S

NICHOLSON

Saxon “Six”
A BIG TOURING CAR FOR 5 PEOPLE

^

^

^

""x

Pf3of of the greater sttetiglh
endurance of Saxon
li- M found in the- fact
that the average cost for

-^

repair parts over a period of
two years is $8.50 per car.

Saxon '“Six ’ ’ is S935 f. o. b. Detroit SPEClFIC.\TIONS: New body design, lajwr body, new finish. 12”
canlDever type rear spring. 2” crankshaft, tilted
windshield, new style lop with Grecian rear bow, new style fenders,
in.stnjmeiil<:Diounted on cowl d.ash. chrome vanadium valve springs,
new^sign aftWetor. 112” wheelbase, light weight six-cylindcr high
SomS motor;
tires.ydemountable rims, two unit Starting
fuittm
system, 'Timken axles, full Timken bearings, and twenty

Saxon Agency
F. C; Rice, Agent

324 EAST FRONT STREET
BeU Phone I36w
Citz. Phone 1134

)

IA Notable Offering of Wash Goods
and White Goods at Reduced Prices
The wc.Tring and using lime fo; Wash Goods and White 0o6ds
crate eypenditure at the reduced prices we quote willVravidfi
you with malcriats for dres.ses, skirls and wafsl.s. Vou can
m splendid n-ssortments
choose troni
n.ssdrtmi-nts at rreal worth while savings,
c duriirr the nesH few da.vs.

WASH GOODS

WASH GOODS ^

Up to I5c Printed Lawns New S|K)it Suitings, Very
popular forWash Skirts.
and SJiadow Cloth |Qiq
Khaki Kool patterns and
Sport Stripes. 1-ormerly
Fine Fiaxon Lawns. 1 fir

Beautiful pnttonisat yd.10”

One L«l of 25c Fancy OUR BliST Wa.sh Gonds
Voiles, .% to 40 inches

WHITE GOODS

299 »"<* 43c

■ U 2Sc“T““i2S
White Crepe Vers>,rauch in
fi • A™!

19c

Formerly' priced up to
Tissue Ginghims. Choice 59c. Your choice from
patterns. Fast 01 p our finest patterns of
colors. Reduced to yd.4,1 ” Voiles and iMarquisettes.

Globe Dept. Store
wssJ

Peeeefut ^Ighbore. '
A man who lives atoagade of a
oemeteiT was aaked If it was not'an
—--------uspieasani 4—„
locauon. -no,- saioae; 1
~l
never resided in all my life with a eel
Of neighbors that minded their owp
bnelneea so eteedily as they do."
I Wisdom. ■
Mamma-^'Don't you know that trinr
Solomon eaid ’Spare the rod and spoil
the childr ■’ UUle Leo—"Yes; but ht
never eaid It unUl after he got eo old
Jiis mother couldn’t lick him.’’—Chi
oegoNewa
Whalina at an Industry.
Whaling is now a well eetahllshed
Industry oS the Ponuguese-Afrlcas
coasu The "bumpbacked" whale av­
eraged <5 feet In length and the occa
atonal sperm whale about 60 feet.

Telephone your Drug wants
to 201 Citizens or R80. Scott’s
City Drug Store.

.lectiic
Langes
Making a Nation

^TBefierGxfe

^•TO more cooking by goesswort Electric cooking is
replacing guesswork with
Bn almost sdentiBc exactness. It
makes cooking successes the rule,
failures rare.
It gives food a
richer.better flavor, a delictoosness
before' unknown.
The Hughes
Electric Range is setting this new
standard of codking erceDence—
•making a nation of better cooks.
I,***
«w» beat of a Hughes
Elet^c Range g|v«« a nnhonnity of
rveulM tutbeno Impoeribla
Conetam
watching is unneeewary; the remit! are
aaeurad in advance.
The^ng^a Blactrle ov^ with Ita

Which Looks The
Larger to
YOU?
$L00
We
Thought So

THANK YOU!

sevae paatly la ojeat ehrinfc^v’^
p»es the mem a finer, better fievoc
vMor^. because of the wonderfully ■
even beat throoghont the oran, Tbare
are no air CDtrauta to cany off the rich

The
Press

With euch a range as this, avary woman
ran bwme a batter cock. When to her
rare m preparation ia-added perfection

a netghbortiood haromes I
ewmng gnmp of naaref
™ M r., mo».bom tb. d«AI—Id rw CM drtdn will, B ti,M
With any oeber cooking matbod.
BUY

City Electric Light
242 E. Front St.

L

-

CLASSIFIED ADS
RATES—One cent per word for first insertion or three issues for the price of two, ex­
cepting Real Estate Ads which run at one
cent per word per issue. SITUATIONS
Wanted run free of charge.

WANTED

. FOR SALE

WANTED-Mkldle aged mu aod
FOR S.^LE— Good established Ice
wife tcf care for fruit farm and stoclc. Cream. Candy and Bakery. .Good loca­
A Kood rh&Dce for some one. Apply tion. Business good, ^’e^y ;cheap for
cash. Inquire Press office.
\VANTED—To exchange, a good or­ FOR SALE-Farm wagon end Ugbt
gan for wall papering, paper furnished. buggy. Inquire 866 E. Front Street or
Apply 239 East Front St.
Press office.
33.5

CONTESTANT’S
STANDINGS

FOR SALE-Genenl store. Stone
WANTED—Man to take entire charge
of our business in this locality. Good buildii^.'new store, ail cash busioess.
j business established. Straight salary 0. M. Vermeulen. Wexford, Mich. I
|or stilar}' and commission. Grand UnFOR SALE-Hound1 |pups of choice '
lion Tea Go.. Lansing, 329 N. A'ashing.
breeding, 4 mo. old. Cheap
. .. ________
ton Ave.
30-3
if taken
at once. These pups will make good
WANTED—Second-hand Ford car in general purpose dogs. E. A. Knowles.
31.3
good condition, for cash. Call Citz. 811 S. Onion.
phone 701.
30tf
FOR SALE—Completely equipped
LOST—On Central School grounds at motor boat at less than cost of engine.
'
24tf
iOldSettler's picnic, black crochet hand Inquire Press otfice.
:bag with purse inside, about S2 money.
Itwo handkerchiefs and door key, Find|er leave at Press office.

In Dunlap Pony Contest
as turned in, to date

FOR RENT

MffIDGETS.

FOR RENT—Modem house, close in.
Inquire at Press Offlte.
27*3

(f^urni CflitQ 3Flimipr &l|0{i

‘GET BUSr IS YOUR Mono
IF YOU WANT TO WIN

PROFESSIONAL

at AnttcrfiAi’a

BOYD’S

Taxi, Transfer and Dray
—Office Phones—
,-Citz. 311 and 307
Bell 10^
Res. R-lOSCitizens

DRS. TRUEBLOOD. A TROl ULOOI)
Osteopathic Physicians. FITS-U glass" fHted, 06 Wilhelm puilding.
DR. SARA CHASE. 407 State Bank
Block. Diseases pf women and <‘btiw
DR. W. J. HIGGINS
- DENTIST
GOOD Dentistry • FINE PreporrtiMS
for Painless Ext
hftPriceBldg.
(

City Open HoiucBlKk

««x.-a3

Minnetonna Home
Creamery

-

,

Do your feet hurt? CaDoosites and
removed without the nse of the
knife. Ingrown nafls«ured. ManneUo
Shop, over Peoples’ Bank.

CONNINE & CQNNINE
•LAWYERS
'
401 State Bank Building
Cit£ Phone 123 '

GERANIUMS
^
for
BEDDING PURPOSES
Porch Iwxcs, bRskets, etc.

PAINE’S GKEENHOUSE
Name, Age, Residence

^ S'; I’?

Url McManus. II VMI-S. 420 F]flhSta«,
Joe Babel. 13 years; 112 E. Ninth bt.
lone Skult. 7 years, 741 E. Eicbth St.
Theodore Crain, in yeprs. 312 W. Fifteenth St. ■
Wilford Nash, 11 years. 326 So. Simiec Slreot. ■
' Samtio] Harbold, 15 years, 237 \Va.<hingtoji
Arthur I. Webster, fi years. 7J3 Lake ,\ve.
Gerald York. 6 years. 729 !.ake Ave.
Esther Root, 9 yeai?. Tenth St.
Knoble Chase. 8 years. G08 Garfield Ave.
Elton Ely. 4 years, 611 Pine St.
• Chester Supemaw, 11 years, 328 Fifth St.
Reginold Eldred. II years. 145 E. SiMeenth Si. John Mackin. 10 yer,r.=.G18E. Eighth St.
Phyllis Wahl. 9 years. 629 Webster SI.
Jo-'ephine Kehoe. 4 years. Webster .inti Roardmari.
Rali.'h Shannon. 10 years. 1002 Cass St.
Gerald .Antli.my Fifarek, 1 year. 156 N. Oak
James Machokla. 11 yt^rs, 406 S. Union

ever
do

28.390
24.930
S..575
2.875
1.890 '
530
60

TRA?ERSE-CnYSreAM
LAUNDRY

DRAYUNES
Heavy, light draying. ■ Prompt seiTioe.
W. G. LaDUKE .
I|
Phone. Citz. G676

a:'

BEN RUSSEL
Dray & Baaga«e Line. Cita. PboM
Re*. Phone 23A

•y Cteaniug and Steam Pressi.
Both Phones
GKORGE F. ROWE, Prep.

BERT MULLEN
Light and Hei\-y Dray. Household
Otx>a* Moving a Specialt)’, Auto Truck
SoiVice.
-Phones. Citz. Office 37S
Res I«96

EAST SIDE TAXI LINE

MARK CRAW
For light draying and baggage calls.
Phone .Number Forty-two
48-4

E. H. Burrows & Son

If you want rubbish hauled, gardens
plowed or any kind of draying
V^“c! MAY
747 Citz. Phone
. 811 E. Eighth
PLUMBING AND REPAIRING

i. O. SMITH
Some Women and Meney.
One of the chief enuaea of financial klumbing and Repair work. Estimates
pressure In modem life is the failure cheertuHy furnished. Re.s. 91S Wash,
12 I
of .some girls and'women to realize ington St. Citz, Phone R397.
that money docs not fall like the dew. |
PAINTING AND PAPEMHANGIM.
gently from heaven.—Stother'a Maga-'____'

j '

EDWARD MARTIN.
Painter and Paperhanger. Estimates
cheerfully given. 219 E. Tenth St.
Diplomatic SUteaman.
Citz- Phone R911

JC-9
"Do yon think your constitnents
agree with your views?" "Yes.’' re­
FRAh'^C HUNT
plied Senator Sorghum, i made It a
Phoni
point to have my views Is agreement Painter and Paperhabger.
G686. Residence 881 £a.st Eighth SL
with theirs before 1 said a word.”
LODGES
But They Don't.
The value some men pul on them,
selves makes you wish they bad the
Job of aeseaslnB. your real eeUte.—
Exchange.

Some of

Traverse City’s People
need your help

~ Wilt Be Rnmarkabla Map.
To make a map of the world on tfei
unprecedented sc&lc of 1C miles to th<
; yich la a project of BrlUah aciontlsta.

Quick delivery to any part
of city. Telephone calls sol­
icited. Scott’s City Drug Store

I. O. O. F.
Grand Traverse Lodge No. 503
Meets every' Thursday Evening in
their hall 221 E. Front st. at 8 o'clock
lAHAN,
Secretary.
LAWN MOWER REPAIRING
teppired
greund and kept in shape
pe all snmnier.
sum
Called for and delivered by ,
J. K. LOfCWELL
Price 75 centa
Call 42 both phones orSSCjtizaas phone

Di. rt iJCsitate to call Uie Press of­
WSTROCTION
fice vvbeticver you have a news item.
l-ndies—^
beauty

Press lOc per Month

Of'' MRS. E. L BONNER
125 Cass St

i ;.

m
TRAVERSF. CITY PRESS

THOSE AWFUL
CRAMPS

CONVENIENT LUNCH CABINET FOR MOTORS

JmAnoNAL

SUNMlSdOOL

»-A

inggestioBS tint may aavo
Much Suffering

Lesson

IBy B. O. BBU.SBS. Aetlns Dlreetoe «<
u* Einday Seheri Ceuia* ot tha Moody
’ Blbla laaucut* of Chicago.)
tcepyriam. HIT, Wctcni Kfwcoaow Ualea.)

LESSON FOR JULY IS.

■...........
by doctor*,
bntny troable caatinoi^antilone dsy
I revl aboat LydU

tnobled with erampt wd fed like •
different 'womu.
I cannot praiaa
Lydia E. Pinkham'e ^Vegetable C

who are ticabled wtffi
peiioda, badcadie.

iiarSi to bealtti by ^ rMt and b^
remedy.
Write for free and bdpful advice to
^a E. Plnkham Medictae Ca («».

She Underetoed.
Certain members ot ibe bonse party
were descrlblns the accidents tbat bad
happened to them daring tbelr re^>ectlve careers. Adreotures by 'flood. Are
and field bad all been well received,
and Mr. Brown, eager lor fame,
tbOQght U„«as bis turn.
“D'.vdn know." he'said. "I bad a
very palnfnl experience once. 1 ran a
confdanded spUnter quite half an inch
long right under roy finger-nail, dent
you know I”
*lteally. Mr. Brown." said a maiden
of the party; "how did you do Itr
Asheapoke be unconsciously raised
bis bond and scratched his forehead.
"Oh. I see," she Intemipted, sweetly;'“bow very careless of youl"

Twenty-Rve f eare’
Eqerience Wdi
Kidney Remedy
Srop-Boot^^ dn^ *11 that tiiM 1

■suer
eoi
tl TSiBihk_______ _
trifadi it in iateaded.
VwTttalyyowv. ______
OITO H. O.- LIPPERT,
l«n Pkeaiiaii. Oor. liberty Sts.
ilVt. iB. 1916. ''
CmriiHitti. Ohio.

[tavs WbM

wa Da Per Tea

^ Bepd Aea coU^ ^

* Co..

___ jittion, tdliBg about tbs kideen
tad bladdCT. When wn^.^bt am and
•A4v.
Psychology and the War*
Prof. O. Stanley Hall of the Clark
onlveirity. United SiateA ptaces the
subject iOf appUed psychology on
high pl/nClB reUUon- to the war. B
dtateal
"Whatever system ‘ has been em­
ployed. it is erldeat tbat applied
psychology has produced results In
thU war which U was never possible
Co att^ before. Men bsve endured
more, they have shown more heroism
and daring and 'have submitted to
more punishment than in any pre­
vious‘war. No such slaughter would
have been possible In former wars
without provoking s panic. This has
unquestionably been due to the sys­
tem of psychological selection, not
only for the varions grades of senlce
but for special activities within each
grade. Our country may ak well think
of going to-war without first-class mil­
itary ^ulpment as without a knowled^ of applied psychology. The coun­
cil of national defense seems to have
recognized this: and the National Re­
search council within that body wUL 1
onderstUnd. contain representative
psychologists."

' e-3

-

PROPER WORKING OF A DRAG

...
-1

Rules From HIghvray Magazine Tell
How to Get Best Results—Drag
Whenevir PeealMo.

MOTORISTS EATING LUNCHEON ON ROADSIDE.
An automobile lunch box. designed and manufactured in Portland. Ore.. Is
Intended to be canled on the running board of a car, to which it may be atuched by means of two small thumbscrews while traveling. It Is /shaped Uke
a suitcase One side Jets do»-n to form a picnic table, and the box contains a
series of hinged and swinging drawers for food and bottles, also a metal-llned
ice box with water drain, and a plate and Unen compartment The materials
used in construction of the box are fir wood and veneer, the outride bring
black enameled and the Interior naturUii finish. Various sires are made, suit­
able for from three to eight persona. The largest sire Is 34 Inches Jong, 19
Inches high, and 9 inches deep, the Ud making a 15 by S3 Inch table.—Populri
Mechanics Magarlne.
,
'

BHUTV OF MOTORS!
Really Handsome Cars ‘Stand
Out and Receive Praise.

ExperU on Dealgns Blame Condition
en American Idea of QuantitySeme Oimeultiee Cited Artist
Must Face.
The really - beautiful antomc
stands out as one of the elect, and
never falU to receive immediate attenand cheerful praise. Yet the num­
ber of motor cam that measure np to
the canons of artistic praise U smaU.
This is so becanse the art of creating
them U but UtUe practiced in America.
The American custom of quality pro­
duction offers but little chance for art
Where a manufaettfrer alms for volume
of production the creation of beautifol
designs Interferes with It Only the
maker whose prodnetion is reUtivriy
limited undertakes to sattaty the
canons of artistic taste.
Hedged In by Restrictions.
Automobile body building Is hedged
about by many restrictions. It U only
In rare cases that the body designer
U permitted to lay hU own foondation.
but must toke the ebagris os it U
tamed «ver to him by ^ mechanical
department and endeavor to do the
best he can on a founilatlMi Wanned
by someone else, who mny not have
the sUghtest conception of beauty.
Artistic bodies need to be 1* bal­
anced proportion to the hood, but Alnce
this is determined by the length of the
motor, and since the length of the body
U determined by the wheel base, the
body designer has not much latitude.
Within a definite space back of the
motor a fixed and arbitrary numlx
persona must be seated and seated
comfortably. Doors for entrance must
be prodded. Seats must be high
enou^ but not too bl^ and the
hrighth of the body must be kept In
relation to the helght.of the seats, and
of the hood.
U. with these restrictions, the body
designer succeeds In turning out a har­
monious car. be has done wriL Yet
he has not really done well unless U
has all been planned so that It will
Uke color combinations most effect­
ively.

a
J

S

*


y miles per hour over
smooth roads. .
To carry one over the rougher roads as fast as one can ride
with any degree of comfort.
To pull through deep sand,
mud or snow ^slly and wltbont
overheating.
. To climb any ordinary hill
where there nre traveled roads,


«
J
o

e
*
e
«
*

color, but when this is dons It takes
the car out of the Oaaa of beautiful
creations.
Eoriy Ornamentations.
In the early days jhe more omamenUtlons in the way of ecroU ■
and trlmmlDga. the more ornate
the car. This was before the day of
simplicity, and before makers leaned
that all these additions to a car simply
were so many dust gatherers, which It
was w^I nigh impossible to keep clean.
Cooslderlng all the handicaps nnder
which the body designer mnst work. It
Is not snrpriring thst so few cars are
genuinely artistic In appearance. Build­
ing on a foundation 4aid by mechanics,
cot artists, restricted to flyed and fre­
quently cramped areas, forced to proe proper doors and seats and when
this Is done, turn out a heantlful
cresUou. the destguer who does this Is
distinctly an artist.


2
e
2


; ontoi,.

Post
Toasties
—They like 'eta

ft«a «I to SUB. according to rise.

d^^lard an^if^D^t^

das'* Kid
B them.

AMichiguCu*
WlUale, aiaUORS
■■
aaya: ‘T suBarai
or ave yean frott
paJQS acroaa my ktdnera
and risbt aid*. Notblna
did DM any rood until 1

ssr..?

If a dirt road Is properly bnllL the
rood drag will keep it In good con­
The reformation under Hezeklab Is
dition. Uke any other work there one of the bright and attractive spots
Is a best way to do It These, rules In the latter history of the kingdom of
from the Highway ^gnstoe. tell how Israel, It was a most thorough refor­
GalD*a^MAay9»-«.n<aBM _
mation and God set his seal upon It
to get the ri^t x^ta.
In many wonderful ways.' Teachers
"Use a ii^t drag.
"Haul U oyer the road at an angle ought to give tbelr classes a compre­
fggnBAOAUBM CO, BUrrALO. M
so that a smaU amonnt of earth la hensive view of all that Eetekleh did.
pushed toward the center of the road. as recorded In n Chron„ diaptera
2»^
"Drive a team at a walk,
“Bide on the drag; do not walk.
PrecIsmatioB. (w,
"Begin at one ride of the road, re­ 1-6). The proper lutroductioo to this
lesson would be to return to chapter
turning up the opporite^de.
"Drag the road as soon after every twenty-nine and note the restoration
rain as possible, bat not when the mnd of the worship of Jehovah. How It
began In one man's heart. Hezeklah
bow he Called the people to be dean
(29:15), then called upon a deanring
of the house of God and Its restoration
(TV. la 19). How be called them to
a to
renewed sacrifice and worship (w. Broken of in any ceodititm. We
20. 21). The restoration of the sin- tj.00 a set seeordinf to vahw. Mafl ae
offering and of the bornt-offering, and
the result of these offerings In the ~
hlpof tl
vltical murie and in the worshli
great-congregation (29. 28).
W. N. U, DETROIT, NO. 27-1617.
quel of song always fqltows and ac­
companies a true rerlvar^freUglon.
Having consecrated themselm. unto BRUD AS ECONOMICAL FOOD
the Lord. HexeRtish sends ont'lhls
prodamadon.
consecration of the
people, as referred In chapter 29^

DOAN’S

OkiralseTeeHiBoaght

;


To get away from a standstill •
• about as qnlckly as one's neigh- •
• hors' ears.

To do all these tilings as
skilled-care and constant atten•••••eeee^eeeeeeeeeeeeeee*

TO CUT AUTOMOBILE FABRIC
Wot Knife Drawn Quickly Across I*
Better Than BheM^Gtrips
MMcs Gasoline
>llns A
Rags. I

Details of «pllt4.eg Drag,

to M
the fabric is a better metbed
ting than with shears.
A stfiT^b
edge with blocks that have 4S-degrc«
edgee nailed to ritiier end is necessary
tor cutting the angle. In cutting, one

conattoB as to stick to tbs

*%imt(»agaa«^^
tiilMri-

"The width at the Orevded way to
t maintained by the drag should be
from 18 to 20 feet; fint drag a Uttie
more than the width of a ringle wheel
track, then gradually IncTease until de­
sired width is obtaioed.
“Always drag a little earth towards
the center of the road nodi it is raised
from 10 to 12 Inches above the edges
of the traveled way.
"If the drag cuts too mudi, shorten
the hitch.
“The best results for dragging
A Heavy Straight-Edge for Placing' on obtained only by repented appUcaa Table to Guide the Knife In Cut­ Oon."
ting the Fabric.
end is evened up against the edge of
the table and a perfect 45-degree cut­
ting angle secured.
After the gum or fabric is peeled off.
the holland strips aresoaked until they
are soft They make excellent gasohae
rags.—Popular Science Mooothly.

OWNER STARTfNG HIS ENGINE
Habit of Flooding Carburetor Dees Not
Give Beet Results—Aim for Cyl■
inder Mixture.

Bow Bddom ooe sees a private own­
er start bis engine with the switch
off, thon^ the profesriooal driver
very often adopts this procedure when
bis motor U cold.
The average owner floods his car-'
buretor, or pulls the riioke switches
on. and presses the starter button In­
effectually five oe sU times. Tbeu be
opens the bonoet, perhaps, floods the
carburetor again, and at last gets sn
explosion.
It Is obvious thst the Idea of flood­
ing the carburetor Is to obtain a teoRwins.
porarlly enrlriied mixture, but the val­
"Have you ever vUlted the mins of
ue of the flooding is lost If It be done
Pompelir
when the cylinders and Induction pipe
"Yes.” replied the globe trotter. “But
are fnU of mixture, any petrol vapor
after seeing a fek churches shot up
left in this overnight haring long since
In this war. Pompeii doesn't Imptess
evaporated.
me asxacklng high as a ruined city."
If the caaglne be turned over a few
BLOWOUT CHAINS ARE HANDY times with the switch erff. the air Is ex­
pelled. and a thin mixture of air soil
They Are Designed to Pass Around petrol Inhaled In Its place. Floodlgt
thai gives a ttaaporarily ridi mixture
Obstreperous Tire, Closlnfl .
In the cylinders and the engine will
and Holding Gap.
Tbe.v say over there the pawnshop win­
start at the flnt trial.
dow* are full of old scepters."
BlowoQt chains are among the latest
novelties to be offered the motor ton> CARRY CHAINS YEAR ROUND
1st They are designed to pass around
the obstr^rons tire, dosing and hold­
ing doaed the blowout gap. With each
uan^reuo—It Is
chain comes an Inner patch to be
» Us* Four.
placed over the hde or ent on tiie In­
side of the sbde. with the sticky side
Remember
chains are anOed
next to the casing. On ^ncher tires a to summer as writ as In winter. A
-bent Up of the main plate of the blow, heavy tala srm soon moke the streets
out chain books under the rim to the end roads dangerona Some people
other ride, against the Up of an auxll- only carry one chain, on the right rear
lary hnok, which atteebes to the rim wheel, eway from the curb. Two ar*
there. A acrewdriver Is the only tool better, both on the rear wheels, but It
needed to apply the device, which costa is best to use tour and have eu

’Give an the kids

LESSON TEXT-II Chren.
GOLDEN TEXT-Ha that comath to
God
t bellcvB tbat be U, and that b*
la a__________
jrder of them that dUIsaoUy seek
bliB.-Heb. U*

Work whkh bringi any tmuHsl

W BiACKS^ay

GOOD CAR REQUISITES

A good autotnooilc should be
able to do the fojloWug things.
according To the head of the engineering detriment of one of
- the Urge motor car manufayJ torlesc,
a steadily and pleasant-

MIR NUMBER QUITE SMAil:

HE2EKIAH, THE FAITHFUL KINa

IsYonrWorkAad?

VOLUNTEER FOR GOOD ROADS

as well as of true piety. He saw the
meaning of the saertflee of redemption
and pnt the passover forward as tte
VM7 heart-center of the worehip of
Jehovah. (See w. 1.2.) Whoemnnderstands the passover. nnderstands
God's way of salvation. (See ftndns
12 J8-28: I Oor. B :T. 8; Bom. 8 «, 20:
Jphnl:2D.) Uczcklah did not confine
his can to those of Israel alone, bnt
extended it beyond its borders to those
of nphtalm. thus manifesting the tme
mlsstooery qdrlL flezAlah had am­
ple Scriptural warrant keeping this
passover ont of Its regular order (w.
9-18). God Is not a God of time or
4>la<». IFberever obedience U possible,
vrirndier It be a matter at ttme or not
God awrovea. HeaeMah. however,
did not act uiwi- bla own InUUtlre,
but nouiht coonseL (See f.J.) The
man who Is tiu iBori clcnrfy led of
God is the man who la most eager and
anxlons to know how God U leedlog
other men and win listen most patient­
ly to their counari. Tbe fact tiiat «»
people had not "gathered themerivea
together at Jeraealem" for a long
time, might have warranted a fur­
ther delay. Not so with this enthnriastic young king. Be was not bound
by precedent bnt was anxlons
please (M.
II.' HezeWab's Exhortatlen (w. 718). Hesekieh began bis exhortation
by calling attention to the trespasses
of their fathers (v. T). A1 the same
time be reminds them tbat tf God gave
them over to desolation because they
themselves were stiff-netted (v. 8)
and yielded not themselves unto ti»e
Lord to enter his sanctuary,
he

If home-baked bread were nnUonnly
writ made, it would be used more cxtenrively than at preeent in place of
foods. I
• ••
In the United States' department of
agriculture, end this woia be i dis­
tinct economy. Prom the etandprint
of nutrition It makes very uttie differ­
ence whether breadsntffs are served th
the form of bread or in the form of
breakfast cereals, ride dishes w^th
meat or desserta.
A man engaged In moderate mnsenler work can profltabD consume about
three-fourths of a ioond a day of
breadstuffs In any one of Otese forma.
This quantity is the eqaiyalcat otf'ooe
poood of baked bread. As a aattof
of tocL taowew. It Is aot'priibnhls
that In the average fossBy dd#-q|uetlry to eonsomod and the-drf-----------made up by the n

and a hygUsIc point of view should he
used more ertonrivriy than It naually
is. declsre the eqtsris.

more than twice what It was 2S yean
aga Ooe company expects to manefacture uppers of shoes from rubber
as well Bs soles. This company wlU
operate its own merdksn't aeriae te
bring crude rubber from' Sumstra and
carry manufactured articles to all
parts of the world. The cMspeny now
employs 28.621 men. and manafaetnres
. 21&.830 pairs of rubber shoe* s dsj.
than a mlllloo tree* In Sumatra
piantatltms are being tapped.

We Can Have Anything Good tf We
Will Get Together and Work
Hard for Desired End.
come nnder the flercenees of God's
wrath, for they had turned from the
Woman—"Bnt these strawberries art
Why, bad roads, even, is a moral Lord; they had "trespassed against the quite green." Fruit Peddler—"WeO.
question. Why should men wade lo Lord God of their fethera.” Because mum. they’re Just from the country."
lonlsb their beasts when of that treopess God bad "given them
they
the power
- . have *the
_
up to desolation." Literally 'he bad
It Is moral In that wee fall* to i
made them "an estonlshmenL” This
advantage the powers and posriblll- astonishment and desolation wsa well
ties that God bu given us, writes B. known, "as ye see” (v. T). AnyoD*
F. Beariey In Progresrive Farmer.
with eyas open can see today the deaoWe can have good roads If we wtIL Uticn of litdlridnalB, of famlUee, com­
We can have any good thing If we munities and nations who tnapam.
wUl—communltiee acting together. against God. For s -teoention we
Half a dozen men could volunteer to have had the drity of <%rltt and the
delegate themselves as leaders in s Inspiration of hU Word caUed Into
good roods movement and the pe<^e question and that the Indlvldnal man
soon would follow them.
to the dictator of his own conscience
A million volunteers wiu rush to and Ufa. and it U because men have
arms to shoot down a million others departed from tbelr faithful alleglanco
Some people find
who have done them do baitn; why to Jesus Christ and tall to obey hto
should not some volunteer to be lead­ command, that we see the strife and
it wiae to quit cofiee
ers In the romances of peace, and
Molation' of today.
wtien Aeir nervet
progr»7__________________
The first departure caused people te
be "stiff-necked" end Jehovah Is call­
begin to "act up."
them to repentance, bnt they would
ARjMY ENLISTING ROAD MEN ing
not bear (see Ch. 36:18: Ez- 82:9;
The easy way now­
Corps of Thoroughly ExpeHsfieed Spe- Bom. 10:21). In pUce of this "stiffneckness" of thrir hearts Hezeklah
adays is to switch to
clBlIsts In Constructing Work
entreats them to turn again to the
Being OrganlssA
Lord and not to be stiff-necked as were
their
fathera
(v.
8).
that
U
they
will
Enlisted men with a knowledge of
roed building sire being recruited In turn again onto the Lord (v. 9) they
the engineer reserve corps of the wlU find compassion so tbat they shall
Cnlted States army. This Is the corps again ester his gradons and merciful
of experienced meo srhlch to being ort dealings. Haring yielded themselves
ganised as a reserve body of thorough­ they were to enter Into communion
ly trained speclaUsta In every branch with him and "ater into hls sanctu­
ary. vrtilcb he had sanctifled forever."
of construction work.
They irere also to serve him. Most
Notbin^ in pleahblessed results were tb follow for them
Ueasur* Conununlty Vales.
uie u misBed by
The roads funtish a yardstick to and for their bretoren and thrir childreo.
but
ell
of
this
bright
prt>n>eet
to
measure the value of any community.
the change, end
S settled country that to not worth a conditioned upon repentant surren­
greater comfert fol*
der, communion and eerrice. whi* to
good road to not worth living In.
based upon the fact that Jehovah "to
Iowa ns the nen«B
grarious and mCTdfol" (b. 84:6. 7;
Obtain Best Reeulta.1
lehiukL
Beet rvulta are obtained by drag­ Ft. 86«; Jonah 4-2; Mark 7:18).
ging ae road as soon as poerible aftv Then, even as now, there were those
who would not yield tbcmsrivee to
PMtom i» rioonnffnrAt
each rain.
God’s gradoos Inritation. As the
to both health and ptnae.
Bad Roeda a )
Poor roods are a bar to better a
grts. better schooto, better chard

The Danger .
Zone for Many Is
Coffee Drinking

Instant
Postum

bettor Uring.

*There's a Reason*

m
TRAVERSF. CITY PRESS

THOSE AWFUL
CRAMPS

CONVENIENT LUNCH CABINET FOR MOTORS

JmAnoNAL

SUNMlSdOOL

»-A

inggestioBS tint may aavo
Much Suffering

Lesson

IBy B. O. BBU.SBS. Aetlns Dlreetoe «<
u* Einday Seheri Ceuia* ot tha Moody
’ Blbla laaucut* of Chicago.)
tcepyriam. HIT, Wctcni Kfwcoaow Ualea.)

LESSON FOR JULY IS.

■...........
by doctor*,
bntny troable caatinoi^antilone dsy
I revl aboat LydU

tnobled with erampt wd fed like •
different 'womu.
I cannot praiaa
Lydia E. Pinkham'e ^Vegetable C

who are ticabled wtffi
peiioda, badcadie.

iiarSi to bealtti by ^ rMt and b^
remedy.
Write for free and bdpful advice to
^a E. Plnkham Medictae Ca («».

She Underetoed.
Certain members ot ibe bonse party
were descrlblns the accidents tbat bad
happened to them daring tbelr re^>ectlve careers. Adreotures by 'flood. Are
and field bad all been well received,
and Mr. Brown, eager lor fame,
tbOQght U„«as bis turn.
“D'.vdn know." he'said. "I bad a
very palnfnl experience once. 1 ran a
confdanded spUnter quite half an inch
long right under roy finger-nail, dent
you know I”
*lteally. Mr. Brown." said a maiden
of the party; "how did you do Itr
Asheapoke be unconsciously raised
bis bond and scratched his forehead.
"Oh. I see," she Intemipted, sweetly;'“bow very careless of youl"

Twenty-Rve f eare’
Eqerience Wdi
Kidney Remedy
Srop-Boot^^ dn^ *11 that tiiM 1

■suer
eoi
tl TSiBihk_______ _
trifadi it in iateaded.
VwTttalyyowv. ______
OITO H. O.- LIPPERT,
l«n Pkeaiiaii. Oor. liberty Sts.
ilVt. iB. 1916. ''
CmriiHitti. Ohio.

[tavs WbM

wa Da Per Tea

^ Bepd Aea coU^ ^

* Co..

___ jittion, tdliBg about tbs kideen
tad bladdCT. When wn^.^bt am and
•A4v.
Psychology and the War*
Prof. O. Stanley Hall of the Clark
onlveirity. United SiateA ptaces the
subject iOf appUed psychology on
high pl/nClB reUUon- to the war. B
dtateal
"Whatever system ‘ has been em­
ployed. it is erldeat tbat applied
psychology has produced results In
thU war which U was never possible
Co att^ before. Men bsve endured
more, they have shown more heroism
and daring and 'have submitted to
more punishment than in any pre­
vious‘war. No such slaughter would
have been possible In former wars
without provoking s panic. This has
unquestionably been due to the sys­
tem of psychological selection, not
only for the varions grades of senlce
but for special activities within each
grade. Our country may ak well think
of going to-war without first-class mil­
itary ^ulpment as without a knowled^ of applied psychology. The coun­
cil of national defense seems to have
recognized this: and the National Re­
search council within that body wUL 1
onderstUnd. contain representative
psychologists."

' e-3

-

PROPER WORKING OF A DRAG

...
-1

Rules From HIghvray Magazine Tell
How to Get Best Results—Drag
Whenevir PeealMo.

MOTORISTS EATING LUNCHEON ON ROADSIDE.
An automobile lunch box. designed and manufactured in Portland. Ore.. Is
Intended to be canled on the running board of a car, to which it may be atuched by means of two small thumbscrews while traveling. It Is /shaped Uke
a suitcase One side Jets do»-n to form a picnic table, and the box contains a
series of hinged and swinging drawers for food and bottles, also a metal-llned
ice box with water drain, and a plate and Unen compartment The materials
used in construction of the box are fir wood and veneer, the outride bring
black enameled and the Interior naturUii finish. Various sires are made, suit­
able for from three to eight persona. The largest sire Is 34 Inches Jong, 19
Inches high, and 9 inches deep, the Ud making a 15 by S3 Inch table.—Populri
Mechanics Magarlne.
,
'

BHUTV OF MOTORS!
Really Handsome Cars ‘Stand
Out and Receive Praise.

ExperU on Dealgns Blame Condition
en American Idea of QuantitySeme Oimeultiee Cited Artist
Must Face.
The really - beautiful antomc
stands out as one of the elect, and
never falU to receive immediate attenand cheerful praise. Yet the num­
ber of motor cam that measure np to
the canons of artistic praise U smaU.
This is so becanse the art of creating
them U but UtUe practiced in America.
The American custom of quality pro­
duction offers but little chance for art
Where a manufaettfrer alms for volume
of production the creation of beautifol
designs Interferes with It Only the
maker whose prodnetion is reUtivriy
limited undertakes to sattaty the
canons of artistic taste.
Hedged In by Restrictions.
Automobile body building Is hedged
about by many restrictions. It U only
In rare cases that the body designer
U permitted to lay hU own foondation.
but must toke the ebagris os it U
tamed «ver to him by ^ mechanical
department and endeavor to do the
best he can on a founilatlMi Wanned
by someone else, who mny not have
the sUghtest conception of beauty.
Artistic bodies need to be 1* bal­
anced proportion to the hood, but Alnce
this is determined by the length of the
motor, and since the length of the body
U determined by the wheel base, the
body designer has not much latitude.
Within a definite space back of the
motor a fixed and arbitrary numlx
persona must be seated and seated
comfortably. Doors for entrance must
be prodded. Seats must be high
enou^ but not too bl^ and the
hrighth of the body must be kept In
relation to the helght.of the seats, and
of the hood.
U. with these restrictions, the body
designer succeeds In turning out a har­
monious car. be has done wriL Yet
he has not really done well unless U
has all been planned so that It will
Uke color combinations most effect­
ively.

a
J

S

*


y miles per hour over
smooth roads. .
To carry one over the rougher roads as fast as one can ride
with any degree of comfort.
To pull through deep sand,
mud or snow ^slly and wltbont
overheating.
. To climb any ordinary hill
where there nre traveled roads,


«
J
o

e
*
e
«
*

color, but when this is dons It takes
the car out of the Oaaa of beautiful
creations.
Eoriy Ornamentations.
In the early days jhe more omamenUtlons in the way of ecroU ■
and trlmmlDga. the more ornate
the car. This was before the day of
simplicity, and before makers leaned
that all these additions to a car simply
were so many dust gatherers, which It
was w^I nigh impossible to keep clean.
Cooslderlng all the handicaps nnder
which the body designer mnst work. It
Is not snrpriring thst so few cars are
genuinely artistic In appearance. Build­
ing on a foundation 4aid by mechanics,
cot artists, restricted to flyed and fre­
quently cramped areas, forced to proe proper doors and seats and when
this Is done, turn out a heantlful
cresUou. the destguer who does this Is
distinctly an artist.


2
e
2


; ontoi,.

Post
Toasties
—They like 'eta

ft«a «I to SUB. according to rise.

d^^lard an^if^D^t^

das'* Kid
B them.

AMichiguCu*
WlUale, aiaUORS
■■
aaya: ‘T suBarai
or ave yean frott
paJQS acroaa my ktdnera
and risbt aid*. Notblna
did DM any rood until 1

ssr..?

If a dirt road Is properly bnllL the
rood drag will keep it In good con­
The reformation under Hezeklab Is
dition. Uke any other work there one of the bright and attractive spots
Is a best way to do It These, rules In the latter history of the kingdom of
from the Highway ^gnstoe. tell how Israel, It was a most thorough refor­
GalD*a^MAay9»-«.n<aBM _
mation and God set his seal upon It
to get the ri^t x^ta.
In many wonderful ways.' Teachers
"Use a ii^t drag.
"Haul U oyer the road at an angle ought to give tbelr classes a compre­
fggnBAOAUBM CO, BUrrALO. M
so that a smaU amonnt of earth la hensive view of all that Eetekleh did.
pushed toward the center of the road. as recorded In n Chron„ diaptera
2»^
"Drive a team at a walk,
“Bide on the drag; do not walk.
PrecIsmatioB. (w,
"Begin at one ride of the road, re­ 1-6). The proper lutroductioo to this
lesson would be to return to chapter
turning up the opporite^de.
"Drag the road as soon after every twenty-nine and note the restoration
rain as possible, bat not when the mnd of the worship of Jehovah. How It
began In one man's heart. Hezeklah
bow he Called the people to be dean
(29:15), then called upon a deanring
of the house of God and Its restoration
(TV. la 19). How be called them to
a to
renewed sacrifice and worship (w. Broken of in any ceodititm. We
20. 21). The restoration of the sin- tj.00 a set seeordinf to vahw. Mafl ae
offering and of the bornt-offering, and
the result of these offerings In the ~
hlpof tl
vltical murie and in the worshli
great-congregation (29. 28).
W. N. U, DETROIT, NO. 27-1617.
quel of song always fqltows and ac­
companies a true rerlvar^freUglon.
Having consecrated themselm. unto BRUD AS ECONOMICAL FOOD
the Lord. HexeRtish sends ont'lhls
prodamadon.
consecration of the
people, as referred In chapter 29^

DOAN’S

OkiralseTeeHiBoaght

;


To get away from a standstill •
• about as qnlckly as one's neigh- •
• hors' ears.

To do all these tilings as
skilled-care and constant atten•••••eeee^eeeeeeeeeeeeeee*

TO CUT AUTOMOBILE FABRIC
Wot Knife Drawn Quickly Across I*
Better Than BheM^Gtrips
MMcs Gasoline
>llns A
Rags. I

Details of «pllt4.eg Drag,

to M
the fabric is a better metbed
ting than with shears.
A stfiT^b
edge with blocks that have 4S-degrc«
edgee nailed to ritiier end is necessary
tor cutting the angle. In cutting, one

conattoB as to stick to tbs

*%imt(»agaa«^^
tiilMri-

"The width at the Orevded way to
t maintained by the drag should be
from 18 to 20 feet; fint drag a Uttie
more than the width of a ringle wheel
track, then gradually IncTease until de­
sired width is obtaioed.
“Always drag a little earth towards
the center of the road nodi it is raised
from 10 to 12 Inches above the edges
of the traveled way.
"If the drag cuts too mudi, shorten
the hitch.
“The best results for dragging
A Heavy Straight-Edge for Placing' on obtained only by repented appUcaa Table to Guide the Knife In Cut­ Oon."
ting the Fabric.
end is evened up against the edge of
the table and a perfect 45-degree cut­
ting angle secured.
After the gum or fabric is peeled off.
the holland strips aresoaked until they
are soft They make excellent gasohae
rags.—Popular Science Mooothly.

OWNER STARTfNG HIS ENGINE
Habit of Flooding Carburetor Dees Not
Give Beet Results—Aim for Cyl■
inder Mixture.

Bow Bddom ooe sees a private own­
er start bis engine with the switch
off, thon^ the profesriooal driver
very often adopts this procedure when
bis motor U cold.
The average owner floods his car-'
buretor, or pulls the riioke switches
on. and presses the starter button In­
effectually five oe sU times. Tbeu be
opens the bonoet, perhaps, floods the
carburetor again, and at last gets sn
explosion.
It Is obvious thst the Idea of flood­
ing the carburetor Is to obtain a teoRwins.
porarlly enrlriied mixture, but the val­
"Have you ever vUlted the mins of
ue of the flooding is lost If It be done
Pompelir
when the cylinders and Induction pipe
"Yes.” replied the globe trotter. “But
are fnU of mixture, any petrol vapor
after seeing a fek churches shot up
left in this overnight haring long since
In this war. Pompeii doesn't Imptess
evaporated.
me asxacklng high as a ruined city."
If the caaglne be turned over a few
BLOWOUT CHAINS ARE HANDY times with the switch erff. the air Is ex­
pelled. and a thin mixture of air soil
They Are Designed to Pass Around petrol Inhaled In Its place. Floodlgt
thai gives a ttaaporarily ridi mixture
Obstreperous Tire, Closlnfl .
In the cylinders and the engine will
and Holding Gap.
Tbe.v say over there the pawnshop win­
start at the flnt trial.
dow* are full of old scepters."
BlowoQt chains are among the latest
novelties to be offered the motor ton> CARRY CHAINS YEAR ROUND
1st They are designed to pass around
the obstr^rons tire, dosing and hold­
ing doaed the blowout gap. With each
uan^reuo—It Is
chain comes an Inner patch to be
» Us* Four.
placed over the hde or ent on tiie In­
side of the sbde. with the sticky side
Remember
chains are anOed
next to the casing. On ^ncher tires a to summer as writ as In winter. A
-bent Up of the main plate of the blow, heavy tala srm soon moke the streets
out chain books under the rim to the end roads dangerona Some people
other ride, against the Up of an auxll- only carry one chain, on the right rear
lary hnok, which atteebes to the rim wheel, eway from the curb. Two ar*
there. A acrewdriver Is the only tool better, both on the rear wheels, but It
needed to apply the device, which costa is best to use tour and have eu

’Give an the kids

LESSON TEXT-II Chren.
GOLDEN TEXT-Ha that comath to
God
t bellcvB tbat be U, and that b*
la a__________
jrder of them that dUIsaoUy seek
bliB.-Heb. U*

Work whkh bringi any tmuHsl

W BiACKS^ay

GOOD CAR REQUISITES

A good autotnooilc should be
able to do the fojloWug things.
according To the head of the engineering detriment of one of
- the Urge motor car manufayJ torlesc,
a steadily and pleasant-

MIR NUMBER QUITE SMAil:

HE2EKIAH, THE FAITHFUL KINa

IsYonrWorkAad?

VOLUNTEER FOR GOOD ROADS

as well as of true piety. He saw the
meaning of the saertflee of redemption
and pnt the passover forward as tte
VM7 heart-center of the worehip of
Jehovah. (See w. 1.2.) Whoemnnderstands the passover. nnderstands
God's way of salvation. (See ftndns
12 J8-28: I Oor. B :T. 8; Bom. 8 «, 20:
Jphnl:2D.) Uczcklah did not confine
his can to those of Israel alone, bnt
extended it beyond its borders to those
of nphtalm. thus manifesting the tme
mlsstooery qdrlL flezAlah had am­
ple Scriptural warrant keeping this
passover ont of Its regular order (w.
9-18). God Is not a God of time or
4>la<». IFberever obedience U possible,
vrirndier It be a matter at ttme or not
God awrovea. HeaeMah. however,
did not act uiwi- bla own InUUtlre,
but nouiht coonseL (See f.J.) The
man who Is tiu iBori clcnrfy led of
God is the man who la most eager and
anxlons to know how God U leedlog
other men and win listen most patient­
ly to their counari. Tbe fact tiiat «»
people had not "gathered themerivea
together at Jeraealem" for a long
time, might have warranted a fur­
ther delay. Not so with this enthnriastic young king. Be was not bound
by precedent bnt was anxlons
please (M.
II.' HezeWab's Exhortatlen (w. 718). Hesekieh began bis exhortation
by calling attention to the trespasses
of their fathers (v. T). A1 the same
time be reminds them tbat tf God gave
them over to desolation because they
themselves were stiff-netted (v. 8)
and yielded not themselves unto ti»e
Lord to enter his sanctuary,
he

If home-baked bread were nnUonnly
writ made, it would be used more cxtenrively than at preeent in place of
foods. I
• ••
In the United States' department of
agriculture, end this woia be i dis­
tinct economy. Prom the etandprint
of nutrition It makes very uttie differ­
ence whether breadsntffs are served th
the form of bread or in the form of
breakfast cereals, ride dishes w^th
meat or desserta.
A man engaged In moderate mnsenler work can profltabD consume about
three-fourths of a ioond a day of
breadstuffs In any one of Otese forma.
This quantity is the eqaiyalcat otf'ooe
poood of baked bread. As a aattof
of tocL taowew. It Is aot'priibnhls
that In the average fossBy dd#-q|uetlry to eonsomod and the-drf-----------made up by the n

and a hygUsIc point of view should he
used more ertonrivriy than It naually
is. declsre the eqtsris.

more than twice what It was 2S yean
aga Ooe company expects to manefacture uppers of shoes from rubber
as well Bs soles. This company wlU
operate its own merdksn't aeriae te
bring crude rubber from' Sumstra and
carry manufactured articles to all
parts of the world. The cMspeny now
employs 28.621 men. and manafaetnres
. 21&.830 pairs of rubber shoe* s dsj.
than a mlllloo tree* In Sumatra
piantatltms are being tapped.

We Can Have Anything Good tf We
Will Get Together and Work
Hard for Desired End.
come nnder the flercenees of God's
wrath, for they had turned from the
Woman—"Bnt these strawberries art
Why, bad roads, even, is a moral Lord; they had "trespassed against the quite green." Fruit Peddler—"WeO.
question. Why should men wade lo Lord God of their fethera.” Because mum. they’re Just from the country."
lonlsb their beasts when of that treopess God bad "given them
they
the power
- . have *the
_
up to desolation." Literally 'he bad
It Is moral In that wee fall* to i
made them "an estonlshmenL” This
advantage the powers and posriblll- astonishment and desolation wsa well
ties that God bu given us, writes B. known, "as ye see” (v. T). AnyoD*
F. Beariey In Progresrive Farmer.
with eyas open can see today the deaoWe can have good roads If we wtIL Uticn of litdlridnalB, of famlUee, com­
We can have any good thing If we munities and nations who tnapam.
wUl—communltiee acting together. against God. For s -teoention we
Half a dozen men could volunteer to have had the drity of <%rltt and the
delegate themselves as leaders in s Inspiration of hU Word caUed Into
good roods movement and the pe<^e question and that the Indlvldnal man
soon would follow them.
to the dictator of his own conscience
A million volunteers wiu rush to and Ufa. and it U because men have
arms to shoot down a million others departed from tbelr faithful alleglanco
Some people find
who have done them do baitn; why to Jesus Christ and tall to obey hto
should not some volunteer to be lead­ command, that we see the strife and
it wiae to quit cofiee
ers In the romances of peace, and
Molation' of today.
wtien Aeir nervet
progr»7__________________
The first departure caused people te
be "stiff-necked" end Jehovah Is call­
begin to "act up."
them to repentance, bnt they would
ARjMY ENLISTING ROAD MEN ing
not bear (see Ch. 36:18: Ez- 82:9;
The easy way now­
Corps of Thoroughly ExpeHsfieed Spe- Bom. 10:21). In pUce of this "stiffneckness" of thrir hearts Hezeklah
adays is to switch to
clBlIsts In Constructing Work
entreats them to turn again to the
Being OrganlssA
Lord and not to be stiff-necked as were
their
fathera
(v.
8).
that
U
they
will
Enlisted men with a knowledge of
roed building sire being recruited In turn again onto the Lord (v. 9) they
the engineer reserve corps of the wlU find compassion so tbat they shall
Cnlted States army. This Is the corps again ester his gradons and merciful
of experienced meo srhlch to being ort dealings. Haring yielded themselves
ganised as a reserve body of thorough­ they were to enter Into communion
ly trained speclaUsta In every branch with him and "ater into hls sanctu­
ary. vrtilcb he had sanctifled forever."
of construction work.
They irere also to serve him. Most
Notbin^ in pleahblessed results were tb follow for them
Ueasur* Conununlty Vales.
uie u misBed by
The roads funtish a yardstick to and for their bretoren and thrir childreo.
but
ell
of
this
bright
prt>n>eet
to
measure the value of any community.
the change, end
S settled country that to not worth a conditioned upon repentant surren­
greater comfert fol*
der, communion and eerrice. whi* to
good road to not worth living In.
based upon the fact that Jehovah "to
Iowa ns the nen«B
grarious and mCTdfol" (b. 84:6. 7;
Obtain Best Reeulta.1
lehiukL
Beet rvulta are obtained by drag­ Ft. 86«; Jonah 4-2; Mark 7:18).
ging ae road as soon as poerible aftv Then, even as now, there were those
who would not yield tbcmsrivee to
PMtom i» rioonnffnrAt
each rain.
God’s gradoos Inritation. As the
to both health and ptnae.
Bad Roeda a )
Poor roods are a bar to better a
grts. better schooto, better chard

The Danger .
Zone for Many Is
Coffee Drinking

Instant
Postum

bettor Uring.

*There's a Reason*

traverse city press

■AYORt. JUDOE4, HIGH OPFI.
CIALS, BM4KER8, LAWYER*.
DOCTOR* ANO EDITOR*
INDORSE IT.

NeTED EXMOR
FamaiRBiinTOTALK IGOMMEIiDSIT

Tlwy Pom* Ponnnri and UaHarttMV Ingljr TtU SuflMno Humvilty Vmtt
OoM f«r TiMm.
|T lx Bddom. iodeed. that o B of prom' i Inence.
loanee, wpertally
eroertally znen
joen bolding
1
high
mblic office, wUUn^ expreaa their In*
I pobllcly to 8 proprietary
mayors of our 1<
g cities, pn
state and county offldala, bankera, law­
yers, doctors, editora, leading educa­
tors, goTemment offidala and even min­
isters of the Gospel have deemed It
their duty to come forward and tell
the people what Tanlac has done for
them.
These weU-hnown men of affairs
have recognized In this medldne a new
discovery and a scientific triumph In
the medical world. It is a well-known
fact that these splendid Indorsements
have be«i given Tanlac time and time
'again and th^ will contlnne to be
given jnst as often as hew tests of Its
powers are made; and it also explains
why numbers of the big drag firms of
the conntry are ordering It exclnslvely
In carload lots.
Doctor Preeeribes It
Dr. J. T. Edwards, of Fayetteville,
> Oa.. one of ttte best-known members
of the .medical profession In the stste
«t Georgia, makes a statement that
wlU undoubtedly produce a profound
impression thronghont the Booth.
*ln my thirty years of actnsl i
ace as a liceiaed physician In the atate
of Georgia.’' Bays Dr. Edwards, *1
have never seen anything to eqn^ Tanlac as a medldne to produce results.
I have no h^tancy In recommot
dt«. proml
educator and prindpal of the 1
School at Ben Hill, (k- says: *T
In sndi tMd physical condition that 1
feared 1 wo^d have to give up my
dotlea. J goffered from rttenmatlsin,
Mugglah Uver, aanaea and terrible bUSon hendaefaea. I ha?* taken 8 bottles
of Tanlac and I feM better tham J have
41SU to yeara.".
-NaiHl,T««B TaOca.
Bon. ArcMe R.
it Harris Ooonty, Texas, Is usaneetlonablji not only one of tlw beetknown, bat one of the nuMt popular
men that ever held office In Texas. Be
eerved the people in this important of­
fice for 16 conaecnttve yean.
T had the wont form of Indiges­
tion, suffered ell the
from gaa on
my stomach and was conttonally belch­
ing np nndlgested food," aald Mr. AndersuL *T snffered with neanlgli
pains of the worst sort ,and nothing
seemed to beto me excq>t to a tem­
porary way.
*T begs?' to fed better after taking
XBy'flnt^bttle of Tanlac and have jnat
now started on my third. Tm a differ(Dt "»*" already.”
E. W. Hill, prealdeot of one of the
leading basking toetltntlone of South
PUtsbur*. Tenn, and one of ttie most
eneceaafnl banken and bostoeB men
to TenncMee, said:
*T snffered from rtieumatlsm end
•dier allmeats ter many fpen and

FORMER MAYOR FRANK V. EVANS,
OF BIRMINGHAM. AUL. MAKES
STRONG STATEMENT.
•y.-B of the latest nddlOons to the
large and rapidly growlrtg list of
prominent men who have publicly In­
dorsed Tanlac for the good It has done
them, is the name of Epn. Frank V.
Evans, former Mayor of Birmingham.
Mr. Brans la one of the beat known
in public life in Alabama today,
being at one time editor of one of the
South's greatest newspapers, the Bir­
mingham Age-Herald. He was also ex­
aminer of public accounts of Alabama.
In telling of the beueflts he had de­
rived from Tanlac, Mr. Evans said:
“For years I suffered with gastritis
end Indigestion In the worst form. I
habitually constipated and had
pains in my sbonlders and headache

eat hurt me. Finally I got to having
awfnl attacks of aente Indigestion, palpltatloD of the heart and smothering
spells. For a long time I would have
one or more of these spells every night
and I would wake ont of my restless
sle^ gasping for breath.
“I bought a bottle of Tanlac and to
my snrpriBe and gratification I began
to feel relief after the first few doeea.
I kept taking tbe>medldne and now my

Tanlac has done me more good tbds
anything I ever tried. I now wake up
In the morning feeling fine.
,*Tm telling all nty friends about
Tanlac and am recommending It to
them, regardless of their age and
trouble."
Dr. G. W. De LaPerriere, of Winder,
Ga., la not only one of the best known
physldans and drngglsta In the State
of Georgia, but Is also « man of exten­
sive property and wide Infloence, rank­
ing as one of the leading dtlzena of
that entire section. He hss been In
the drag business In Winder for 2S
years.
Becently Dr. De LaFetriers wrote:
"Onr peoide are mndi enthnsedgtvW
the beuRdal eftoete of Tffidae and X
dciilze to any toat It u Uw mpet wudA»^\ >rii«r I ever had in ttils storaOther prominent men wbo have iO‘
dorsed Thslae are:
Prbfeeeor Elmer Motrta. of Dover,
Tenn.; Professor W. A. Wood,
the
Central Graded Schools, Winder. Oa,;
C O. Cooper, president of the Georgia
Home Cotton OU Co., Lav
Oa.; Hon: S. S. Shepard, member
B. Oatoea, of Bowling
tor, poUtleal writer and well-known
leader in hla atate; Hon. George Sam­
uel BUey. Chief of Police In Macon.
Ga.; Eon. C. G. Leveuder, register of
Williamson County. T?nnessee; Dr.
W. H. Brown. 4822 Charlotte Ave,
Nashville, Tenn., tonnder and prerident of the Tennessee Protestant Home
for Girls; John F. Carroll, notion mill
Buperlntendent of Chattahoochee and
Atlanta and N. M. Taney, manager of
contract - department, Atlanta , Tele­
phone and Telegraph Co.
There Is a Tanlac dealer to yonr
town.—Adv.

War Spirit Con
Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree was
than once placed In a parplexloss of members
Ing position by tbe
t
urlng hls tour througbof hls cast durlnt
Canada and the United States.
No less than ten members enlisted,
iDclndlng two ladies for service In
war hospitals. One humorous Inci­
no la
dent occurred after the engagement
dy a Ii
go^ O
dropt required at u appucauun. ea pn of a “deputy” In the United States.
Sbe was not very much interested In
the war prior to her appointment
iBlnW ruis Wu. SrvlM. VwIcmi VcImi ilkn but the talk behind the scenes among
nTZihomOm- P>kiIludB«HsliU4mBfa the company bore so frcqnently on
MAitimid. w*«i»ntO. aa. br
the loss of relatives at the front that
sbe felt one night Impelled to volnn___ ,
nurse, was eventually ac­
cepted. end her ^ace had to be filled.

SELDOM SEE

ABSORBiNE

DAICTFLT KILLER

FRECKLES
«•* U
BM «f XhM*
Tben't 00 k»a«cr Ik* WtsbUst bm4 •(
tMllns Mhsm*« fit rear trMkiM. m tk*
pnMrleUeB otklB* — «*skt* stnaatk — to
fBsntoi**« t* ru>*T* tk«M k*B*lr •>
BtoBply •
mu?^

SUMMER HARD ON CHICKS'

The Same Tt
THE STORY OF PSTfIDLEUM.
A fann«. going over hU land.
The Ustarr aC cO rmds Bks a fsliT tale.
Ii hls dog b
eaugbt an
passing In a field, and thraatened him
with prosecution.
BeCnralng, however, ttuongb the
same Arid an hour later be was snrBy C. H. BURGESS,
Department of Poultry Huebandry, prised to meet the irtriunan In an­
other
of It, and exclaimed an­
Michigan Agricultural College.
Naturally Handicapped.
East Unalng, Mleh.^ there le any grily:
-Whatl Trespassing agalnr
Kidd—Does Goode enjoy golfing to
season of the year when the young
•<No.
no,"
answered Pat "It’s stiU Its fullest extent?
chick should be more carefully nnrsed
the
same
trespass.
Fair
play,
sort
I"
Kidder—Very
unlikely; you see W»
along than nsnal. It la In the csontbs of
Intensely religions.
July and A'ngnst, vrben the weather
There are a lot of fnnny tifings In
REQUIRE CARE IN THRESHING man begins to get In hls wsrmest work. this world—Indndlng patent si
It Is at this time that pallets which
are expected to become winter layer*
are moat likely to receive a setluick.
In handling them during the hot
, la Other Ways, Vi'lll
weather eeason. therefore. It is wMl to
Bar Seed From Pedigreed
keep a number of points In mind.
Class.
Look to .the water supply. There
should be plenty ofTt It should be
INFANT MORTAIJTYtoaoiaetoincfcigJitfti Wecmnbai^raalaa^
By PROF. F. A. SPRA.GO.
kept la the shade, should be |>erfectly
I of aU tbe chfldren borw in dvilised ooontri^ twenty-two pg cenL,
PlaM Breeder, Experiment Stttlon. pure, and contained In a dean vessel,
/ Mlohigan Agrioultural College.
for It Is through the drinking water
Bast Lanslog. Mlcb.—There have that many diseases are trannnlned
th^anfifteenl
been developed by the experiment sta­
the flock. Water should never l>e
many of these precioas 1
tion of the Michigan Agricultural «l- pivt^n growing ^toek which U lew than
of these inlsntiU deaths ara o
lege Id recent years Improved strain* ,
Fchrenhelt.
« sold for children’s compuijnts
Drops, ttnemres and soothing
of wheat oats, rye hnd barley which
^andty and
They are,
^ ______________
In eonaSderamequantities,
qui
oved t< of highest quality, with sound —•*
•nr“
-^fy, retard circulation and tort
s have been pro'
be superior In yielding power, nnlf It hrlKh: grain in It A good grain
to congestions, sickness, dcalh._ There «n be no danger in the use of Gasa number of other qualities, to any lion for July may he made up of
toria if it bears the aignatnre of Chas. H. FleU^er
^
as It contains no opiates or narcotics of any kind,
A J’any other strains of these crops grown pan* by weight and one part of com. |
In the state. All of these varieties If wheat Is not avnilable use lioricy. A
Oenulne Caetoria always bears tbe aignatura of
have been built up.-by careful selec­ mavli composed «f equal iiarts by
tion. from a single seed. In the cose weight of wheat bran and ground oats,
of Red Rock wheat, the first planting to which has l^een added 16 per cent
from which this variety has groTjn, by w eight of u good meal or fish scrap,
was made^ the fall of lOOS.
is alKo good.
After a time enough seed was pro­
The i)uliet8 should bare plenty of
duced frd& this original experiment shade. The Ideal place to grow them
10 enable the college to distribute Is In the middle of a cornfield. Such
this variety among a number of se­
situation la ideal for the colony
lected fannera, by whom 4.000 aei^ house. The pullets may destroy to a
of this superior wheat are'expected to large extent the growing crops within
be harveeted this season.
rod of the building, but that la all.
All of this should be saved to-be
A wheat field will grow pullets that
marketed for seed purposes, but If Its wll) lay most beavliy.
holders desire to have the grain In­
Do not overctowd the pullets at
spected and certified to by the collage night. Allow at least eight Inches
are a remedsnrfiich quickly hdps in resturma: normal
and the Michigan Crop Improvement perch space for each pullet. Over­
fTwriitygia. Thevactonthe stcnnadi, kTET andbowds,
association, every care must be exer-' crowding means overheated birds, and
and so renew ^ streng^ and steady the nerves.
ci^ to see that the wheat Isn't mixed. this may lead to their catching a cold
A few doses of these worla-fanied family pills will
^ese precautions are necessary for which frequently develops Into some
this reason: Red Rock wheat. It has form of roup.
been demonstrated, will yield from five
A full crop DOW means a‘full egg
to tdn bnsbels per acre or superior basket nett winter.
Leghorns, will produce eggs when
they are five months old. Plymouth
Bocks, Rhode Island Reds and Wyanm.
dottes when they ure six mouths old.
Fulton Wat a Great Man.
tbe supper ]>arty ibe boat
Sort-'your pullets when Utey
The class In history was studying
twelve weeks old. Remove the weak the life of Robert Fulton. In connec­ handed round u box of rigors with an
ones and those which seem slow to ma- tion with It they, of course, brought dxpanslvo smile of the/help-yonreeU:. A well-raised pullet will produce, la the topic of the steamboat, which Bud-don't-mind-me rariety"Lovely cigars, ye know!" he
while a poorly raised pullet will be
yon know, made Fultoa famous.
“What ore many of the great uses dared, offeriug the box to the first
of the steamboatT' asked the teacher. guest. “Tliey were o present from my
wife."
things might not have happened
CABBAGE WORM! AT LARGE •■What
Gently, hut none the !e*s firmly, erIf tbe steamboat bad not been inventry man presetii swore that smoktof
Raids Gardens and Fields, but May edr sbe hinted.
:ouId expand his heart to coiosul pro•Wdh” answered Uttie Johnny, wbo
Ba Chaeked by Powder
bad been called 00." weU. nm-m-a, Oo- portlona,orclBe that he had sworn off
andSpi^
might not have , dlscovettod the weed tew tbe dnrattoa, says Lsm> donidesa
■ »y DON B. WHELAN,
When they had all gbffit tbe-Sost «'Extsnsleff Specialist In Entomoiegy,
tracted a card from uafier the ficto
Michigan Agricultural Coilegw
layer of dgara: ••Prom Uncle James."
Bast Lansing. Mich.-Farmers and
“That little speech saved me that
gardeoers with a crop of cabbages com­ Dlaappear With Use of Cwtioura fioap box."bemnsed. “Jollysmartwheerar
and OlrrtfnenWTrial Fr«a.
ing on may find die cabbage worm
among tbelr onwelemne vtaltors ere
Her Parting Shot
Tbe firm thing In resttwtng dry.faD*
A FIELD OF MICHIGAN WINTER long if they haven't already discover*
"Ton have returned aU my letteti
tag hair , la to g«t rid of dandruff and end presents. Hortense," says Egbert
BARLEY IN EAST LANSING.
him. The cabbage appears to have n
Thle strain ef barley, and ether end of traoblea. If It survives trans- Itching. Bob'Cnticura Ointment Into •but you seem to be retaining my
-pedigrwd" varietlae ef wheat o«ta {daotlng, escapes tbe flea-beetle and scalp, next morning shampoo with
May I yet dgre to-ba^
and rye yield crepe frem S3 te 60 pbr root maggot, and reaebas an advanced Oaticura Soap and hot water. Preveot that-^^
eent better than the average. They ■tate of growth. It Is attacked by cab- skin and scalp troubles by making Onti“Oh. yonr photograph? 1 sent that
furnish a ehwt eut te IncraaMd
CUM your everyday toUet preparation. to Ufe. thinking tbe editor would want
duetien.
We notice frequently that the cab­
Free sample each by mall with Book. to run It as one of those pictures for
bages we have watched over so closely Address postcard, Cnticura, Dept Is which they pay a *100 to anybody that
graJu more than any other white wheat during the spring and early summer
can supply a proper title."—Life.
Boston, Sold everywhere.—Adv. ,
grown In, the state. Jtt all this Im­ have bolra eaten through the forming
proved strain can be planted this fall heads while the outer leaves also show
Crazy About It. in Fact
Irralcvant Similarity.
It will bring about a big increase In znueb damage by briug eaten. Upon
Time—What do the Inmate* think et
“Cooper Is a writer who Is well
production next eeasoa. and moi
closer examination a number of small
tbe new ns.vlum?
1919, wltbout so mucb as tbe breaking green worms, varjing In size, are
Keeper—They Just rave over It
of an additional acre of ground—a fac­ found. They are not readily nqen ow­
tor highly IfflportantTn the light of tbe ing to the fact that their color Is so
expense in men and money which at­ nearly like that of the leaves upon
tends Increasing acreage.
which ibey ara feeding.
In addition to the Red Rock wheat
Tbe.adult of the cabbage worm la
“pedigreed" varieties of oats, barley the common white butterfly seen so
and rye have also been distributed. frequently In the early spring. In the
Years of tests of these grains, including spring these butterflies gather In large
the wheat have proved that they will numbers la moist places and lay their
Canada extends to yoa a hearty invita­
yield the following, in bushels per
eggs on some available plant, and ths
tion to settle on her FREE Homestead
as compared with other strains:
larvae emerge In about a week. The
lands of 160 acre* each or secure some
whole life cycle requires abont five
of the low priced lands* in Manitoba,
weeks, and there are about three -gentdMwan
sod Alberts. This year wheat b higber but
eradons a year. The last generation
Ikn lead just as cheap, so the onxwtUDity is more atspends the winter as pupoe among the
OATS.
fc rhsn ever. Canada wants you to help feed tbe weald
Mnmen v»rl»ty, avarage.......
old stalks and rnbblah In tbe fields.
tag
aome
other fertile eoU—land abmlar to that wfaich
’orlby o»u. •tam^eraga...
Cabbage worms can be controlled by
I many years has avoieged 20 to 45 boabels of wbaat
I eera. Think of the menay you can meVe with wheat
•ne use of powdered arsenate of lead
dusted on befdre the beads have
The adoption of these Improved formed. Later, as the cabbages ma­
' *^e8tem Canada is as profiuble an iadastry as
strains by tbe farmers of Michigan ture. a spray conslstlDg of half on
growing.
would, without qoestlou, bring abont ounce of pyrethruiaj^ or Persian Insect
'Tto Govertoert tfab year I-esldsth>^M»toratM■
an increase la production with less powder. In a gallon of water, will serve
cTtaaal wnecc taco Biela. Tboc toe great teBoS tar
cost and greater returns than Is pos­
efficiently control the “worms" and
fens labor to icDlem tbe mear roBBs aea wbo bees
Iforeervka. TbeeSmatetobcakfafol^
sible by any other siogle means.
will be barmlesa to man. One qtray.
i esncabto.rcihrirfaciUtlwexoelkst.1aeedKhoetoato
But tbe men wbo have these strains however, will opt be soffident under
to thrir possession now. and those who ordinary condltiona. Tbe spray wUl
may plant them later, most recognise have to be repeated at Intervale
that If these varieties are to be kept (hronghont tbe summer.
para, and their bl^ yielding qnsfitiee
maintained, every poeaibiUty of tbelr
mixing with other varieties must b*' ORCHARDS NEED CULTtVATION

MANY PROMINENT MEN PEDIGfiDGIUINS
SOME OUT FOR TANIAG PiOinGGiPS

Special Care Should S« Otvea There
During Hot Woather
Months.

Strains Must Be Pure, However,
to Be Certified.

Save the Babies

When Hred and Nervous

B the end of the day finds you weary or irrit3ble,withachingheadandfrayednerves,youneed
enmpthing to tShft pnd Strengthen the system.

BEEGHAM’S PILLS
Bring Welcome Relief

DANDRUFF AND rrCHllia

Raise High Priced Wheat
on Fertile Canadian Soil

a

:::2:S

ra.*v ' .|£

Before planting, and Utar to barvastlng and thrashing, thwa polnis nrast
he bone In miiAbtoke sura that toa land Is fra* frem
grain that nmy mtz.
That tbe drill la praperiy deued.
That an alley eepantas aeeb two
pmtoe.
Tee Mgeb ef It
That tfie last straw la leamved frem
•Ssdo't we a breesy time of tl last fibs blnOer before
to cot
nightr* *"100 much of It for when
That tbe grain tmmtoed la kept eep1 gto borne, my wife stormed."

5®>^®£r»-sssl.id'Si
Eyes^-^

m

IBda-^

Tbst tite matffilne la ctoan before
ttFmtoag. (Threah cels bc^n« a fan
fimto. or eet aside a few satto before
tovtoc aeed.)
That tbe mcks have bea toned toMde out and toaken.
That tbs cracks of bto ara deened
oat before etortag.
That toe weed aeeds ara toened
before aowlug or —Bing.

Keeping Soil In Good Condition Helpe
Fruit Crop.
Beet Tensing. Mlcb.—Ordmrds. aeeardlng to tbe department of bortleaV
tore of tbe Michigan AgricultoraLcollage, Bbould be qnltivated tborongbly If
tb^ an expected, to do tbelr best. Colttvatiou is Decenary to keep tbe soli
10 good medianical oonditiao. tg fnrtW preveot the loas of molstore by
evaporation, and to kfll and keep down
weeds '
Tbe or^spd ebould be gone over
ooee In tea dayi or two weeks, and
after bard rains. Fnilt demands a
great deal of tmrtstow to devriop prop«riy. and for tola raasoo frequent iffislJaw cultivation abonld be given te
make the molatara wadlly avalUble to
Ihetree.
The
barrow U one of tbe
best toola to use to tbe orcluM ter this

Wm

TUs Is Ihe Year for an Inland
___ , Water Trig

A Dleasest wey. a healthful way,
to
^ or two or more.

at Montreel-OuelDl old QmIm,
old-worM
Ito*
witb lu old
" charm and —
Saguenay-deep u^e bl*m

-a!".' fa-sssssi

WSuct! hlgher'SS

NIAGARA TO THE SEA
ae»4 Seen-ftnue-rated Booklrt. «ap «d Onlda

CMrta Sturnm UMfi. UM. 76 B* • 0*

’ -i'

200 Ladies’
Middies and

Over two thousand yards take a quick drop in price

Sport Blouses
In plain white, combi^
nBtionfi and Khaki*Cool
patterns, worth up to
$3.95 at

Children’s
Half
Hose

High-grade Wash Goods
Wash Goods

59c Wash Goods ^^0."':“’*' 44c

Wash Goods

29c Wash Goods

Other Wash Goods

Including tuTn-back top^
and all silk styles in
white, tan, blue, pink
and combinations (not
all sizes) worth up to 39c
at

24c

*

He, 14c and 18c

WbZS'

Fifty Swimming and Bathing Suits

*1.” s *2.“

The newest, most comfortable and charming styles in all the different colors and combinations for
men or women, worth $6.00, are now on special sale at......................................$4.95

100 Ladies’ and
Misses’ Porch

:

Other Bathine Suits foi
are especially priced at

.

:

.

and House Dresses

With every sale of a Bathing Suit you <an have a High Grade
Turkish Towel, worth 35c, for only............................ ..

worth up to $2.25 and $2.50

'

............................-...................

at

1

Bathing Caps, All the Newest Novelties

Igc.escjsctns

at 2k 35c, 50c, 65c and 75c

FpRGET--REBATE COUPOliiS WITH ALL CASH

LEST YOU

PURCHASES OF 25c OR OVER

J. H. STEINBERG

J^}/Hc*Ufieatre
ar

PHOTO-PLAYS

E0I£ OF GOOD PiaORES, PHUKIVENITUTION AND THE $5,000.00 PIPE ORaN
CHANGE OF PICTURES EVERY DAY.
MATINEE DAILY AT 2:IS

EVENING AT 7:00

PEKEHARQUETrE.RAILWAY
Summer Schedule effective June 17
as follows:
North Bound:
Lv. 5:10 a. m. Resort special. Charle­
voix and Petoskey. Daily except
Monday.
I.v. G;4S a. m. For all points north.
Connect at Bellaire for E. Jordan.
Daily except Sunday.
Lv. 1:40 p m. Central like. E. Jor­
dan, Charlevoix, and Petoskey.
^ Daily.e.xceht Sunday.
Arrive from North:
.i^r. 11:10 a. m. From Petoskey. Charle­
voix. E. Jordan and Elk Kapids.
DaiLv except Sunday.
Ar. 2:50 p. m. From Mackinaw City,
Petoskey. Charlevoix. Boyne City,
and East Jordan. Daily except
Sund.iy.
Ar. 9:3'i p. m. Resort special from Pe­
toskey and Charlevoix. Daily exce|it Saturday.
South Bound:
Lv. 5:0 a. m. Saginau,
Muskegon,
Flint tlrun'd Rapins. Chiedgo, Lan­
sing and all (Kiints^east and west.
Daily except Sunday.
Lv. 3:10 p, HL Saginaw, Bay City, Flint
Ludinglon, Grand Rapids, Chicago
andDciroit CarriesChica^^sSleeFer everj' Saturday. Daily.
Lv. 9: 5 p. m. Grand Rapids. Lansing.
Detroit. , Chicago, St. Louis. Mo.
Carries da)' coach. Club car and
thru sleepers to all above points.
Daily except Saturday.
Arrive from South:
Ar. 5:00 s.tii. From Detroit. Toledo,
Lansing. Grand Rapids, Chicagoand
St. Louis, Mo., with day coach attd
sleepers from ali above poiuls.
Daily except Monday.
Ar. 1:20 p m. From Chicago. Detroit.
Saginaw, and Grand Rapids. Daily,
r. ll:2np. ni. From Chicago. Grai»d
Rapids. Muskegon, De^it, Toledo,
Saginaw. Daily except Sunday.

MONDAY
Bessie Barriscale with Chas. Bay and Louise Glaum in Admi^ions «lo cm,

“HOME”
2®ct Ke^oiic Cotnedy

WED.

TUES.‘
,i t lo.

Virginia Pearson in Admis.io» s s, loc
“ROYAL ROMANCE"

“HIS SWEETHEART"

Wm. Fox production.

in 5 acts

Hearst Pathe Weekly

Klever Comedy

Children 5 ceiit.s

THURSDAY

DOUBIi BIUr-THREE ACTS
Paramount presents LiUian Martin in a 5 act drama “THE WAX MODEL"
' and a 2 act Keystone Comedy.

FRIDAY
DOUBU BHU-THUE ACTS YAIIDEVIIIE

Children 5 cents

Adults IS cents

Sarah Bernhardt in her great trii)mph “MOTHERS OF FRANCE”, 5 acts.
.
and Burton Holmes Travel Pictures

SATMabel Taiiaferrain.
"A Magdniaine of the Hills”
M Metro wonder play iq five acts.

Hearst Paths Weekly.

SUN.
Bessie Love in “The Heiress at Coffee Dab's'
William Armstrong and Juanita
Hansen in “Black Eyes and Blue"
,

L. Q. B.

As friends of all
Shall we act and use our mi^t
For more good to draw another
To the great lifdit
That tximes to heaijs withf love
For the souls of air to live
In that glorious day?

CONTINUOUS

PROGRAM FOR THE WEEK OF JULY 16th to JULY 22nd

Fay Tincher in “THE FRENCH SILLINERY”

A. GLORIOUS LIGHT!

Michael H. eran, for 2u yeare a res­
ident uf this city, pA^Fed away Sunday
’nitrht jil hishotne on Park Street, after
a lln-erin" illni-st. He was a verywell known mat. ti.rou.rhout the cil.v
niid was fl pN.r.uiieiil .worker amonrr
Eagioc. He le.ivrs. bcsidrs his wife,
four children to mourn their loss. Fuojeral ^lA'iccs w ere held from Uie h
Wednesday afiemoon at 3 o’clock
from the Eagles’ home at 3;30, with
burial in Oakwood.

YOU CAN COME AS LATE AS 9:30 AND SEE A FULL SHOW-

Adulls IS cents

W, 69C, 98C,
n.25 Kn.9«

Hundreds of New Collars
and Jabots
.........50c, 65c, 98c and $125

MICBAELH.ZERAN

George Behan, in

r

^

The Newest in Ladies’ Belts
at 50c, 65c and $1.00
Children’s belts 19c, 25c and 35c

50 Ladies’ and Miss®*’
Colored Parasols
.... ...... 59C, 88c and gge

"Braving Blazes"

for all ages to 14

-75c, $1.25, $2.50, $3.00 and $3.50

Turkish Towel Special for 15c extra
Worth up to $1.50 and $1.75
at

200 Girls’
Dresses

$2.25, $4.50 and $6.50

a 2 act Keystone Onnedy

■ NOTE: Our regnlar pirt^ nights in the^f^re will be te for children ^^ for

Thurs-

al these prices to the 8t& of Ulriiigan.

^"73iq Star hi a iVig ^jeature Svery^Dq^'i

Piano with beautiful tone
io mahogany ca^, $175 at
at Grinnell Bros, o'neasy pay-

ONLY BIG CIRCUS COMING THIS SEASON

COOK BR01HERS

Big 3 Ring Wild Animal Circus

Traverse City
ONE DAY ONLY

Tuesday, July 24th
The World’s Largest Wild Animal Circus. 300 Persons,
200 Finest Horses, 100 Performing Wild Animals,
3 Rings, 2 Stages, 25 Clowns, 2 Trains.



t



jg>«L J

The World’s'Wonders at your doors 100 star .^nts-gathered
from many lands. A Peerless Program of Pre-Eminent Per­
formers. The Famous Wallett Family, Fjtgtend’a fnemost
Aerialists and Riders.
,
NOTE:

Cook Brothers Circus wilt positiTel/ present their mile loBg,
....._______ __________I. with open deuB
_______ .. „
lux, Richly Sobed Riden, Oowiu end
ottter features A Spectacular introduction to the Worlds largest WU4
Aoimal Circus.

One ticket admits to the Circus and meoagerie, we
make no eiora charge to see all the animals.
Doors op^ at 1:00 and 7:00 P. M.
TWO PERFORMANCES: Afternoon at 2. NlgM at 8.

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