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4hfi T m SIXTY-FIRST YEAR F. R. BECKMAN DIES MONDAY AT SON'S DOME Funeral end Interment in Chat*worth Wednesday Afternoon. John W. Spear ie Only Surviving 1 Local Veteran John W. Speer Is the only surviving veteran of the civil war in Chatsworth township. Mr. Speer enlisted as a volun- teer In. Co. >F., 18th Indiana Regiment, Infantry, and serv- ed three years and 10 months, receiving an honorable dis- charge at the close of the war. He was 94 years old Jan- uary 89, 1936. He is wide- ly known in this section, hav- ing for many years been a successful stock buyer. He is honored and respected by all the people of'the'commun- ity which has been his home so long. He is hale and hearty and lives in a comfortably kept home in the western part of town, amid beautifully land- scaped premises adorned with gardens and flowers that have been prldefully devel- oped for many years by his son, Harvey, who recently married and took up his es- idence in Watseka. CHATSWORTH. ILLINOIS, THURSDAY. MAY 30. 1935 DESECRATION! NOtSf "W... ... X. •v X v-':'r F. R. Beckman died at the home of his son William in Chicago at 1:20 a. m„ Monday, May 27th, after a period of several weeks of intendh Buffering from heart trou- ble and attendant dropsical condi- tions. Mr. Beckman went to Chicago last November and spent the win- ter with his son and- family. He returned to his home in Chats- worth about the middle ot last month and spent the last two weeks of April here. He then became ill and was taken to Chi- cago. Funeral Here Wednesday The body was brought to Chats- worth Monday evening and funer- al services were held Wednesday afternoon at 2:30 o’clock in St. P a u l ’s Evangelical Lutheran church, the pastor. Rev. A. E. Kalkwarf, officiating. Interment was made in Chatsworth cemetery. Born in Germany Folkert R. Beckman, son of Rolf and Agte Beckman, was born in Oestfriesland, Germany, Decem- ber 11, 1853, and lived 81 years, 3 months and 16 days. At the age of four years, his parents i brought him to America, locating I Evangelical Pastor* of the north of Falrbury- As a young I ° . man he started learning the black- j Peon* District Coming smith’s trade at Danforth. Here Over Half a Century He married Miss Theresa Wall- rich October 3, 1882, and he es- tablished a shop here and made their home In Chatsworth continuously thereafter. Forty- seven years of Mr. and Mrs. Beck- mnn’s married life were spent In the home that continued to bp big until the end. \x !iJ«vee Two Sons MINISTERS TO MEET JUNE 6-7 INCONVENTION to Chatsworth. The Evangelical Ministerial they'Convention of the Peoria district will be held in Chatsworth, Thurs- day and 'Friday, June 6th and 7th. The session! Will etart at 10 o'clock Thursday and end J*11*1 the noon-day luncheon Friday. The inewly-elected district superintend- f .jent, Rev. Philip Beuscher, of! Rev. M. C. Eignus Only Surviving Forrest Veteran 'I’m 91 years old today,” cheerily declared Rev. M. C. Eignus Saturday morning, when he called on The Plain- dealer editors. The oldest resident of Forrest township, and the only surviving Civil war veteran remaining in the township, Mr. Eignus is re- markably hale and Jovial; well informed, most agree- able in conversation, a decid- edly companionable gentle- man to meet. He served three years in the 89th Illinois Infantry. Sixty years in the Methodist Episcopal ministry, his per- sonal history 1 b rich In exper- ience; hls record as a citizen, soldier, servant of God and fellow man is worthy and in- spiring. Mr. Eignus lives with his daughter, Mrs. A. V. Hodg- son, on a farm in Forrest township—and we're going to accept hls invitation to ‘‘Come out and see me some- time.” LARGE NDMKK WILL RECEIVE NEW DIPLOMAS County Superintendent Is- sues List of Those Pass- ing 8th Grade Tests. | The following is a list of tha | pupils of the southeastern part aC Livingston county who will ' l l ceive eighth grade diplomas aa s 1 result of the regent examination*. P-3 U: ta PK The general public is invited to all the services which will he held In the Evangellcar church. About 25 to 30 ministers and their Two sons were born to the WO-i , Pie, Robert and William. The “ Wator. will open the program. former Is a resident of Kankakee and has one daughter) Phyllis. W illiam Uvea In ChiVAgb; he has one daughter, Joann. These sons and their famillra were frequent!wlvee are expected to be present, visitors her*) paying tender de-|The Program follows: votlon to ibelr aged parents, and Thursday, June 8 in turn sharing their home with j 10:00 a. m.—Opening Session, their father during the winters —Philip Buescher, D.S. since Mrs. Beckman passed away MISS ANNA KEMMER DIES IN PONTIAC ^ HOSPITAL SUNDAY Miss Anna Kemmer, a resident of Chatsworth for more than 60 years, died in the Pontiac hospi- tal Sunday morning at 3 o’clock, where she had undergone an op- eration about three weeks ago. The body was brought to the home of her sister, Mrs. Gertrude CORN PLANTERS HUMMING AS SUN DRIES THE FIELDS A very small portion of the corn of this part of Illinois was planted on time this year and most of it will.-be planted during the month of June. Sunday, In a drive from Chats- worth to Champaign, the writer found very little corn had been planted south of I’iper City gml considerable ground remained to! be plowed. Fall plowing Is get- ( ting weedy and hard from sppt'n j ued rains and Vlll require more work than usual to get In condi- tion for planting. A few fartn- NAME SEVEN NEW APPOINTEES IN THE HIGHWAY DEPT. Mr. and Mrs. Beckman observ- ed their golden wedding annlver- Mauritaen, where she had made “A Mod-1 her home for the past 30 years, el Worship Service.” | Funeral services were held Tues- 11:00 a. m.— “Lord, Teach Us .day morning in the Catholic to Pray,”—J. W. Davis . Pulpit, sary In a quiet way two years ago j pastoral and private prayer last October. Mrs. Beckman died i 11:30 a. m.—“Hymns of the January 22, 1933. ^Christian Life.”— H. B. Schaeffer.1 Mr. Beckman is also survived 12:00 m.— Business session, by two brothers, John, of Rennse- 12:30 p. m.— Dinner, laer. Ind., and George, of Normal. < 2:00 p. m.—Afternoon Session, Three sisters and a brother pre- Devotions— H. C. Farley. ceded him in death. An Approved Workman He retired from active work at bis trade in December, 1924. In the forty years and more that Mr. Beckman served this community 2:30 p. m.—Discussion of the Stewardship Program. (1) The Every Member Canvass, D. N. E b- ter; (2)—Unifying the Financial Year, F. A. Render. (3)—The Merits of the Duplex and Single as a blacksmith he established an ' Envelopes. L. W. Stauss. (4) church at 9:30, conducted by Rev. Father Markey. Burial was In St. Patrick’s cemetery where her parents are buried. She was born July 25. 1860, at Lars, Germany, the daughter of John and Gertrude Kemmer. At the age of eight she came to this country and tb Chatsworth. Sur- viving besides Mrs. Mauritzen is one brother, Peter Kemmer, ot Havelock, Iowa. After the death of her parents in-Chatsworth she went to the home of her sister. About two A shake-up of the county high - ways department of Livingston county was announced Tuesday by the state aid road and bridge com- . , „ , . mittee of the county board. Seven ers worked Sunday but the num-|or ht appolntment9 were made. berwas not very large -South o f.A„ e ht of ^ , jo„ hoW_ Gibson City to Champaign consul bet>n notlfled ot their erable corn had been planted and I ,, , , , , ,, dismissal from service May 31. 1 Appointments are: S. H. Berg- strom, of Pontiac, Illinois, as bridge inspector, successor to 'Charles O. Phillips; W. E. DenUer, Forrest bookkeeper and stenogra- pher. .succeeding Russell Loudon Long Point, county owned irac- I tor operators, Linus Mies, Fair- bury, and Clarence Asper, Eppards furnished by County Superintend- ent of Schools, H. W. McCulloch, j Chatsworth— Beulah E. Wilson. 251; Janette Beck, Harold R. Finefleld, Rose Johnson, James H. Meister, Robert M. Milatead, Wil- liam W. Norbits, Glenn W. Rosen- boom, Victor Runyon, Raymond Sleeth, Ernest J. Stehle, Jay R. Warner. Janet Woodruff, 252; Margaret H. Frosman, 254; Dwayne B. Bayston, 255; Elmer David Bachtold, Louise R. Guts- wfler, 259. Charlotte— Donald C. Gerdeg, Arthur F. Sterrenberg, 262; Ada i E. Rosendahl, 263; Helen L. Fra- her, 264; LaVerne C. Dehm, 26*. Germanville — Bernice Kem- mer, 241; Lyle B. Kemnetz, 244; Madeline Crandall, 246; Gerald Kemmer, 247. Sullivan— John P. Blackmore. Merle C. Corbin, 261; Irma M. Me- Pherson, 271; Roy D. Lewis, 273; Harry R. Magee, 274; Mervil C. Haag, Arthur F. Trost, Arley A. Wilson 275; Hershel I. Coash, Al- ice J. Flessner, Mary L. Haag; William F. Haack, Ruth PndketL Paul L. Sterrenberg, Wilma E, Swan, Charles P. Young, ZV4s _____ Keith D. Frantz, 277; Charles JL Melvin, 278. Thirty-three acres of land in Fayette — Donald W. Benwa*. Livingston county have been plat- Edith M. Koehl, Eldon E. KoeM. ted Into community gardens this Doris J. Kuntz, Donald E. Maierx year under the supervision of A. ' Madalyn Y. Price. Chester Pyg- C. Herbert, of Pontiac, garden su- man, Harold E. Steldlnger, Roy L pervlsor of the county Emergency Stein, Dorothy E. Towler, 185. Relief committee. 1 Forrest — Fred Altstadt, Pan- j In addition to the above, which line E. Altstadt, James K. Boh- includes 242 separate plats, there'non, Dorothy M. Collins, Kathjeea are 297 Isolated gardens where re- E. Cottingham. Kenneth A. On. lief clients are operating gardens Dolores E. Crawford, Peart T* on their own property under the Friedman, Ralph W. GoaU, COUNTY RELIEF GARDENSTOTAL I OVER 33IACRES ___ Land and Seed Will Again Be Furnished Free to the Unemployed. supervision of Mr. Herbert. George J. Hack, Floyd Harrtag the fields were In better condi- tion than east and north of Gib- son City. Around Chatsworth. very few farmers had finished planting by Monday. More were progressing nicely and yet a few had hardly started. Continued rains and a limited amount of sun- shine has kept the low grounds too wet for cultivating. , _ , . , . b Point; county owned elevating enviable reputation as a compet-jA Program for the Monthly Meet-lyear8 ago 8he went to Peoria to ent and conscientious workman, putting Into every Job and every transaction that element of gen- uineness that was typical of hls character. A quiet, good natured man and a truly good citizen, he accrued a wealth of esteem in hls home community and enjoyed the well-deserved friendship of all who knew him. ------- M ------- MRS. JOHN SCHROEN The funeral of the late Mrs. John Schroen was held Saturday afternoon, the Rev. A. E. Kalk- warf, pastor of the local Lutheran churches, conducting the eervicee In the Germanville church at two o'clock. Interment was njade In the Germanville cemetery. Augusta Bel swig was born in Saxon, Germany, July 3,1861, and attained the age or 83 years, 10 months and 19 days. She came to America when three years of age, first residing at DanevIUe, Wisconsin and latsr moving to this vicinity. In 1889 she was married to John Schroen, of Germanville. Two sons were born to them. One died In Infancy and the other, Bruno, survives and cared for her In hls home In her deollnlng years. Mr. Schroen died In 1117. She also leaves a grandson. The various school events of reeent days are reported In The Teller, the high school depart- ment of The natadealer. ing of the Steward Board, E. Schaefer. 6:30 p. m.—Supper. 7; 30 p. m.— Evening Worship. Devotions, Wm. Graham; music by the church choir. Report of the Conference Temperance Commit- tee, D. N. Ester. Temperance moving pictures. Friday, Jane 7th E-1 reside at St. Joseph Home. Last 'fall she left there to spend the winter at the Hollywood home In Kankakee. This spring she came back to Chatsworth but kidney trouble caused her removal to the hospital for an operation that for a time seemed successful. Besides the relatives enumerat- ed above there are a number of more distant relatives and friends 9:00 a. m.— Morning Session. who wlll cherlsh her memory. Devotions, Frank Unger 9:30—Discussion of Conference Missions. Summary of “Missions Today and Tomorrow,” Fred O. Stroebel. 10:15 a. m.—Discussion of Con- ference Evangelism, Paul Lang. 11:00 a. m.—Panel Discussion on Conference Problems. Conference Matters— B. E. Rei- ser. Evangelism—<H. B. Schaeffer. Missions—Leo Schmitt. Women's’ Missionary Society— Mrs. D. N. Ester. 18:00 m. — Closing Worship service', O. W. Wykle. 13:30 p. m.—Dinner and Dis- issal. A NOTE OF THANKS Mrs. Gertrude Mauritzen and family extend sincere thanks to ell friends of the late Mias Anns Kemmer for their expreesions of sympathy, their personal services end accommodations, floral offer; gs, spiritual bouquets end ell other kin* considerations. m —Plalndealer ads pay. ST. / PATRICK’S SCHOOL EXERCISES HELD SUNDAY Although the rains have responsible for holding hack the field work, wet weather has brought definite contributions to the local farmer. "The subsoil Is again holding moisture," one farmer stated, in contrasting the present with con- ditions of last year. “Without |ha* be*n named- heavy downpours and more than | average moisture, the outlook j would be far from promising.” In addition, the Increased rain- fall has held back the chinch bug hordes, expected In record-break - ing numbers this season. The spread of the white fungus dis- ease, brought about by damp, cool weather, is reported as hav- ing taken a heavy toll among the Insects. Oats around Chatsworth look better than further south in the grader operator, Emil A. Frey, of Pontiac; county owned blade grader operator, Eugene Brown Cullom; dump foreman, Haswel] Younfl, Emington. George Cavlezel, engineer, is to lit no successor Other employes discharged are: Clyde Vant, F. C. Billingsley. Edward Leonard, Ivan Orr and Robert Gaston. Chairman A. C. Dixon, Newton township, said the changes were made In keeping with the reor- ganization of the county board and Its state aid road committee. ------- fa ------- RESIGNATIONS OF TWO LIVINGSTON RELIEF OF- FICERS ARE ACCEPTED j Relief clients are furnished with Nellie E. Hayden, Carol E. Kelly, free gadren space, free seeds and Florence Painter, Lois M. Pnrkey. the use of tools with which to cul- Marjorie C. Schlipf, Billy Shep- tlvate their tracts. pard, Paul O. Sohn, Marilyn M- In addition 26,000 tomato Swing, Laverne Thomas, Mary plants, 14,000 early cabage plants v. Williams, 192; Alffen Nusn and 9,000 pepper plants have been baum, Charles R. Rudd, 193; Jay made available for Livingston L. Eacret, 194; Charles M. Whit- county gardens. These plants are fill, 197; Marian L. Meister, 199; being distributed from Peoria for Robert W. Von Bergen. Eldons eight counties. Zimmerman. 199. Community gardens operated Pleasant Ridge—Zetta L. Shell, in Livingston county this year are Anna E. Warblnton. 201; HaroM as follows: Pontiac, 61 acres; e . Harms, 202; Robert I.'Barne*. Dwight. 4 acres; Odell. 7 acres; Elsie Johnson, Ernest Richard Cornell. 21 acres; Flanagan. 2 Hoke, 203; Robert Pokaraey, acres; Falrbury. 41 acres; Forrest 204; Merla J. Burtch, Wilbur f. 2 acres; Chatsworth 3 acres and Haab, Gilbert E. Tribley, 206. Campus 11 acres. Honors and Scholarships The Chatsworth gardens this year will be on the Watson lanJ at the east edge of town. Last year the gardens were west of the tile factory. Seed for the Chats- worth garden was received Satur- day. Besides these tracts relief cli- ents of Pontiac township are op- erating 70 isolated gardens. St. Patrick’s School held inter- esting graduating exercises Sun- day evening, which were largely attended. The exercises were held in Saints Peter and Paul’s church. The class of eighth grade gradu- ates included, as named last week, five boys and four girls. The altars were beautifully dec- orated with cut flowers. The Rev. F t. Fulton, of Gibson City, delivered an Inspiring address and the pastor, Rev. Fr. Msrkey, pre- sented the diplomas. A number of out-of-town priests were pres- ent. The children of the school sang hymns, showing excellent musical training. A* In former years, the closing of the parochial school was made a memorable event In the lives of the hoys and gtrla who have completed their course of study In the Institution. . ----- * ------- Use printed stationery. The Plalndealer will gladly fill your Resignations of two Livingston state. Water that stood in low .County Emergency Relief com- plices has ruined spots In nearly every field. Three grade school pupils, Dan- iel J. McCoy, district 23. Long Point, Eunice I. Hovda, same dis- trict. and Margie A. Tiffany, dis- trict 62. Cornell, won highest han- ors and honorable mention. Thro* rural school students won ths same honors and mention: Geral- dine I. C. Frederisy. district 23J. Dwight township; Margaret M- Pellouchoud, district 173. Nevada township. Dorothy J. Ripsch, dls- _____ trlct 81, Eppards Point township. ^ On Friday. May 24th, Mrs. Ber-. NormaI school scholarahip wia- nard Saathoff, or Charlotte, enter- ner8’ one to each t0" n8*lp’ are aa talned at two showers In honor of follo" 9: J™ 1" Be' k’ , <*** Miss Elizabeth Kyburz. worth; Ada E Rosendahl, Chas In the afternoon the ladies and lotte: L>’,e B Kemnetz, German- daughters of District 266 In which i " 1Ue; ^ rla U J- Eu“tz’ Miss Kyburz has been teaching for Marjorie C. Schlipf. Forrest; Zetta MIACEL1 J or IGNEOUS SHOWERS GIVEN FOR MISS KYBURZ RELIEF CARRIES ON Relief in Livingston county, threatening to stop last week-end, was assured of continuance Satur- day morning when $10,200 was received from state headquarters to furnish grocery orders for the remainder of the month, and pay salaries for May. Administrative staff members have worked volun- tarily without pay since May 1. NOTICE After June 1st all coal hauling will he 86c a ton. No trips under SOc.—John J. Bouhl, Clifford Btebblns, Jos. J. Diets, Cap Barg- mann. 37-38” MEMORIAL DAY CLOSING The postoffiee will close at 9:89 a. m., May 80 la observance of Memorial Day. mittee administrative officers were accepted at a meeting of the county committee Thursday night. Lowell Baker, administrator, resigned to accept a directorship In the Montague Settlement House sponsored by the Woman's Club of Rockford, June 1. His resig- nation to thte Illinois Emergency Relief commission was tendered F*riday. S. H. Bergstrom, former super- intendent of work relief and a special investigator of relief cases, resigned to go into the county highway superintendent's office as bridge inspector June 1. Successors will be named when state relief funds start activities again. the past few years, were entertain-1 L. Shell, Pleasant Ridge; Richard SIGNS OF SUMMER ed, and In the evening the young E‘ R*ch’ Saiinemln; R lu A. Krip- lady friends of Miss Kyburz form- Pel’ Un,on; Her8hel *■ Coa8h- ed another happy gathering. jBvan’ Games were enjoyed and “fifty", was played. Three pupils of Miss Kyburz.! -------- |Mary Ruth Hubly, Margaret Shell; This issue of The Plalndealer and Annetta Saathoff, each car- contains a group of special mea- rytng over them a gaily decorated sagee on electric refrigeratlna. umbrella "showered” the brlde-to- The Central lllihois Public Servira be with lovely and useful gifts. Company is co-operating with lw- A delicious two-course luncheon cal dealers in a campaign to f«r- was served by the hostess, who ther popularize this method of as- was asststed by her mother, Mrs.; frigeratlon. In addition to tl 8. D. Durkes, of Franklin Grove. | large advertisements in this who had been visiting her for the:over the signatures of the past week. WOODMEN MEMORIAL Next Sunday, June 2, Is Mod- ern Woodmen Memorial Day. Member* are requested to assem- ble at the hall at 10 a. m., biing- in cars and flowers. HDW. COONEY, Sec. TO GIVE FREE SHOW A free show will be given In Chatsworth Wednesday evening, June 5, under the auspices of A. C. Ehmaa, Chatsworth dealer In farm machinery. The show t> pro- vided by The Firestone tiro com- pany and features pneumatic tired tractors. Particulars appear la a large advertisement oa page f. ' tit Service Company—one of which devoted to the General Bit —the following are also advertf^ ed in this paper: The El eel Trunk-Marr Company; house, C. L. Ort man; L. J. Haberkorn; the Leonard, hr Bill's Studio, (W. G. Swltaar) Ih- per City. A careful, reading «ff all these advertisements la saw gested. .... 1 -Try Plalndealer want ada. 1
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THURSDAY. MAY 30. 1935 F. R. BECKMAN LARGE … · John and Gertrude Kemmer. At ... Madeline Crandall, 246; Gerald Kemmer, 247. Sullivan— John P. Blackmore. Merle C. Corbin, 261;

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Page 1: THURSDAY. MAY 30. 1935 F. R. BECKMAN LARGE … · John and Gertrude Kemmer. At ... Madeline Crandall, 246; Gerald Kemmer, 247. Sullivan— John P. Blackmore. Merle C. Corbin, 261;

4hfi

■ T

m

SIXTY-FIRST YEAR

F. R. BECKMAN DIES MONDAY

AT SON'S DOMEFuneral end Interm ent in

Chat*worth Wednesday Afternoon.

John W. Spear ieOnly Surviving 1

Local Veteran

Jo h n W. Speer Is the only su rv iv ing veteran of the civil w ar in C ha tsw orth tow nship. Mr. S peer en listed as a volun­te e r In. Co. >F., 18 th Ind iana R egim ent, In fa n try , and serv­ed three years and 10 m onths, receiv ing an honorab le d is­ch a rg e a t the close of the war.

H e w as 94 years old J a n ­uary 89, 1936. H e is w ide­ly know n in th is section , hav­ing fo r m any years been a successfu l s to ck buyer. He is honored and respected by all th e people o f 'the 'com m un- ity w hich has been his hom e so long.

H e is hale and h earty and lives in a com fortab ly kept hom e in th e w estern p a rt of tow n, am id b eau tifu lly land ­scaped prem ises adorned with g a rd en s and flow ers th a t have been p rldefu lly devel­oped fo r m any years by his son, H arvey, who recently m arried and took up his es- idence in W atseka.

CHATSWORTH. ILLINOIS, THURSDAY. MAY 30. 1935

DESECRATION!

NO tSf

"W... ... X.• v X v - ':'r

F . R. Beckm an died a t th e hom e of h is son W illiam in Chicago at 1 :2 0 a. m „ M onday, May 27th , a f te r a period of several w eeks of intendh Buffering from h ea rt t r o u ­ble and a tte n d a n t dropsical cond i­tions.

Mr. Beckm an w en t to Chicago la st Novem ber and spen t th e w in ­te r w ith h is son and- fam ily. H e re tu rn e d to h is hom e in C h a ts ­w orth ab o u t th e m iddle o t la s t m on th and spen t the last tw o w eeks of A pril here. H e th en becam e ill and w as tak en to C hi­cago.

F u n e ra l H ere W ednesdayT h e body w as b ro u g h t to C h a ts­

w o rth M onday evening and fu n e r­a l serv ices w ere held W ednesday a fte rn o o n a t 2 :3 0 o ’clock in St.P a u l’s E vangelical L u th e ra n ch u rch , th e pas to r. Rev. A. E.K alkw arf, officiating. In te rm e n t w as m ade in C hatsw orth cem etery .

B orn in G erm anyF o lk e r t R. B eckm an, son of

R olf and A gte B eckm an, was born in O estfriesland , G erm any, D ecem ­b er 11, 1853, and lived 81 years,3 m on ths and 16 days. A t th e ag e of fou r years, h is p a re n ts ib ro u g h t him to A m erica, lo ca tin g I Evangelical Pastor* of the n o rth of F alrbury - As a young I ° . m an he s ta rted learn in g th e b lack- j Peon* District Coming sm ith ’s tra d e a t D anforth .

H ere O ver H a lf a C en tu ryH e m arried Miss T heresa W all-

rich O ctober 3, 1882, and h e es­tab lished a shop here and m ade th e ir hom e In C h a tsw o rth con tinuously th e re a fte r. F o rty - seven years of Mr. and Mrs. Beck- m nn’s m arried life w ere sp e n t In th e hom e th a t con tinued to bp big u n til th e end.\ x !iJ«vee Tw o Sons

MINISTERS TO MEET JUNE 6-7

INCONVENTION

to Chatsworth.

T h e E vangelical M inisterial th e y 'C o n v e n tio n of the P eo ria d is tr ic t

w ill be held in C hatsw orth , T h u rs ­day an d 'F riday, Ju n e 6th and 7th.

T he session! Will e ta r t a t 10 o'clock T hursday and end J*11*1 the noon-day luncheon F riday . The

inew ly-elected d is tr ic t su p e rin ten d - f . j e n t , Rev. P h ilip B euscher, of!

Rev. M. C. Eignus Only Surviving

Forrest Veteran' I ’m 91 years old today ,”

cheerily dec lared Rev. M. C. E ignus S a tu rd ay m orn ing , when he called on T h e P lain- dea le r ed ito rs. T h e o ldest resid en t o f F o rre s t tow nship , and th e only su rv iv ing Civil w ar v e te ran rem ain in g in the tow nship , Mr. E ig n u s is r e ­m arkab ly h a le an d Jovial; well in fo rm ed , m ost ag ree­able in conversation , a decid­edly com panionable gen tle ­m an to m eet.

He served th re e years in th e 89 th Illino is In fan try . Sixty years in the M ethodist E piscopal m in istry , h is per­sonal h isto ry 1b rich In exper­ience; h ls record as a citizen, so ld ier, se rvan t of God and fellow man is w orthy and in ­sp iring .

Mr. E ignus lives w ith his d a u g h te r , Mrs. A. V. H odg­son, on a farm in F o rrest tow nsh ip— and w e 're going to accep t hls inv ita tion to ‘‘Come o u t and see me som e­tim e.”

LARGE NDMKK WILL RECEIVE

NEW DIPLOMASCounty Superintendent Is­

sues List of Those Pass­ing 8th Grade Tests.

| The fo llow ing is a lis t of th a | pupils of th e so u th e as te rn p a r t aC L ivingston coun ty w ho w ill ' l l ceive e ig h th g rad e d ip lom as aa s

1 resu lt of th e regen t exam ination*.

P-3 U: t a PK

T he general public is invited to all the services w hich will he held In th e E vangellcar church. About 25 to 30 m in iste rs and th e ir

Two sons w ere born to th e WO-i ,Pie, R obert and W illiam . T he “ W ator. will open th e program .fo rm e r Is a residen t of K ankakee an d has one daugh ter) P hy llis.W illiam Uvea In ChiVAgb; h e has one d au g h te r, Jo an n . T hese sons and th e ir fam illra w ere f r e q u e n t!wlvee a re expected to be p resen t, v is ito rs her*) paying te n d e r d e - |The Program follow s: vo tlon to ib e lr aged p aren ts , and T hursday , J u n e 8in tu rn sh a rin g th e ir hom e w ith j 10 :00 a. m.— O pening Session, th e ir fa th e r d u rin g the w in te rs — P h ilip B uescher, D.S. since Mrs. Beckm an passed aw ay

MISS ANNA KEMMER DIES IN PONTIAC

^ HOSPITAL SUNDAY

Miss A nna K em m er, a residen t of C ha tsw orth fo r m ore than 60 years, d ied in th e P o n tiac hospi­ta l S unday m orning a t 3 o ’clock, w here she had undergone an op­e ra tio n a b o u t th ree w eeks ago.

T h e body was b ro u g h t to the hom e of h e r s is te r, Mrs. G ertrude

CORN PLANTERSHUMMING AS SUN

DRIES THE FIELDSA very sm all portion of the

corn of th is part of Illino is was p lan ted on tim e th is year and m ost of it will.-be p lan ted du rin g th e m onth of June.

Sunday, In a drive from C hats­w orth to C ham paign, th e w rite r found very lit tle corn had been p lan ted so u th of I’iper City gml considerab le ground rem ained t o ! be plowed. F all plowing Is get- ( tin g weedy and hard from sp p t 'n j ued ra ins an d V lll req u ire m ore w ork than usual to get In condi­tion for p la n tin g . A few fartn-

NAME SEVEN NEW APPOINTEES IN THE

HIGHWAY DEPT.

Mr. and Mrs. Beckm an observ ­ed th e ir golden w edding ann lver-

M auritaen , w here she had m ade “ A Mod-1 h er hom e fo r the p ast 30 years,

el W orsh ip Service.” | F u n e ra l services w ere held Tues-11 :0 0 a. m.— “ Lord, T each Us .day m orn ing in th e C atholic

to P ra y ,”— J. W. D avis . P u lp it,sa ry In a q u ie t way two y ea rs ago j p as to ra l and p rivate p rayer la s t O ctober. Mrs. Beckm an died i 11 :3 0 a. m.— “ H ym ns of the J a n u a ry 22, 1933. ^C hristian L ife.”— H. B. S ch ae ffe r. 1

Mr. B eckm an is also surv ived 1 2 :0 0 m.— B usiness session,by tw o b ro th ers , John , of R ennse- 1 2 :3 0 p. m.— D inner,laer. Ind ., and G eorge, of N orm al. < 2 :0 0 p. m.— A fternoon Session,T h ree s is te rs and a b ro th e r pre- D evotions— H. C. F arley .ceded him in death .

An A pproved W orkm an H e re tired from active w ork at

b is tra d e in Decem ber, 1924. In th e fo rty y ea rs an d m ore th a t M r. B eckm an served th is com m unity

2 :3 0 p. m.— D iscussion of th e S tew ardsh ip P rog ram . (1 ) T he E very M em ber C anvass, D. N. E b- te r ; ( 2 ) — U nifying th e F in an c ia l Y ear, F. A. R ender. ( 3 ) — T heM erits o f the D uplex an d S ing le

a s a b lacksm ith he estab lish ed an ' Envelopes. L. W. S tauss. (4 )

church a t 9 :30 , conducted by Rev. F a th e r M arkey. B u ria l was In St. P a tr ic k ’s cem etery w here her p a ren ts a re buried .

She w as born Ju ly 25. 1860, a t L ars, G erm any, th e d au g h te r of Jo h n and G ertru d e K em m er. At the age of e igh t she cam e to th is coun try an d tb C h a tsw o rth . S u r­v iv ing besides Mrs. M auritzen is one b ro th e r , P e te r K em m er, ot H avelock, Iowa.

A fter th e d ea th of h e r p aren ts in -C h a tsw o rth she w en t to th e hom e of h e r s is te r. A bout tw o

A shake-up of the county h igh­ways d epartm en t of L ivingston county was announced Tuesday by the s ta te aid road and bridge com-

. , „ , . m ittee of the county board. Sevene rs w orked Sunday bu t the n u m - |o r ht appolntm ent9 w ere m ade.b e r w a s not very la rg e -South o f . A„ e ht of ^ , jo „ hoW_Gibson City to C ham paign consul „ bet>n notlfled ot th e ire ra b le corn had been planted and I ,, , , , , , ,d ism issal from service May 31.

1 A ppointm ents a re : S. H. B erg ­s tro m , of P on tiac , Illinois, as b ridge inspector, successor to

'C h a r le s O. P h illip s ; W. E. DenUer, F o rres t bookkeeper and s te n o g ra ­pher. .succeeding Russell Loudon Long Point, county owned irac-

I to r operators, L inus Mies, F air- bury, and C larence Asper, E ppards

fu rn ished by C ounty S u p erin ten d ­en t of Schools, H. W. McCulloch,

j C h a tsw o rth — B eulah E. W ilson. 251; J a n e t te B eck, H aro ld R. F inefle ld , R ose Jo h n so n , Jam es H. M eister, R obert M. M ilatead, W il­liam W. N orb its, G lenn W. Rosen- boom, V ictor Runyon, Raym ond S leeth , E rn e s t J . S teh le , Ja y R. W arner. J a n e t W oodruff, 252; M argare t H. F rosm an , 254; D w ayne B. B ayston, 255; E lm er David B achto ld , Louise R. G uts-

w f le r , 259.C h arlo tte— D onald C. Gerdeg,

A rth u r F. S te rren b erg , 262; A da i E. R osendah l, 263; H elen L. F ra - her, 264; L aV erne C. D ehm , 26*.

G erm anville — B ern ice Kem ­m er, 241; Lyle B. K em netz, 244; M adeline C ran d a ll, 246; G erald K em m er, 247.

S ullivan— Jo h n P. B lackm ore. M erle C. C orbin , 261; I rm a M. Me- P herson , 271; Roy D. Lew is, 273; H arry R. M agee, 274; Mervil C. H aag, A rth u r F . T ro s t, A rley A. W ilson 275; H ershel I. Coash, A l­ice J. F lessn er, M ary L. H aag; W illiam F. H aack, R u th P ndketL P au l L. S te rre n b e rg , W ilm a E , Swan, C harles P. Young, ZV4s

_____ K eith D. F ra n tz , 277; C harles JLMelvin, 278.

T h ir ty -th re e acres of land in F a y e tte — D onald W. Benwa*. L ivingston county have been p lat- E dith M. K oehl, E ldon E. KoeM. ted In to com m unity gardens th is Doris J . K un tz , Donald E. M aierx year u n d er the superv ision of A. ' M adalyn Y. P rice. C heste r Pyg- C. H erb ert, of P on tiac , garden su- m an, H aro ld E. S te ld lnger, Roy L perv lsor of the county E m ergency S tein, D oro thy E. Tow ler, 185. R elief com m ittee. 1 F o rre s t — F red A lts tad t, Pan-

j In add ition to th e above, which line E. A lts tad t, Jam es K. Boh- includes 242 se p a ra te p la ts, th e re 'n o n , D oro thy M. Collins, K ath jeea a re 297 Isolated gardens w here re- E. C o ttingham . K enne th A. O n . lief c lien ts a re o p era tin g gardens D olores E. C raw ford , P eart T* on th e ir own p ro p erty under the F ried m an , R alph W . G oaU ,

COUNTY RELIEF GARDENSTOTAL

I OVER 33IACRES___

Land and Seed Will Again Be Furnished Free to

the Unemployed.

supervision of Mr. H erbert. G eorge J . H ack, F loyd Harrtag

the fields w ere In b e tte r condi­tion than east and no rth of Gib­son City. A round C hatsw orth . very few farm ers had finished p lan ting by Monday. More were p rogressing nicely and yet a few had h ard ly s ta rted . C ontinued ra in s and a lim ited am oun t of su n ­sh in e has kep t th e low groundstoo wet fo r cu ltiv a tin g . , _ , . , .b P o in t; county owned eleva ting

enviab le rep u ta tio n as a c o m p e t- jA P rog ram for the M onthly M eet-lyear8 ago 8he w en t to P eoria toe n t an d conscien tious w orkm an, p u ttin g In to every Job and every tran sa c tio n th a t elem ent of gen­u ineness th a t was typical o f hls ch a rac te r . A q u ie t, good n a tu re d m an and a tru ly good citizen , he accrued a w ea lth of esteem in hls hom e com m unity and en joyed the w ell-deserved frien d sh ip o f all who knew him .

------- M -------MRS. JOHN SCHROEN

T he fu n e ra l of th e la te Mrs. Jo h n Schroen was held S a tu rday afte rn o o n , th e Rev. A. E . K a lk ­w arf, p as to r o f the local L u th e ra n churches, conducting th e eervicee In th e G erm anville ch u rch a t two o 'clock. In te rm e n t w as n jade In th e G erm anville cem etery .

A ugusta Bel swig w as born in Saxon, G erm any, Ju ly 3 ,1 8 6 1 , and a tta in e d th e age or 83 years, 10 m on ths and 19 days. S h e cam e to A m erica w hen th re e y ea rs of ag e , f irs t resid in g a t DanevIUe, W isconsin an d la ts r m oving to this vicinity .

In 1889 she was married to John Schroen, of Germanville. Two sons were born to them. One died In Infancy and the other, Bruno, survives and cared for her In hls home In her deollnlng years. Mr. Schroen died In 1117. She also leaves a grandson.

The various school events of reeent days a re reported In The Teller, the high school depart­ment of The natadealer.

ing of th e S tew ard Board, E. Schaefer.

6 :3 0 p. m.— Supper.7; 30 p. m.— Evening W orship .

D evotions, W m. G raham ; m usic by th e chu rch choir. R eport of the C onference T em perance C om m it­tee, D. N. E ste r. T em perance m oving p ictures.

F rid ay , J a n e 7 th

E-1 reside a t S t. Joseph H om e. L ast 'fa ll she le f t th e re to spend th e w in te r a t the H ollyw ood hom e In K ankakee. T his sp rin g she cam e back to C ha tsw orth b u t k idney tro u b le caused h e r rem oval to th e hosp ita l fo r an op era tio n th a t fo r a tim e seem ed successful.

B esides th e re la tiv es e n u m era t­ed above th e re a re a nu m b er ofm ore d is ta n t re la tiv e s and frie n d s

9 :0 0 a. m.— M orning Session. who w lll cherlsh h e r m em ory.D evotions, F ra n k U nger

9 :3 0 — D iscussion of C onference M issions. S um m ary of “ M issions T oday an d T om orrow ,” F red O. S troebel.

10 :1 5 a. m.— D iscussion of Con­ference E vangelism , P au l L ang.

1 1 :0 0 a. m.— P a n e l D iscussion on C onference P roblem s.

C onference M atters— B. E. R e i­ser.

E vangelism — <H. B. S chaeffer. M issions— Leo Schm itt. W om en 's’ M issionary Society—

M rs. D. N. E ste r.1 8 :0 0 m. — C losing W orsh ip

service', O . W. W ykle.1 3 :3 0 p. m.— D inner and Dis- issal.

A NOTE OF THANKS

Mrs. Gertrude Mauritzen and family extend sincere thanks to ell friends of the late Mias Anns Kemmer for their expreesions of sympathy, their personal services end accommodations, floral offer;

gs, spiritual bouquets end ell other kin* considerations.

— m —— Plalndealer ads pay.

ST./

PA T R IC K ’S SCHOOL EX ER C ISES H E L D SUNDAY

A lthough the ra in s have responsib le for ho ld ing hack the field w ork, w et w ea th er has b rough t d e fin ite co n tribu tions to the local farm er.

"T he subsoil Is again holding m o is tu re ," one fa rm e r s ta ted , in co n tra s tin g th e p re se n t w ith con­d itions of last year. “ W ithou t | ha* be*n nam ed- heavy dow npours and m ore than | average m oisture , th e outlook j would be far from prom ising .”

In add ition , th e Increased ra in ­fall h a s held back th e chinch bug hordes, expected In reco rd -b reak ­ing num bers th is season. The spread of th e w hite fungus d is­ease, b ro u g h t abou t by dam p, cool w eather, is reported as h a v ­in g tak en a heavy to ll am ong the Insects.

O ats a round C hatsw orth look b e tte r than fu r th e r sou th in the

g rad e r opera to r, Em il A. F rey , of P on tiac ; county owned blade g rad e r opera to r, Eugene Brown C ullom ; dum p forem an, Haswel] Younfl, E m ington.

George Cavlezel, eng ineer, is to lit no successor O ther em ployes

d ischarged a re : Clyde V ant, F. C. B illingsley. E dw ard L eonard , Ivan O rr and R obert G aston.

C hairm an A. C. Dixon, Newton tow nship, said th e changes were m ade In keep ing w ith th e r e o r ­gan ization of th e county board and Its s ta te aid road com m ittee.

------- f a -------RESIGNATIONS O F TW O

LIVINGSTON R E L IE F O F ­F IC E R S A R E ACCEPTED

j R elief clien ts a re fu rn ished w ith N ellie E. H ayden, C arol E. K elly, free gadren space, free seeds and F lorence P a in te r , Lois M. P nrkey . th e use of tools w ith which to cul- M arjorie C. Schlipf, Billy Shep- tlva te th e ir trac ts . pard , P au l O. Sohn, M arilyn M-

In add ition 26,000 tom ato Swing, L averne T hom as, Mary p lan ts, 14,000 ea rly cabage p lan ts v. W illiam s, 192; Alffen Nusn and 9,000 pepper p lan ts have been baum , C harles R. R udd, 193; Ja y m ade availab le fo r L ivingston L. E ac re t, 194; C harles M. W hit- county gardens. These p lan ts a re fill, 1 9 7 ; M arian L. M eister, 199; being d is trib u ted from P eoria for R obert W. Von B ergen . E ldons e ig h t counties. Z im m erm an. 199.

C om m unity gardens opera ted P lea san t R idge— Z e tta L. Shell, in L ivingston county th is year a re A nna E. W arb ln ton . 201; HaroM as follow s: P on tiac , 61 ac res; e . H arm s, 202; R obert I .'B arne* . D w ight. 4 acres; Odell. 7 ac res; E lsie Johnson , E rn e s t R ichard C ornell. 21 ac res; F lan ag an . 2 H oke, 203; R obert P okaraey , ac res; F a lrb u ry . 41 acres; F o rre s t 204; M erla J. B u rtch , W ilbu r f . 2 ac res; C hatsw orth 3 acres and H aab, G ilbe rt E. T rib ley , 206.C am pus 11 acres. H o n o rs an d S cho larsh ips

T he C hatsw orth gardens th isyear w ill be on th e W atson la n J a t th e east edge of town. L ast year th e gardens w ere w est of the tile factory . Seed fo r the C h a ts­w orth garden w as received S a tu r ­day.

B esides these trac ts re lief cli­en ts of P ontiac tow nship a re op­e ra tin g 70 iso lated gardens.

St. P a tr ic k ’s School held in te r ­es tin g g ra d u a tin g exercises S u n ­day evening, w hich w ere la rge ly a tten d e d . T h e exercises w ere held in S a in ts P e te r an d P a u l’s ch u rch . T he c lass of e ig h th g rad e g ra d u ­a tes included , a s nam ed la s t w eek, five boys an d fo u r g irls . T he a l ta r s w ere b eau tifu lly dec­o ra ted w ith cu t flow ers. T h e Rev. F t. F u lto n , of Gibson C ity, delivered an In sp iring address an d th e p as to r, Rev. F r . M srkey, p re ­sen ted th e d ip lom as. A n u m b er of out-of-town priests were p re s ­ent. The children of the school sang hymns, showing excellent musical training. A* In form er years, the closing of the parochial school was m ade a memorable ev en t In the lives of the hoys an d g trla w ho have completed their co u rse of study In the Institution.

. ----- * -------Use printed stationery. The

Plalndealer will gladly fill your

R esignations o f two L iv ingston s ta te . W ate r th a t stood in low .C ounty E m ergency R elief com ­p lic e s has ru ined spo ts In nearly every field.

T h ree g rad e school pupils, Dan- iel J . McCoy, d is tr ic t 23. Long P o in t, E un ice I. H ovda, sam e d is­tr ic t. and M argie A. T iffany, d is­tr ic t 62. C ornell, won h ighest han- o rs and ho n o rab le m en tion . Thro* ru ra l school s tu d e n ts won th s sam e honors and m en tion : G eral­d ine I. C. F red erisy . d is tric t 23J. D w ight tow nsh ip ; M argaret M- P ellouchoud , d is tr ic t 173. N evada tow nsh ip . D orothy J . R ipsch, dls-

_____ tr lc t 81, E ppards P o in t tow nship. ^On F riday . May 24th , Mrs. B e r - . N orm aI school scho larah ip w ia -

n a rd S aathoff, or C h a rlo tte , en ter- ner8 ’ one to each t0 " n8* lp’ a re aa ta ln ed at two show ers In hono r of fo llo" 9: J ™ 1" Be' k ’ , < * * * Miss E lizabeth K yburz. w o rth ; Ada E R osendahl, C h a s

In th e a fte rn o o n the lad ies and lo t t e : L>’,e B K em netz, German-d a u g h te rs of D istric t 266 In w hich i " 1Ue; ^ rla UJ - E u “ tz’Miss K yburz h as been teach ing fo r M arjo rie C. Schlipf. F o rre s t; Z etta

MIACEL1J or

IG N EO U S SHOW ERS GIVEN F O R MISS KYBURZ

R E L IE F C A R R IES ON

R elief in L iv ingston county, th re a te n in g to stop la s t week-end, was assu red of con tinuance S a tu r­day m orn ing w hen $10,200 was received from s ta te h ead q u arte rs to fu rn ish grocery o rd ers fo r th e rem ain d er of th e m onth , and pay salaries fo r May. A d m in istra tive s ta ff m em bers have w orked vo lun­ta r i ly w ith o u t pay since May 1.

NOTICE

After June 1st all coal hauling will he 86c a ton. No trips u nder SOc.—John J . Bouhl, Clifford Btebblns, Jos. J. Diets, Cap Barg- mann. 37-38”

M EM ORIAL DAY CLOSING

The postoffiee will close at 9:89 a. m., May 80 la observance of Memorial Day.

m ittee ad m in is tra tiv e officers w ere accepted a t a m eeting of the county com m ittee T hu rsday n igh t.

Lowell B ak er, a d m in is tra to r, resigned to accep t a d irec to rsh ip In th e M ontague S ettlem en t House sponsored by th e W om an's Club o f R ockford, J u n e 1. H is resig­n a tion to th te Illino is Em ergency R elief com m ission w as tendered F*riday.

S. H. B ergs trom , fo rm er su p e r­in ten d en t of w ork re lie f and a special in v e s tig a to r of re lie f cases, resigned to go in to th e county highw ay su p e rin te n d e n t's office as b ridge in sp ec to r Ju n e 1.

Successors w ill be nam ed w hen s ta te re lie f fu n d s s ta r t ac tiv ities again .

th e p as t few y ears , w ere e n te r ta in -1 L. Shell, P lea san t R idge; R ichard

SIGNS O F SUMMER

ed, and In th e even ing th e young E ‘ R*c h ’ S aiinem ln; R l u A. Krip- lady friends of Miss K yburz form - Pe l’ U n ,on ; H er8hel *■ Coa8h- ed an o th e r happy g a th e rin g . jB van’G am es w ere enjoyed and “ f if ty " , w as played.

T h re e pupils of Miss K yburz .! --------|M ary R uth H ubly, M argaret S hell; T h is issue of T he P la ln d ea le r an d A nnetta S aa tho ff, each car- co n ta in s a group of special mea- ry tn g over th em a gaily decorated sagee on e lec tric re frig e ra tln a . u m b re lla "sh o w ered ” the brlde-to- T he C en tra l lllih o is Public S erv ira be w ith lovely and usefu l g ifts. Com pany is co-operating w ith lw-

A delicious tw o-course luncheon cal d ea le rs in a cam paign to f« r- w as served by th e hostess, w ho th e r popu larize th is m ethod of as- w as asststed by h e r m o ther, M rs .; f r ig e ra tlo n . In add ition to t l 8 . D. D urkes, of F ra n k lin G rove. | la rge advertisem en ts in th is w ho had been v isiting h e r fo r th e :o v e r th e s ig n a tu re s of th epast week.

W OODMEN M EM ORIAL

Next Sunday, June 2, Is Mod­ern Woodmen Memorial Day. Member* are requested to assem­ble at the hall a t 10 a. m., biing­in cars and flowers.

HDW. COONEY, Sec.

TO G IV E F R E E SHOW

A free show will be given In C h a tsw o rth W ednesday evening, J u n e 5, under th e auspices o f A. C. Ehmaa, C h a tsw o rth d ea le r In farm machinery. The show t> pro­vided by The Firestone tiro com­pany and features pneumatic tired tractors. Particulars appear la a large advertisement oa page f.

'

tit

S erv ice Com pany— o n e of which devo ted to the G enera l Bit — th e follow ing a re also a d v e r tf^ ed in th is p ap e r: T he E l eel T ru n k -M arr C om pany; house, C. L. O rtman;L. J . H ab e rk o rn ; the Leonard, h r B ill's Studio, (W. G. Swltaar) Ih- p e r City. A careful, reading «ff all these advertisements la saw gested.

.... ™ • 1 • ►-Try Plalndealer want ada.

1

Page 2: THURSDAY. MAY 30. 1935 F. R. BECKMAN LARGE … · John and Gertrude Kemmer. At ... Madeline Crandall, 246; Gerald Kemmer, 247. Sullivan— John P. Blackmore. Merle C. Corbin, 261;

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I

THE CHATSWORTH PLAIN DEALER, CHATSWORTH, ILLINOIS THURSDAY, MAY 80, 1035

New Chevrolet Assembly Plant Opens in Baltimore

I• 1

V-.

Governmental, state and civic officials joined with the principal executives of General M otors Corporation in the fermal opening of the new 80,000-car-a-year Chevrolet assembly plant in Baltimore recently. The new plant (center) was dedicated with impressive ceremonies (lower left), and Chevrolet, Fisher Body^ and General M otors officials were guests o f the Baltimore Association of Commerce at a formal banquet in the evening. W. E. Holler, vice-president and general sales manager o f Chevrolet, is shown (standing) with M aryland's Governor, H. W. Nice, and Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., president of General Motors (upper left). M. E. Coyle, president and general manager of Chevrolet, Is pictured fa the upper right photo with Senator Millard Tydings (left) and Mayor H. W. Jackson, of Baltimore (right). Lower right shows the first motor car bui't in that city.

i + W H H H I ! ! ■ H H H f H 11 I i H W H I ♦ I I 1 1 1 1 1 1 i I t i l l* W l H I I H I 1 H H H * ; [

FREE MOVIE DISPLAYAUD DEMONSTRATION

MR. FARMER, HERE’S YOUR CHANCE TO SEE

Pneum atic T ired T ractors

A t Chatsworth

Wed., June 5is

REMINDERS of BY-GONE DAYSC H EW ED T H E BUTTONS O F F

“ (■leanings F rom Y ellow ing F iles o f T h e P la in d e a le r”-a

TH IR TY(M ay

YEARS AGO26. 1935)

th e Illino is C en tra l ra ilro ad was b u ilt to ta k e th e position of sec-

— tion forem an. N ine of th e ir elev-M arkets— Corn 45c; oats 28c; en ch ild ren a re s till living,

eggs 14c; b u tte r 15c; sp rin g I t Is reported th a t the T. P. & chickens 9c. VY. ra ilro ad has m ade se ttle m en t

C hatsw orth citizens aTe g e ttin g fo r th e loss of life in an autom o- ready to ce leb ra te Ju ly 4th. Hon. bile acciden t w est of tow n last J . J . Brow n, of V andalia , will be T hanksgiv ing . Mrs. Mary Joobst. th e o ra to r. m o ther of C harles Joobst, of Pon-

B ert Bell, of C hatsw orth , the tiac, who was k illed , has accepted youngest son of Mr. and Mrs. Hob- $250 In full se ttlem en t. I t is • r t B ell, was m arried in Chicago understood th a t th e ra ilro a d has May 24th to Miss C lara Zender, of se ttled fo r the d ea th s of L ottie , th a t city. T he couple will reside V iola and S arah H agam an for in Chicago. $400. Miss Ju n e K arg er and

Thom as J. W allrlch has ju s t W a lte r B olller w ere both very closed a dea l for the 160-acre badly h u r t in th e sam e accident, fa rm in C h a rlo tte tow nship be- £3longing to th e T im othy O 'C onnor TEN Y EARS AGOesta te , the price agreed upon be- ' (May 28, 1925)lng $140 an acre. i —

Miss P earl Desmond closed a M ark e ts—C o rn $1.08; oats 41c;successfu l te rm of school fo u r .h e n s 20c; eggs 27c; cream 37c. m iles w est of C hatsw orth F riday j Golf fans a re ta lk in g of opening w ith a lite ra ry and m usical pro- a golf course n ea r C ha tsw orth if g ram and a picnic. T h ere w ere su itab le g round can be procured. <0 in a tten d an ce . I C a rp en te rs a re engaged In re-

Tw o of the m em orial w indows m odeling the e lev a to r no rth of th e fo r th e M ethodist church a re to be Illin o is C en tra l depo t and recen t- g u t in by C h a tsw o rth lodges. The ly pu rchased by R. B. S toddard . K n ig h ts of P y th ias and M asons Miss L o m a Squires, of R oberts, h a re sign ified th e ir In ten tions o f . has been engaged to teach th e pri- gay lng fo r w indows. m ary room In th e C hatsw orth

The E vangelical congregation school fo r th e nex t school year.

L itt le W illie had re tu rn ed to Chicago from a w onderfu l v isit to the coun try and w as te llin g

«

8:00 P. M.

SEE THE FREE MOVIE DISPLAY OF

ALL KINDS OF FARMING MACHINERYIN ACTUAL OPERATION

WITH SOUND PICTURES IN COLOR'l ou cannot a ffo rd to m iss this as it show s you .nil the latest farm ing m eth­o d s . L eam h o w to sa v e tim e and m oney. See us for further details W e will gladl v explain to you in full w ithout p lacing you under any o b li­g a tio n .

his 1 •{•m o th e r all abou t it. His g rea tes t .j. in te re s t cen te red in th e pigs. "A ll Vth e l i t t le pigs chased one big pig all over the lo t," he said.. W hen th e big pig got so tired he had to lie dow n, th e lit tle pigs all flew a t him and s ta rte d chew ing all th j b u tto n s off his v es t.”

------ - 1B1 -------W e saw a fellow ru n n in g down

the alley back of th e office y es te r­day and w hen we asked w hat was th e m a tte r he said th a t he was a fug itive from a cha in le tte r gang.

THIS DEMONSTRATION AND SHOW IS SPONSORED BY

A. C. EHMAN— iFor qu ick re su lts ad v e rtise Is

T he P la in d ea le r w an t ads.

3

IIIT

F v -H -K -K -H -K -: - H- H- K- K— H U FM 14 I ■H '4 1 1 M l I I I I 1 11 M i l 1 -H M l H f l

DEALER IN MODERN

FARM MACHINERY CHATSWORTH, ILL.

Dm Imxm

decided to proceed w ith re ­m odeling p lans of th e ir church th a t w ill cost ab o u t $5,000. The s a t i r e bu ild ing w ill be brick ve- meered, ra ised and changed.

The 23rd an n u a l com m ence­m e n t o f th e C hatsw orth high school w ill be held In T h e G rand th e evening of Ju n e 12th.■toad of h av ing a sp eak er m em ber of th e class will deliver [a

Mrs. E . F . M ackey cam e from P lan k tn to n , S outh D akota , a few days ago to v is it h e r d au g h te rs , Mrs. C lair K oh ler, w ho haB been 111.

Mr. and Mrs. A. M elster, th re e sons, of Copeland, K ansas, a r ­rived h e re a few days ago fo r a

In -1visit w ith rela tives. T hey m otor- each jed th ro u g h in abou t a week, w ith

'a tr a i le r behind th e ir ca r anda n o ra tio n , th e sub jects and speak- j cam ped n ights, a r s of w hich a re : “ P ro g ress of the W ith te m p era tu re s rang ing U nited S ta te s ,” Miss E m m a La- from 25 to 29 in th is locality k ey ; “ Success In L ife,” Miss Isa- M onday n igh t vegeta tion of all bnlle F e r r ia s ; “ O ra to ry .” MisslttU a b e th L u n t; N ellie Duffy.

“ Illu sio n s ,” Miss

TW EN TY YEABS AGO(M ay 27, 1915)

T he w ea th er has been cold and ra in y b u t th e crops look fine.

Mr. an d Mrs. Joseph w elcom ed a ten pound baby

— l

k inds w as badly dam aged. P o ­ta toes and corn th a t bad been plowed once w ere leveled to the g round and m any farm ers have s ta rte d rep la n tin g corn.

Jo h n S ilberzahn departed th is m orn ing fo r New Y ork and from th e re w ill take a boat for a v isit w ith h is re la tiv es a t th e scene of

W ittie r hi* b ir th in G erm any. D uring his absence of several w eeks Gus

. . , . , ,___ . _________ (F rederick , will look a f te r th e Sll-u g h te r In to th e ir hom e W ednes-1 , ’ . .. .“ “ jherzahn b lacksm ith shop.F o u r of a five-car passenger

tra in on th e W abash was w recked two m iles sou th of F o rre s t early th is m orning. None of th e th ir ty p assengers on th e tra in was se r­iously In ju red . Mrs. V ance Hays, fo rm erly Miss Jo sep h in e McMul­len , o f M oberly, Mo., a passenger on th e tra in , w as b ru ised ab o u t th e head and face.

M em orial Day exercises w ill be held th e m orn ing of May 30tb a t 10 :3 0 on th e g rad e school g rounds. Rev. A. R e ttb e rg , pas­to r of th e L u th e ra n chu rch , will be th e speaker. T h e high school band w ill fu rn ish m usic and th e re w ill a lso be vocal num bers. T h e A m erican L egion w ill fu rn ish a f ir in g squad an d have ch a rg e of th e g rav e decorations.

W eig h a ll facto rs

fudgefo r y o u rse lf

(m.■XVOO»>' ' •v> • v v

C om m encing Ju n e 2d free mov- t s g p ic tu re s w ill be show n on the S tree ts of C h a tsw o rth d u rin g the

m e r each W ednesday evening. A bou t th ir ty friends and neigh-

ten d ered Mrs. W a lte r Grled- Or a su rp rise p a rty on May 24th s a th e occasion of h er b irthdaySS H irers ary .

M em orial D ay w ill be f ittin g ly ■ beerred in C h a tsw o rth by a p ro ­g ram In th e p ark . Hon. W. R. O s rra n w ill be th e speaker and I k s P ip e r U tty band will fu rn ish th e m usic fo r th e pa rad e and pro-

“ r . ^ •Mrs. C ornelius B rosna- m ce leb ra ted th e ir f iftie th wed- s g a n n iv e rsa ry May 2 2d a t th e ir ■M ta th is c ity . All th e ir cbll- « n excep t C orneliu s, J r . , w ere a t

b e w as d e ta in s ^ a t h is h o s ts tor I llness. T h e coup le re- halved m o re th a n $100 la gold as

ta • f ro m re la tiv e s and T h ey have lo n g been

loots o f C h a tsw o rth , Mr. B ros- oom tng h e re sh o r tly a f te r

W a rra n ty J a n e Q oan toek . M * .■ a rres t, to

M allnde iCHbb, o f IM m m ry , M ay I t , l f l l / t t t so u th ft o f (he n o r th ­e a s t ft Of section 26 In P a y e tte to w n sh ip M.OIO.

It’s the most finely balanced

low-priced car ever built

CHEVROLET

^ H E new Master De L u x e Chevrolet brings you s perfect

combination of the most desired motor car advantages, from allur­ing Fisher Body beauty to the famous gliding Knee-Action Ride, and from solid steel Turret-Top construction to spirited Blue-Flame valve-in-head performance. Yet the Master De Luxe sells at much lower prices and gives much greater operating economy than any other motor car yon would think of comparing with itl See this car . . . drive i t . . . today!CHEvmoLrr motor go, n r rx o r r . mich,Ctmfmrt C k m n itft Urn i tHm nd priem mm4 mmp

C .U .A .a tm m m . A Cmmml U m n VAmm

GHOOSI CHEVROLET FOR QUALITY AT LOW COST

KN E E - AC T I O N C O M F O R T suiiim

Master De Luxe CHEVROLET«

B aldw in C hevrolet, Inc.Chatsworth, DKnois

I

. i

if?

Page 3: THURSDAY. MAY 30. 1935 F. R. BECKMAN LARGE … · John and Gertrude Kemmer. At ... Madeline Crandall, 246; Gerald Kemmer, 247. Sullivan— John P. Blackmore. Merle C. Corbin, 261;

1 P A C T

REFRIGERATION PAYS!ANOTHER STEP AHEAD

this time in Beauty

Start Enjoying Refrigerator Comforts Today

GET A MODERN REFRIGERATOR NOW

Q l U c A ° NF A C T S A B O U T

M O D E R N R E F R I G E R A T I O N

THERE’S only one way to know how really beauti­ful the new 1935 Electrolux is! That’s to see it for yourself! When you do, we believe you’ll agree that

here’s “the best looking refrigerator of them all” !You’11 find, too, that sparkling beauty is only one of

the reasons why so many families are choosing this modem gas refrigerator. Because of its simpler, more efficient operating principle, Electrolux offers features no other refrigerator can match.

It has no moving parts to wear. No moving parts to cause noise. And thanks to its utter simplicity, the running cost of Electrolux is extremely low.

Come in and inspect the beautiful new models. Ex­amine their worthwhile conveniences. Learn how Elec­trolux actually pays for itself with its savings.

ELECTROLUX (S ENDORSED BY THE GREAT AMERICAN GAS INDUSTRY

Trunk-Marr Co.

1 A M odern R e fr ig e ra to r ‘pays fo r fteelf’ In th e sav in g s It m ak ea In f o o d , tim e , w ork and m oney.

S It fu n c tio n ! c o n s tan tly 24 h o u ra a d ay , th e y ea r around .

S P re se rv e s th e m ost p e r ish ­ab le foods fo r d ay s , even In th e h o t te s t w ea th er.

4 S av es th ro u g h th e fu lle stp u rc h a se of food on th e b es t m a rk e tin g days.

5 P ro te c ts h e a lth by sa feg u a rd -food from c o n ta m in a tio n .

4 P ro v id e s p len ty of Ice fo r Ice w a te r . Iced te a , and o th e r beverag es .

1 K eeps b o ttled b ev erag es a t ta s ty te m p e ra tu re s a t all tim es.

d M akes possib le th e e a s y p re p a ra tio n of d e lig h tfu l, ch illed d e sse r ts .

9 E n a b le s th e h o ste ss to p re ­p a re d a in ty re fre sh m e n ts long before th e y a re to be se rved .

<0 O p e ra te s fo r a few penn ies dally .

• A M o d e r n R e f r ig e r a t o r in your home reflects thoughtfulness and care for family health protection. I t denotes wise economy and a desire to have con­veniences that make for a full enjoyment of life. Now— before hot weather sets in— is the time to get a new' Modern Refrigerator. From the very day it enters your home it starts saving for you in many important ways—and the saving adds up to dollars rapidly!

New Showing Modern Refrigerators— in the Show Windows—in the Stores

See the Modern Refrigerators now on display every­where. Sec how attractively designed— how marvel­ously efficient they are and learn how it will pay you to have constant refrigeration and how it will pro­vide many tasty foods at a saving. The low prices and convenient terms now offered by dealers make ownership easy. \

Your Refrigerator Dealer will ted you bow

la pay far yaur raf rigeration out af savings

m m m mW O U K ^

EE YOUR DEALER

MF.LVIN NEWSE lisab e th 1'i.derw ood. C orrsspondsn t

G eorge Benz, Sr., was a Gibson C ity ca lle r T uesday.

Mrs. M. D. Thom pson, who has been ill. Is im proving.

Mrs. H annah S hllts, who has been ill, is Im proving.

Mr. and Mrs. Clyde H u n t w ere R oberts ca lle rs T hursday .

M ilton Sm ith was a business ca lle r In Gibson S atu rday .

Mr .and Mrs. C. O. M cM ahon, of C h a tsw o rth , spen t a p o rtion of S unday h ere w ith friends.

F ra n k Ogg, of E llio tt, was a business caller h e re S a tu rd ay .

F red C arrol, of G-lbson City, spen t S a tu rday h ere w ith friends.

Mr. and Mrs. W. C. H olm es and sons w ere P axton ca lle rs Sunday.

C. A. U nderw ood an d P e te r F tck w lle r w ere P ax ton ca lle rs Sunday.

C harles In k s te r , of S p ringfie ld , sp e n t th e w eek-end here w ith h is fam ily.

Dr. John D eFrles, of T haw vllle, ■pent S a tu rday w ith Mr. and Mrs. Cy S ternberg .

Mrs. C a therine U nderw ood and d au g h te r , Miss Mabel, w ere R ob­e r ts ca lle rs F riday .

Mr. and Mrs. O rville O liver, of C h a tsw o rth , spen t F rid ay evening w ith Mrs. H an n ah Shllts.

Mrs. Jo h n M iller Is s till qu ite 111. H er fam ily and frie n d s a re anxious about h e r condition .

Dr. and Mrs. W ayne H am m and fam ily , of Paxton , spen t Sunday w ith Mr. and Mrs. A. B uchhols.

W a lte r W eber, of R enssa lae r, In d ia n a .spent th e w eek-end w ith h is fa th e r, L ouis W eber, and son.

K a th e rin e W est, o f R u tlan d , sp en t th e w eek-end here w ith h e r g ran d p a re n ts , Mr. and Mrs. F red M ohr.

Mrs. M ary N eth erto n , of Rob­e r ts , Is spending a p o rtion of th e w eek w ith h e r m o ther, Mrs. M. D. Thom pson.

H aro ld G edelm an sp en t th e w eek-end In C hicago w ith Mrs. G edelm an, w ho Is a p a tie n t In the R esearch hosp ital.

Mrs. W llltgm H ayes an d Mrs D eM arcus re tu rn e d to th e ir hom es a t K noxville, T ennessee, M onday, a f te r a th re e w eeks v is it h e re w ith friends.

S t r e a m l i n e B e a u t y lGraceful, flowing lines in modem styling, harmonize with the snow- white finish and superb appoint­ments of an all-steel cabinet.

S t re a m lin e E ff ic ie n c y !Dual-automatic control, hermetic­ally-sealed mechanism and forced- draft cooling are features which insure economical, trouble-free performance year after year.

Stream line Convenience!The Handy Seryice Tray, Revolv­ing Shelf, Button-Touch Door Latch, Automatic Interior Light­ing, and Fast-Freezing Sanalloy Froster are just a few of the fea­tures for extra convenience . . . Let us show you the new models.

Revobrinf S h elf makea •pace more accessible.

Ejeot-o-Cube Trey releases cm bet instantly.

Mill

TrlpI»Storm4» Compartment.

Ortman’sElectricShop

5 years’ P ro tec tio n on th e sealed -in M e c h a n i s m f o r on ly $5, inc luded I n t h e p r i c e .

All the extra usable space, extra advantages, extra convenience*, extra fea­tures, extra value of the Crosley Shelvador can now be yours) For here is a new easy way—the Shelva-bank way! The Shelva-bank it given to you absolutely free, when you buy your Shelvador. It is not a meter plan— does not interfere with operation o f refrigerator. Helps you to save your nickels and dimes and

?uart«rs to pay for your b e l r a d o r . Use the

Shelva-bank to own a Shelvador. Come in and make your selection now from our complete line of the new 1935 models.

PRICES INCLUDE DELIVERY, INSTALLATION, ONE YEAR FREE SERVICE

$ 7 0 .5 0f # M D SP

Haberkom’s Supply House

E dw ard B ertram re tu rn ed to b is hom e a t V alley City, N orth D ako ta . F riday , a f te r a v isit h e re w ith rela tives.

Mr. and Mrs. Jam es T hom as an d ch ild ren spen t Sunday w ith Mr. an d Mrs. L eonard S harp and fam ily n e a r S traw n.

Miss T eda A rends re tu rn ed hom e T uesday from V alley City, N o rth D ako ta , w here she a tten d ed th e fu n e ra l of h e r uncle, F red Behroeder.

M r. and M rs. R obert M udge and d a u g h te r , V ivian, and M atthew G podm anson, o f EUUott, w ere here S a tu rd ay to a tten d th e fu n e ra l of H drachel Day.

C larence F lck w ile r an d Miss V ictoria F lckw iler, of th is city, an d Mrs. C la ra L aR osa an d son, C harles, of Loda, w ere C ham paign ca lle rs T hursday .

Miss D orothy A ckert re tu rn ed to h e r hom e In C hicago Sunday, a f te r a v isit w ith h e r s is te r, Mrs. Guy T hom pson, and fam ily.

R e la tiv es here received word of th e d e a th of A tto rney B. R. T hom pson, 60, of P ontiac. He w as born and raised in th is com- m u nn lty and has m any re la tives and frie n d s h ere who m ourn hla passing.

Mr. and Mrs. V ernon W urxbur- g er an d sons. Loyal and E nard . and d a u g h te r , D onna May, and Mr. an d Mrs. C harles H odges and sod, C harles, and Mrs. L etb a W oodard , spen t S unday In G ibson C ity w ith Mr. and Mrs. G eorge W oodard and fam ily In honor of Mr. W oodard ’s b irthday .

H ersche l Day, aged IS , passed svfay a t h is hom e h ere W ednes­day, May 23d, follow ing s several

V&lVi 4

w eeks illness w ith h ea rt trouble. H e Is su rv ived by his w ife and n ine ch ild ren , two b ro th ers and one slBter. H is p a ren ts preceded him in d ea th . F u n e ra l services w ere held from the M. E. church S a tu rd ay afte rn o o n a t 2 o'clock, Rev. H. W . H artm an officiating. In te rm e n t w as m ade In the local cem etery . T h e m any friends ex­tend sym pathy to th e sorrow ing fam ily.

YOU'LLt t i o J u v ^ L

& £ ih e M a

GEN ER A L ELECTRIC

\REFRICERATORSnW ITH N EW

C O N V E N I E N C E

FEATURESm Gleaming Porce'a-n g T i m p « r a , u r e C o n tro l• Automatic . «• Soper ' ,reezer °

le s s S te e l• D e f ro s t in g S w ito• Sliding Shelve*• Interior LightingJ F o o d P e d a l D o o r O p * n * c A V e g e t a b l e D ra w e r

tain©r*# Ice T r a y

Iancu • *--- . jmatchless sealed

, V e a r 's P e r f o r m -• P lu s 5 Y ea r* ^ ^ t h eProtection on ta n c e . . - . e a l e d - i n - . t e e l

fo r $1 » y ° a r -m e c h a n i s m

B e sure to see the new 1935 General-Electric Re- < frigerators. That's the advice owners are giving to all their friends with good reason. The new models , have all the advantages listed above— and they have v as well a beauty of design that will make you marvel! \ f

?iSee them today! Examine their many worthwhile conveniences— ask about the 5 year's performance protection for only SI a year. You'll find that never before has your money commanded so much refrig­eration value!

SA 1841 *

CENTRAL ILLINOIS PUBLIC SERVICE

COMPANY

LEONARD£ Since 18 8 1 your mother and your grandmother have used LEONARD ice refrigerators. Now, there is a LEONARD electric for you. See me and get the price before buying.

Billy’s StudioO F F IC E H O l'R S 9 :3 0 a. m. to 5 :8 0 p. m.

P ip er City, IllinoislUtiM ence P h o n e 12

Bill A llen W hite say* th e Ideal

new spaper Is one “ w hich te lls the t r u th .” N erts , Bill. A new spa­p e r th a t w ould te ll th e tru th w ould b e boycotted an d ru n ou t of tow n so fa a t It w ould m ake k s tream -lin ed express look like a lunch s ta n d .— P h ilad e lp h ia Dis­patch.

P I P E R C I T Y(Jo u rn a l, May 23, 193-5)

Silas Quick has leased the house know n as the W alrich prop­erty and will m ove to i t w ith his fam ily som e tim e in Ju n e . At th a t tim e he will ta k e over the m anagem ent of the Q uick s to re and W. L. Q uick p lans to re tire .

Miss Helen and R ussell K irk- ham who a re com pleU ng th e ir sec­ond year of s tudy a t th e S ta te N or­m al un iversity , a t N orm al, have accepted schools fo r th e com ing year. Miss H elen w ill teach In F o rd county , d is tr ic t 14, know n as th e M cKinney school and R ussell w ill teach in Iroquo is county .

W ord has been received th is w eek th a t Rev. M. 0 . Long, o f Ar-

g en ta , had su b m itted to an o p er­ation on F rid ay of la s t w eek a t the Macon hosp ita l In D ecatu r. P i­per C ity frien d s w ill be g lad to know th a t he Is do ing nicely and expects to re tu rn hom e th is week.

Mr. and Mrs. J . J . Lyons, E ddie and M arilyn ; J im m ie and P hilip F ran c is and Mrs. K. B. H aw th o rn e w ere fo rtu n a te In escap ing u n in ­ju re d w hen th e Lyons P lym outh sedan o v ertu rned in to th e d itch S a tu rd ay evening as they w ere re ­tu rn in g hom e from T lm berlaw n. T he acciden t w hich occurred n ea r C rescen t City, w as caused by a t ire blow ing o u t an d a lth o u g h they w ere trav e lin g slowly Mr. Ly­ons w as unab le to keep th e ca r on th e road . No one was in ju red , and aside from a couple of sm ash ­ed fen d e rs th e ca r w as only s lig h t­ly dam aged.

T H E W ORLD REALLY M O V M

It has been only a com parative­ly few years since the virgin I l l i ­nois p ra irie s f irs t fe lt th e touch of a plow, but It is a fa r ery fas fa rm in g m ethods and condltioM of those days to th e presen t. F b r Instance, those p ioneer se ttle rs la th e ir w ildest d ream s never Im ag­ined them selves in th e position o t L ester D. C lark , en th u sia s tic pov- e r fa rm e r of th e Cullom neighbor­hood, who has a new b a llo o n - tln d trac to r , equipped w ith search ­light* fo r n ig h t w ork , and a rad io to keep him p o ited on world even ts as h e m oves a b o u t hla w ork of fa rm in g several h u n d red acres. — C ullom C hronicle.

F o r qu ick resu lts advertise lbThe P la in d ea le r.

)m

Page 4: THURSDAY. MAY 30. 1935 F. R. BECKMAN LARGE … · John and Gertrude Kemmer. At ... Madeline Crandall, 246; Gerald Kemmer, 247. Sullivan— John P. Blackmore. Merle C. Corbin, 261;

:e***

ea*i

THE CHATSWORTH PLAlNDEALER, CHATSWORTH, ILLINOIS

rrtf

t b a t e v m l * ^ b u u d t i d n .

PORTERFIELD A RABOIN P ub lishers

---------------- ----------------------------------- IE n te red m second class m a tte r

St the poatoftlce. C hatsw orth . II h t l i , un d er act of M arch S. M l* .

COUNTY HBCEIVBH

JUST RAMBLING ALONGB d l tw 'l Com m ent o a n U . T h a t

and th a O ther T h ins

T h e T ide T u rn s a L ittle I t Is encourag ing to note th a t

_____ ' a num ber of p ro p erty ow ners a re3SR-3 m ak ing needed Im provem ents on 32R-3 th e ir property . New roofs, new

33 p ain t, rem odeled porches and o th -_____ e r s im ila r th in g s a re giving w ork

S U B S C R I P T I O N r a t e s ' to c a rp en te rs and p a in te rs and

• W e e Phone • J. P orterfie ld , Res. X- R. P orte rfie ld , Res

«13 .807 FO R SC HOOLSDUE FROM STATEP ennsy lvan ia Is th e la te s t s ta te

to Join in the an tl-h itch -h lk ln g cam paign now being waged W a rra n ts to ta lin g $13,297.62 th ro u g h o u t the coun try . Several w ere received F riday by County s ta te s have already m ade it unlaw- S u p erin ten d en t of Schools H. W. fu l to s ta u d along a s tre e t o r a McCulloch from A udito r of Pub- highw ay and solicit a rid e in an He A ccounts Edw ard J . Brady, auto . P e n n s y lv a n ia now o u tla w s 1 T hus sum w ill be d is tr ib u ted by th e " th u m b e m '' and fixes a fine th e county su p e rin ten d e n t ofo of $2 o r a day in Jail fo r each of- schools to th e various tow nship fense. school tre a su re rs of L ivingston

M otorists who ap p rec ia te the county as soon as the necessary

a Y ear; M onths

fu ll m ean ing of se lf-p ro tec tion ' clerical w ork can be done.*2 00 Im proving th e lo o k s 'o f th e to w n ! w lu • w r o v e of such laws, and In j T h ree of th e W arrants, to ta lin g▼ *,W ¥ \ l a A r l l t i A n f r a iw l lu h n n n A amt sari 1 I

ft \

«1 00 'a n d coun try If p rosperity ever :add4t4on *°ndly b °P® th e d a J » 441 $8,499.23. a re In paym ent o f past com ee back w ith a bang p a i n t !com e w hen they a r « ,n effect 8,1 due claim s o f L iv ingston county m a n u fa c tu re rs and pa in ters a re

u

MKMOK11AL DAY T he fact th a t th e ran k s of o u r go ing to reap a harvest. N ever

• lv U W ar ve terans have th inned j in th e rem em brance of the w rite r *0 th e point w here it Is no longer th e re been m ore need of p a in t possib le fo r them to s tage a pa- —n ea rly every bu ild ing In tow n

over the land. T hose who w ant from the s ta te school fund , and to be on th e safe side will not ta k e ' a re paid from d elin q u en t tax col- chances by encourag ing s tra n g e rs lections fo r th e years 1930, 1931 to ride, w ith them . Each sum - and 1932.m er b rin g s a long list of robberies | The sum of $979.12 Is paid fo r

a re su lt of tak in g such chances. 1 L930; $5,258.05 for th e schoolSom e h itch -h ikers a re desetv - ly e a r end ing Ju n e 30, 1931, and

lng. T h e m ajo rity o f them are $2,262.06 fo r th e school y ea r end- harm less. But th e ir Increasingly tng Ju n e 30, 1934. tr i ta tin g m anner, inc lud ing th e ir | S u p e rin te n d en t McCulloch Is

rad e on M emorial Day does not a „d coun try needs p a in t— and th ls 80me ° [ th. e m 1l“ vol.v ln? “ u rd e r; a8 t. hJ L 8cho" i / ^ r_ en.d l n g 3 °: m ean th a t th is long-cherished h o i-1 May should be abandoned. A m -' e rica owes a d eb t of g ra titu d e to those who have passed on and M em orial Day will always o ffe r aneppo rtun ity to m ake paym ent. j „ „ „ „ „ _________ __________

W hile o rig inally in tended as a addreBBed a g roup of “ hand p ic k - ! w a* ,n attem4>t8 t0 “ th u m b ” a ride fu r th e r paym en ts on c laim s willd ay upon w hich to pay tr ib u te to fa rm ers he called those "sub- and tb e fact tb a l un8avory charac- depend on collection of f u r th e r de-th o se who engaged in th e w ar be- J e c u r of hl’a who have d isagreed ter8 have also ad o Pted ‘his m o d e ,R nquent taxes. The s ta te a u d ito r tw een the s ta te s , it has com e to w ltb him liars. o t tra n sp o rta tio n , have m ade also m ade sim ila r d is tr ib u tio n sb e recognized as a day upon which O ver a t P eoria Tuesday Secre- 1 h ttch -h lk ln g an abom ination and th is w eek to 101 d o w n sta te coun-to honor a ll those who have had a ta ry of A gricu ltu re W allace called a luenace T hat 11 4s a m enace is tiesp a r t in any w ar in which th is na- tboBe who d isagreed w ith his AAA ?hown by the fact th a t s ta te a f te r

Is n o t a p a in t advertisem en t, e i­the r.

-------J R A --------

Dignified Officials?

1 cen U y"w hen**Prestde n t" Roosevett

THURBDAY. MAY 99. IM S

W A N T A D SA dvertisem ents w ill be In serted

u n d e r th is head fo r one can t a w ord per Issue. No advertlse - lo coun t fo r leas th a n 16 oenta If paid In advance , o r 16 ce n ts If charged .

FOR SALEFOR S A L S — A varie ty of ea rly

an d la te cabbage an d to m a to p la n ts . A lso fo u r k inds o t sw eet p o ta to p lan ts . P h o n e 108R-S.— J o e J . D iets. 38*

FO R SALE— E x tra fine co ttag e cheese, 30c p in t. D eliveries m ade every m orn ing . Call -51F-11.— B e rth a Y ount, C h a tsw o rth . 28*

F O R SA L E — Sw eet po ta to p lan ts , reds, N ancy H all an d P o rto Ricos.— E. T. B aker. 38*

In ad d itio n to the above a w ar-tio n partic ipa ted . T he s ilen t Dr0gram " f a th e a d s .” 8 ta te is now enKaBed ln P*884"* ra n t w as fo rw arded by th e s ta tem arch to th e cem etery, the roll of R em arks like th e above m ight laws to Put an end to 4t T h ” au d ito r fo r $4,798.40. w hich is th eth e drum s, the placing of flow ers not ap p ear so blazon if they had °Pe n in K of a new m otoring season reg u la r m on th ly d iversion from• n the li t t le green m ounds w h ic h -Com e from th e Bowery in New is a good ,4me t0 m ake a decision th e occupational tax fund for the cover our so ld ier dead— no m at- y 0 rk City, b u t they ce rta in ly did as t0 w h e lh e r o r not >ou witl en ' >’ea r end ing Ju n e .10. 1934.te r in w hat w ar they fo u g h t— not add th e d ign iity of th e of- *S Bro" in ~

fice of the P resid en t of the Unit- ed S ta tes an d his appointee, the

F air-

ahould be as fa ith fu lly observed today as it has been back th roughth e years when u.ore of them than sec re ta ry of ag ricu ltu re , now were h ere to ta k e p a r i in bury Blade, such an observance.

The d a te of May 3t) shou ld nev­er be overlooked by C hatsw orlh citizens. S ure ly we canno t be fo r­ge tfu l of its o rig in o r its purpose.Though we m ay be fo rever a t peace— and w hat a b lessing th a t would be— we canno t e ra se from m em ory th tf record of th e past.O ur s tru g g le s to m a in ta in our

-------J R A --------

H ere’s to T he T a lle r F orce D uring th e past th irteen years

s tu d e n ts of the C hatsw orth high school have ed ited a section oi T he P la in d ea le r a l te rn a te w eens d u r in g the school year in a de-

to. a la rm in g proportions. T liere is but one way to b reak it up in s ta te s w here no law has yet bet-u passed against it. T hatis to d rive on and let the " ih u m V e r" severely alone.

------- P3 -------HOW ADS H E L P

tnPLAN OUT DOOlt EX ER C ISES

CLEANU-UP SALE — Model 118-H Phllco 8- tu b e e lec tric se t— bo th long an d sh o r t w ave, lowboy ca b in e t— fu lly g u a ra n te e d , reg u ­la r $89.50 se t, specia l fo r $65 and you r old rad io . — P h llco R adio Shop, C ha tsw orth .

FO R SA LE fo r D eco ra tio n Day — O u t flow ers: peonies, p in k and w h ite ; Iris, d if fe re n t co lors, and o th e r cu t flow ers; and a ll k inds of p lan ts, such as geran ium s, p e tu n ­ias, phlox, sw eet alyssum , pansies, and ag e ra tu m .— Mrs. R ow cllffe.

LOST AND FOUND

KSMFTOH VOTES TOBULLA) NEW SCHOOL

Now High School for Kemptca A new h igh school la to be

e rec ted as a ree u lt of an election held S a tu rd ay ln th e K em pton d is tric t. T h e ree u lts show ed 340 vo tes cast fo r and 86 aga lna t. A to ta l of 386 vo ted to Issue bonds to r th e p ro jec t end 76 aga in st.

F o r th e e lte of th e new b u ild ing 817 voted to pu rch ase g round east of th e p resen t location an d 37 s ig n ified they w ould like th e new b u ild in g located w est of tow n.

T h ere w ere 868 votes cast.

O dell P r ie s tT h e Rev. W. P . W hite , w ho has

been p a s to r a t S t. P a u l’s C atho lic ohu reh a t O dell fo r th e p as t elev­en y ears , h as been appo in ted p as­to r of St. P a tr ic k ’s church a t L in­coln. Rev. W h ite delivered his fa rew ell ad d resses a t th e m asses S unday m orn ing . Rev. J . M. Sheedy, of S t. P a tr ic k ’s ch u rch a t H av an a , h as been appo in ted to th e O dell church . B efore go ing to O dell Rev. F t. W h ite w as s ta tio n ­ed a t C ullom . *

Rudd’s HweMade

ICECREAMtwo miles

V anilla , Lem on a n d Choc­o la te , per q u a r t -----------

F ru it Ice C ream , specia l th is w eek, p e r q u a r t—

ed an d delivered p e r gal. --------------

40c

50C * 7

». pack- * .*

$1.25

H . C . R U D DPhone

V an illa F lav o r O nly fo r 8a le a t T h e H ighw ay C afe. F o rree t

LOST— S ilver gray P e rs ian cat. F in d er p lease no tify Mrs. Sam

38*

A successfu l school y ea r in Cul- loni will end next week, w ith com­m encem ent for tlie tw en ty m em - Ra r be r . bers of th e class of 1935 of C u l­lom com m unity high school se t fo r FOUND— L icense P la te , T r. E.S a tu rday evening. Ju n e 1st. 13— 895, Illin o is , 1935. — The

Due to lim ited sea tin g space ln P la indea ler. it Is p lanned , if

MISCELLANEOUS

5-10-36* .

Did you ever stop to th ink th a t the public hall the c ritic s of ad v e rtis in g who are w ea ther cond itions a re favorab le ,fond of stressing its "eb st" en- to have th e g rad u a tio n exercises | i

p a rtu ien t of th e ir ow n— “T he T at- tire ly overlook the p a rt which ad- out of doo rs th is year, w ith a pub -1 CASH FOK DKAD STOCK I___ le r .” The efforts of the s tu d e n ts vertis iug has p layed in m ak ing lie ad d ress system being used s o 1 w ill rem ove a ll dead stock

Place as" a ° fre e and liberty-lov ing ba8 *uab4ed lh is Pa P*r 10 * lve ils th is world a m ore p leasan t and th a t all m ay h e a r , J e s " 0^ ^ R a v m o n d ^ 's ta ^ le r6DeoDle form s the most b rillian t rea d e rs a good account ot the stu- a g re eab le place in w hich to live? M em bers of the class of 1935 es to R aym ond b ta d le r , r ip e r^ a p t L to o u r h isto ry So even d e n l ac tiv ities and we cheertu lly A„ m anner of fun m ay be m ade are : B e rth a W inifred B oem an. 1 City,though th e re is no parad e to the acknow ledge o u r indeb tedness an d Qf th o se products w hich w hiten M ary A lene S pang ler. R u th K ath -eem etery, no ro ll of th e d rum s, hereby express o u r th an k s an d ap- te e th o r reduce body odor o r leen M agee, G ertru d e E lb e rt. Gen-th e re m ust be flow ers fo r the p re d a tio n . W e tru s t th a t th e a r- sw ee ten foul b rea th . B ut th e ir evieve It. C lark , D onald D. N et-graves of those to w hose m em ory I ra n 8em ent m ay con tinue next ad v e rtisem en ts have im pressed tlingham . D onald A. K oerner.th e holiday was firs t procla im ed. )'e a r and prove as accep tab le as m illions of persons w ith the lm- T heodore A llen C hand ler. Law-I t is one d eb t we owe th a t canno t 41 bas d u rin g the years past. po rtan ce of personal hygiene. They rence E. Schlpper, Roy E. M iller.be honorab ly set aside. ____ ____ have done m ore to overcom e ob- R ussell F. P u ck e tt. LeRoy E.

m noxious hab its of carelessness th an F ran tz , D onald L. M cCaughey,w h r v U’K u i s s n v F in a lly F o rced I t Down any one fac to r in th e h ir to ry of R obert LaV an C lark , M ary A gnes

a , J W ell» G overnor H orner hu n g on th e w orld None of the com forts H offm an. O pal A rlene Magee. B er-,i_ „ „ ____ K persis ten tly and by schem ing and have around us would have nice E. M iller, H aro ld B. F lessner,Chicago an em aciated , poorly-•lo thed old man who fo r 25 v«»r« tiire4 t884llL finally go t th e s ta te (been given to th e m asses w ithou t Jo seph L ouis W egste in ,

anna rent) v hart Won. toa . fthnllt 4eKl8 la tu re ‘" P * 8* th e th re e *ce“ 4 , ad v e rtis in g . M odern plum bing, E. S te rren b erg . Cullomap paren tly had kept ju s t ab o u t ene long jum p ahead of th e poor

F ran c isC hron-

sa les tax. H e w as not successful tb e a u tom oblle, th e rad io — you tele.bouse W hen his shabby room in getU ng 11 pa88ed Ior 4“ med4a4e | could go on n am in g them lndefln-

hwi follow ing hia h ..r- resiill* b u t It goea in to nely . T h e ir m a rk e t was foundle t- I t w ill s tim u la te tAisinees In , th ro u g h ad v e rtis in g . W ithou t I llin o is from now to Ju ly 1st fo r m odern ad v e rtis in g they would

w as searched , follow ing his b u r­ia l ln a p o tte r 's field, w ell th u m b ­ed b an k books w ere revealed show ing th a t he had ab o u t $150,- 600 on deposit. He had no know n k in , so hia m oney in v e rted to th e s ta te . H e had lived an d died a m iser. H e had m ade h im self an d everyone a ro u n d h im unhappy, and to w h a t end.

Every sensib le cltlxen rea lises th a t th e re a re no pockets to a sh roud , an d th a t w hen we pass on we a re ta k in g no th ing w ith us. W ise Is th e m an who rea lizes th a t th e re a re Ju s t tw o th in g s to leave behind w hen he d ies th a t a re really w orth -w h ile — som e rea l frien d s to shed a te a r a t parting , and a few u n fo rtu n a te s whose Rve* have been m ade th e richer r a d b r ig h te r because ot h is serv­ice to them .

BUSINESS

B usiness Is done on en th u sia sm everybody who can wUl do th e ir have beeQ confined to a few. Nor P ’ 8 d g

w ould they ever h av e been perfec t­ed, a s a t p resen t. D em and, ere- >

heavy buying befo re then to avoid pay ing th e add itiona l cen t tax. G overnor H o rn e r and th e Demo­c ra tic p a rty a re d irec tly charge­ab le w ith th is ad d itio n a l tax ho o k ­ed on to th e g en e ra l public. E v­ery m an, w om an and child to I l­lino is who m akes any purchases a f te r Ju ly 1st w ill pay th re e cents e x tra on every do lla r they spend fo r any com m odity of life. I t w ill give a lo t Of good D em ocrats C ha tsw orth c ltlse n s will rejoice Jobs ta k in g ca re of the ex tra thou- j t0 le a rn th a t we a re g e tting some- san d s of d o lla rs th a t will be m ul-1 w here a s a n a tio n Industria lly , ched o u t of th e people. even If o u r p ro g ress Is slow. T he

___ jH A ____ M arch production of autom obiles.Jam m in g th e L eg islative M aw 4n th l* coun try . 416,000 cars. was: M o re th a n l .s V o p ^ p o s e d sto le »a ^ t to severa l years. Steel

oheer.W hen you rep ress m en, sup-

. . ., , p ress them , d es tro y th e ir freedomated th ro u g h ad v e rtis in g , c o m - y lnltuU ve> lh en buglneM la n _

gulshes.. . . . ... , I t is Ju st as w rong to k ill free-

ag e m an to live w ith m ore ^bodily i ̂ om o f buBlneM „ u t0 k lncom fort than k ings lived to the ^ freedom o r m en ta l free- olden days. dam

___ I G ra n tin g th a t b ig business m ustRECOVERY SIGNS receive a ce rta in am o u n t of su p e r­

vision, yet th is superv is ion m ust

polled th e ir p e rfec tio n ;. M odern ad v e rtis in g has enabled the aver-

r

law s o r am endm ents to ex isting T here is foolish sav ing ju s t a s ; s ta tu te s , w hich tre a t n ea rly as

th e re Is foo lish spending . T he m any su b jec ts as th e constitu tion CMcago m iser offered an exam ple of th e s ta te perm its, have been to ­o t foo lish sav ing . H e revealed troduced by m em bers of th e s ta te th e abom ination of hoard in g , a n d ' leg is la tu re now to session to proved th a t owe can w aste one 's S pringfie ld .life even though they m ay n o t ! C om m enting on th is unusual w aste a few p en n ie s ." B u t th e ead 1 sp u r t of unnecessary energy a • a r t is th a t h e isn ’t g o ing to ge t a ‘ p ro m in en t S p ringfie ld w rite r says: ehance to com e hack a n d try life j "H ere a re 203 sen ato rs an d rep- over aga in . T h a t Is a n o th e r th in g [ resen to tivea— th e re being one va- w orth rem em bering . If you d o n 't ' cancy ln th e low er house— an d the g u t as m uch in to th e w orld as average of new bills fo r each ex- you ta k e o u t w hile you live to It, ceeds seven. If each leg is la to r than you a re su re to q u it loser. w&3 successful to having his pro- Bven th e m oney you h oard , w ith portion of new m easures enacted a o one to pass It on to, is lo st in to law, probably no re s id e n t of w hen th e tim e to "cash in " e v e n t- ; th e s ta te w ould be le ft untouched .Bally a rriv es . I t appears q u ite ce rta in th a t no

M pocketbook would escape un-— AND PAYING CASH plucked. I aw av en tire ly

I t shou ld In te res t everyone W lth lu the m em ory of o ld ste rs ’ around h ere to learn th a t since : in th e leg isla tive halls th e re has J a n u a ry 1 m ore au to s have been been no g en e ra l assem bly th a t has gold to th is coun try th a n fo r a adopted as m any bills as have been M m ilar period to any year since ‘ proposed th is session. W ith no 1*29. B u t the s ta r t l in g p a r t of p receden t to lead any assem bly this re p o r t is th a t a la rg e r per- m an in to op tim istically believing •o u tag e o f p u rch asers a re now j th a t a ll h is subm itted ideas would gay tog cash th a n ever before. In becom e law , color is le n t to re- other w ords, m ore ca rs a re being pea ted ru m o rs th a t som etim es gold th a n a t any tim e fo r five m ore th a n th e public w elfa re gov- pears w hile few er p u rch ase rs a re e rn s th e In troduc tion of bills.•snorting to th e paym ent p lan of I —— JRA — -•B e a rin g them . T h ere Is a w orld i J n e t Waiting fo r An A u d it

I Cook coun ty au th o ritie s In d ica t­ed S unday th a t County T re a su re r R obert M. Sw eltxer would be al­lowed a w eek to w hich to repay th e $414,129 an au d it a s se rts he owes th e county.

Sw eltxer, since th e a u d it figures w ere announced and befo re It w as com pleted , ad m itted he had not tu rn e d over a l l th e M onies of hie fo rm er office, h u t said th is was on ly because h e w as aw aiting the a u d it f ig u re s to asce rta in w h eth er th ey co rrespond w ith hie ow n to ­

la ru n n in g ab o u t 50 per cen t of ca­pac ity ; exports an d Im ports show a s lig h t Increase; ca r loadings a re g a in in g stead ily except to a few sections, and places of am usem ent a re rep o rtin g s te ad ily Increasing p a tronage . T h u s U Is seen th a t w e a re no t w ith o u t pu rchasing pow er. W e ca n n o t increase our spend ing w ith o u t increasing pro- duetion , w hich 4b tu rn m eans m ore m en a t w ork . This Is the process of evo lu tion which m ust

be th e w ork of econom ists, o f b u s­inessm en ,of w ork ingm en , of m en who know ju s t h o # lo n g I t ta k e s to ea rn a d o lla r w ith th e ir ow n h an d s ; fo r before a m an can In­te llig en tly superv ise h e m u s t h av e w orked a t the th in g h e Is su p e r­vising.

To have the business of th e w orld superv ised by th e d em a­gogue an d po litic ian w ould be lik e p u ttin g a m an to to lead th e o r­ch e s tra who had no techn ical know ledge of m usic.

T he dom ination o f business by th e o ris ts will e v e n tu a lly d es tro y the business fab ric , k ill in itia tiv e , s top production , th r o t t le o rg an iz ­ation , and p u t a q u ie tu s on corn-

ca rry us back to norm alcy. T here me»t:,a l evolutiona re som e d a rk clouds s till hover- And w ith o u t com m ercial evolu-in g ab o u t us; th a t Is true . B u t !1108 Wthere„ w41‘ ^ no O v a t i o n

m ean ing to th a t If you will ta k e $o ponder over It. T he fac t m ore cars a re being sold Is

evidence th a t the co u n try 1* g e t­ting b ack on its fee t, an d th e fact that b uyers a re pay ing cash Is psattive proof th a t th e A m erican people are e ttll f a r from b r in g “ b ro k e .” i t ’s a s traw th a t show s w hich w ay th e wind Is blow ing r a d fo r onee It seem s to be blow - tag in th e r ig h t d irec tion .

T . J e ro m e B aldw in an d G ladys B aldw in , C h a tsw o rth . to B aldw in C hev ro le t, Inc. C h a tsw o rth , May 98, 1*81, lo t i 9 and 10, block 21. C h a tsw o rth , f l .

WANTED—Flower orders—for funeral and all other oesaaloa;,— Bertha French. Phono 141R-4.

th ey a re few er now th an they have been fo r th e p as t five years, and a genera l move on the p a rt of ev­eryone to buy th e th ings they need now, w hen buying will do th e m ost good, w ill drive them

AD M IN ISTRA TRIX ' NOTICE

E sta te of Jo h n O. B runs, d e ­ceased.

T h e undersigned A dm in is tra trix o f sa id E sta te , hereby gives notice | th a t she will a p p e a r before the C ounty C ourt of L iv ingston C oun­ty, a t th e C o u rt H ouse to P ontiac, on th e f irs t M onday to Ju ly next; a t w hich tim e a ll persons having c laim s a g a in s t sa id E s ta te a re no­tified an d req u ested to a tte n d for th e purpose of hav ing th e sam e a d ju s te d .

D ated th is 28 th day of May, 1935.

LULA B. BRUNJ3, A d m in is tra trix

B aker, N iven A C rab treeA tto rneys J13

— E lb e rt H ubbard .

A M odern N ew spaperT he N ews-Review , P o n tiac ’s

w eekly new spaper, cam e o u t la s t w eek u n d e r new ow n ersh ip and m akeup. I t is g rea tly im proved typog raph ica lly , m odern to ap ­pearance , perfec tly p r in te d and ab ly ed ited . As a co m p etito r, we w ish the new ed ito r-p u b lish er, W. P. Sanford , an d th e m an ag e r. Geo. El Myers, m uch success, w hich they seem to m erit.

Congratulations

To th e g rad u a te s of C h a ts­w orth T ow nsh ip h igh school, the pub lic schools of C h a ts ­w orth an d v ic in ity a n d of St. P a tr ic k ’s School—

O ur s in c e re c o n g ra tu la ­tions a r e ex tended a t th is tim e. May th e hap p in ess th a t la j o u r 's a t th is period con tinue th ro u g h o u t the com ing d ay s of fu r th e r schooling o r th e b u ild in g of your c a re e r ln o th e r ways. May success be j o u r ’s in an ab u n d a n t way.

p. l McGu ir eCHATSW ORTH, ILL.

LEISER BROS.Food Store in Tauber's Store, Chatsworth, Illinois

■9-9-F I1 111 I 11 I 11 M l M i l M 1 I I 11 I 1 I I 1

C orner G rocery ;REB HO LZ A MAUIUTZEN, P ro p rie to rs

F R JD X m N D SATURDAY CASH SPECIALS

JB LLO3 fo r .................. ........... I 7 t

PEN JE L2 fo r .... ..... ..... ............... 25c

PAR VALUE ICE TEA p er lb .............................. .. 29c

POST TOASTIES2 fo r . . . „2U

23cP. & G. SOAP 6 fo r __ .

R ED M ILL SALMON 2 No. I cans . . _ 25c

CAM EL SPINACH 2 No. 2 cans 23c

SWANS DOWN CAKE FLOURe a c h _____________________

B A K E R 'S CHOCOLATE1 lb. (3 oz. b a r F R E E ) __

SILK TISSU E T O IL E T P A P E R 4 ro lls f o r ________________

LONGHORN C H E E SEp er pound _________ _____

H A PPY HOUR CASTILE SOAP p e r b a r __________________

H A PPY HOUR QUICK OATS p a c k a g e _____ ___________

H A PPY HOUR CORN FLA K ES2 f o r _____________________

27C

KELLOGG’S CORN FLA K E S 2 f o r _______________

H A PPY HOUR TOMATO JU IC E 1 8 ) os. cans, 8 f o r _______

H A PPY HOUR P IN E A P P L E No. 8 1 cans, e a c h __________

ANY HOUR C O F FE E8 pounds fo r ______________

CA M PBELL C O F F E Ep er p o u n d ________________

CAM PBELL C O F F E E .4 pound p a l l ______________

' M M I I I I I I I 4 I I I 44 M l I 14 0 4 ♦ • • * * 9 9 * 8 1 8 8 9 9 • !

21c >

19c : 4

19c10C19C21c21c i15C 123C '►

45C !21C i93C :

r

SAVOY JE L L Y PO W D ER S all flavors, 2 pkgs. -----

SAW Y ER'S A -l CRA CK ERS 2 pound box ___________

MARY TODD C O F F E E16c per p o u n d ; 8 pounds f o r ----------------------

ROBY MORN SALAD D RESSING OR SANDW ICH SPREA D , q u a r t J a r _________________________

LEMONSp er dozen ------------------------------------------------------

Probate C onti HeEstate of Jennie K. Barrett:

$30,000 bond of Administrator F rank H. H err filed and approved, oath filed, letters ordered; claim day, third Moadky la July, 1086. Petition filed to r leave for admla- letrator to heard and allowed

OUVBB—large queens large sis# bottles -

NEW POTATOES6 pounds to r ------

N EW CABBAGE per pound

PEANUT BU T T E B6 ouaoe J a r ---------

BANANAS—O m end (H

r-TO

BREAD—'White, rye o r wheat large let

Long Life That Means Low Cost—The Oliver

Nichols & Shepard Combine# Long Life ie built into the Oliver Nichols & Shepard Combine. The hot-riveted, bridge-trussed frame stands up to the jolting of the harvest field. Anti-friction bearings, ground shafts, and high pres­sure lubrication cut down the friction that causes wear. Big, strongly-built motors furnish the power.

• The cost of an Oliver Nichols & Shepard Com­bine is divided among many harvest seasons Throughout its long life it keeps running, keepsthreshing, keeps saving.*■ » •-

t; * k.« *• . ,

£ See the Oliver Nichols 6t Shepard Line.♦ ’ . •

eulUvater; eae 19-S9 sad oa# 16-8* a s # Me. 1*2 L E . a eorm pU ater sad

W* Wlii»■ - . «•■ - V

O to H w r Tower

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K Ifit' _____

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Page 5: THURSDAY. MAY 30. 1935 F. R. BECKMAN LARGE … · John and Gertrude Kemmer. At ... Madeline Crandall, 246; Gerald Kemmer, 247. Sullivan— John P. Blackmore. Merle C. Corbin, 261;

c a l sMiss Evelyn Perk in* , o f K anka

I kee. sp en t th e w eek-end w ith her paren ts, Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Per-

I k ins.Jo h n F. D onovan, local poat-

J m aste r, re tu rn e d F riday evening,M rs. J a m e s C arro ll, of Chicago i* ft* r * * * * * w n t th re e a t '

v isited h e r s is te r . M rs P W K a l- ' te ttd ln * th « P o s tm a s te rs ’a e r , S a tu rd ay and S unday ' | convention. Jo h n H art, of O tta

M r u _ IT___________ w a, Is the new ly-elected p residen tMr. and M rs. H en ry M ens and ' of th e 0W n U a t lon. Mr. H art

h as a la rg e acquain tance In th is vicinity .

Mr. and Mrs. Hoy H erron , Mrs. N ellie Schrock and C hris Schrock, o f L afay e tte , Ind ., m oto red toO hatsw orth Sunday. Roy H erron stopped a t P ip er C ity to v isit h is m other. T he o th e rs w ere e n te r­ta ined a t d in n e r a t the C larence C. B en n e tt hom e and a ll fo u r w ere e ra s in g gu es ts of Roy B. B ennett.

P rac tica lly every business house In C ha tsw orth w ill close a t noon D ecoration Day, taverns, re s ta u ­ra n ts and p ic tu re house excepted.

aon , C lifford , of W ash ing ton , 111., sp e n t 8 unday a t th e H enry Day hom e.

R o b ert W alsh an d fam ily , of n e a r C lifton , w ere gu es ts S unday a t th e hom e of his b ro th er, C h a rle s W alsh , In C h a tsw o rth .

M r. an d Mrs. K. R. P o rte rf ie ld , d a u g h te r , J e a n , an d Mr. an d Mrs. B e r t M iller, of F o rre s t, w ere d in ­n e r g u es ts a t the A rth u r P earson hom e In N orm al S unday.

The Jo h n H eikens e n te rta in ed a few frien d s F rid a y evening a t a u c tio n -bridge, se rv in g th e irg u e s ts w ith delicious re fre sh m en ts I t has been th e custom fo r a num- d u r in g th e evening. ; b e r of y ears to close a t noon on

M r. a n d Mrs. Lloyd D oran an d th l* ho liday. T h e postofftce will aon . D ickie, of P ip e r C ity , sp en t closed a ll day and no m alls will 8 unday a t th e hom e of the la t- be d ispa tched a f te r ab o u t 10 In to r 's p aren ts , Mr. an d Mrs. Mike m orn ing , If th e usua l custom 8 m lth , an d fam ily. »a followed.

Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Dixon and T hose who cam e to v isit over tw o ch ild ren , of W aukegan , cam e l*1® w eek-end a t the hom e of Mrs. to C h a tsw o rth la st F rid ay and vis- H eye F lessn er and fam ily w ere: tied Mrs. D ixon's p aren ts , Mr. and Mr- and Mr8- T ibbe tts andMrs. J. A. L eggate, u n til S unday M,aa G race F lessner, of C hicago; evening. Mr. and Mrs. F red F lessn er and

Mr. and Mrs. Percy H ow ard and ' hU dre“ - M r- and Mre- F red B ,e' ch lld ren m otored to D ana S a tu r ber and aon ' L aurence and F re d 'day to tra n sa c t som e business aud e r*ch. Mrs. C larence F u th ey and ■

sons, Raym ond and L lnard , all of: Peoria.from th e re w ent on to S tre a to r to

spend S unday w ith Mrs. H ow ard ’s p a ren ts .

Mrs. A da B en n ett en te rta in ed la young frien d s of Billy Gene a t a w iener to a s t in honor of his six th b ir th d a y , S atu rday , May 2\>. A fter th e w iener roast B illy ligh ted can ­d les on a decorated cake, a s u r ­p rise g ift, w hile th e ch ild ren sang “ H appy B irth d a y .’’

Mrs. M ary B rockelsby, of Chi- j cago, a rriv ed here S unday to v isit h er b ro th er, C harles Lown. a t the A ndrew Eby hcftne. She p lans 1 to rem ain here un til M em orial day, a f te r w hich Bhe Is to visit Mrs. T hom as C lark a t Cullom . She 1 w as b ro u g h t here by Mrs. Bush and d au g h te r , Mrs. W end t, of iW atseka, a f te r com pleting a v isit

Miss D orothy McNeely has re- w Itjj ^ e m . tu rn ed hom e from ABhkum, w hereshe w as em ployed In the Jo h n P h illip s J r . home fo r th e p as t five m onths. She has accepted a po­sitio n In O narga a t th e hom e of Mr. and Mrs. R olland K nocke, be­g inn ing Ju n e 2, 193S.

MIm G e r tru d e E n rig h t

WILL ARRIVEIn C h a tsw o rth nex t M onday m orn ing . R ep resen ta tiv e of L anglo ls, F am ous B eauty A u th o rity , to give Com pli­m en ta ry C onsu lta tions, In­c lud ing F ac ia l an d M ake-Up.

T h e v isit o f Mia* Ekiright w ill be an even t of keen In­te re s t to w om en w ho a re a l­w ays In te res ted in a t ta in in g th e s m a r t ap p e a ran c e so ty p ­ical of th e w om en of o u r com m unity .

S he com es th ro u g h the cou rtesy of Q u in n 's D rug S to re and sh e has been tra in e d by M. L ang lo ls h im ­se lf in th e a r t of teach ing new m ethods of cu ltiv a tin g loveliness r ig h t In one 's own hom e.

Miss E n rig h t, In ta lk in g a b o u t th is says, <rW e believe th a t every w om an has a love liest se lf . . . th e self th a t looks o u t from h e r m ir­ro r w hen sh e Is happy, th r ille d , en th u s ia s tic ab o u t life , an d co n fid en t th a t the Im pression sh e is m ak ing Is a ch a rm in g one.

“S om etim es th is ‘loveliest s e l f la u p perm ost In a wo­m a n ’s ap p earan ce ; som e­tim es i t Is neg lec ted and she Is f a r less lovely th a n she need be. I t Is my keen est d es ire to help th e lad les of C h a tsw o rth to b rin g o u t an d develop th is p e rh a p s la te n t loveliness. N ot th ro u g h a m irac le b u t th ro u g h sound com m on sense p rincip les un ­d erly in g dally sk in care.

“ I w an t to devo te 45 m in­u te s to d iscussing w ith each w om an w ho com es to me h er ow n sk in cond itions and p roblem s . . . to g iv ing h e r a re s tfu l fac ia l follow ed by an Ind iv idualised m ake-up th a t w ill m in im ise any Im­perfec tions of fe a tu re or oom plexion an d accen t ev­e ry beauty .

“ I use only M. L ang lo ls’ fam ous C ara Nom e B eau ty C rea tio n s because I have found them th e p u res t, f in ­e s t an d m ost effective ob­ta in ab le . T h ere Is n o ob- U gatlon . . . no ch a rg e fo r th is co nsu lta tion . Mr. Q uinn h as persona lly engaged m e fo r th is serv ice as a co u r­tesy to h is fr ie n d s an d cus­to m e rs ."

M iss Bn r ig h t w ill rea lly help wom en to a t ta in th e new b ea u ty dem anded today. Bhe Is av a ilab le a ll nex t w eek fo r ap p o in tm en ts be­tw een 9 :0 0 a . m. and 4 :45 p. m. O nly ten app o in t­m e n ts a d ay can be m ade, so p lease phone o r call fo r one

WILL C,

T he A m erican Legion A uxiliary i m et M onday n ig h t a t th e hom e of Mre . V elm a O’B rien , so u th of town. T he an n u a l election of o f­ficers w as held, re su ltin g in last y e a r ’s o fficers being re-elected for j th e com ing year. T hey a re : P res-i ld en t, Mrs. C. L. O rtm an ; V ice; P re s id en t, Mrs. G ladys Slow n; S ecre tary , Mrs. B e rth a F ren ch ; T re asu re r. Mrs. M arrle H err. A ] nice lunch waB served.

Local go lfers who play a t F a ir- | bu ry have been considerab ly h a n ­dicapped th is sp rin g by bad w ea­th e r. As fa s t as the g reen s w ere go tten In cond ition a lo n g cam e a flood and covered m ost of them ov er w ith m ud o r w ashed a ll the sand and o il off. A p o rtion of th e cou rse has been to o so ft to mow th e g ra ss u n til I t h and icap ­ped playing. Officers of th e club have been p u ttin g fo rth every ef- fo r to g e t th e course In sh ap e and p layers have been co n sid era te In th e m eantim e.

P o n tiac ch a p te r of th e O rder of th e E a s te rn S ta r held a guest n ig h t T uesday eventhg, beg inn ing w ith a 6 o 'clock d in n e r followed by a m eetin g In th e educational h a ll o f th e M. B. chu rch . P re ­s id in g o fficers of v ario u s ch a p te rs fille d th e ch a irs d u rin g th e m eet­in g In w hich fo u r ca n d id a tes w ere In itia ted . T he fo llow ing from C h a tsw o rth w ere g u es ts : D r. a n d M rs. O. D. W lllstead , Mrs. M ar­g a re t S tephens, Mrs. C. S. B erry , Mrs. Jo e M iller an d A. A. Raboln. T h e la t te r served as g u es t Assoc­ia te P a tro n .

F. H. H e rr an d S anfo rd M artin a tten d e d th e fu n e ra l services In P o n tiac M onday afte rn o o n fo r th e la te B. R. T hom pson.

Mrs. H. L. W agner and d au g h ­te r . Mrs. Joe M artin , of P eoria , sp e n t S undayyU the hom e of th e fo rm e r 's m o ther, Mrs. Sophia 8chafer.

T h e public p a rk , which u n til r e ­cen tly had no t been “ tr im m ed ’’ on accoun t of the heavy ra ins, h as re ­ceived considerab le a t te n tio n In rec en t days. W ith th e a tte n tio n of a num ber o f w orkm en It has been nicely Im proved In a p p e a r­ance.

Mr. an d Mrs. C lem ent M onahan a n d th e la t te r ’s m o ther, Mrs. J . A. K errin s , o f S pringfie ld , arrived h e re S a tu rd ay . T he lad les rem ain h e re on a v isit, w hile C lem ent, w ho Is a f ir s t lie u te n an t, le f t S un­day to spend tw o w eeks a t F o rt S heridan .

Mrs. N ora H ow ard arrived h ere T uesday from P eo ria to v isit h e r son, P. R. H ow ard , an d fam ily u n til a f te r M em orial day. Mrs. H ow ard m ade th e Journey h e r e 1 w ith Miss M ildred A dam son, o f j T haw vllle.

W h e a t fa rm e rs In L ivingston i co u n ty w an t th e w heat a d ju s t­m en t program to be continued . T h is is show n by th e w h ea t re fe r­endum vote of 95 ballo ts cast, ev­e ry one of w hich was favo rab le to th e co n tin u an ce of th e w heat a d ­ju s tm e n t p rogram .

Mre. B m m a W lenand and b ro th ­ers, W illiam H allam and F ra n k H allam , of P on tiac , and Mr. and Mrs. G eorge M etx .'o f F o rre s t, a t ­tended th e fu n e ra l of Chas. Dun- do re a t P la in fie ld Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. D undore lived a t Y aki­m a, W ash ., th e la t te r being a niece of Mrs. W lenand , know n here as Je ss ie Law.

M isses Mae P au l. C la ra Seiler, of M arshall, M innesota, and Miss Mae B. S hafer, o f C hicago, g ra d u ­a ted n u rses of the E vangelical D eaconess hosp ita l in Chicago, sp e n t T uesday w ith th e la t te r ’s p a ren ts , Mr. an d Mrs. Bdd Shafer, so u th of tow n. They w ere a c ­com panied by Jo h n B. A nderson, of E lm h u rs t, H llnols.

M isses C lare , K ath leen , Lucille an d M ary Jo F re eh lll and Mrs. E l­roy F re eh tll w ere hostesses a t a b r id a l show er given a t th e Misses F reehllls* a p a r tm e n t in Chicago S unday afte rn o o n , in hono r of M rs. F ra n c is F reeh lll. D uring th e a fte rn o o n b ridge and bunco w ere played, a f te r w hich a delic­ious lunch w as served. Mrs. F re e ­h lll received m any lovely and u se­fu l g ifts .

All ca n d id a te s fo r th e LJvlng- s to n C ounty F a rm B u reau base­b a ll team a re asked to re p o rt a t th e Play.. P a rk In P o n tiac 8 a tn rd a y a f te rn o o n , J u n e 1, fo r th e f ir s t p rac tice of th e season . L iv ing­s to n coun ty w ill cpm pete w ith W ill, L aS alle an d K enda ll coun­tie s in d is tr ic t S of th e Illino is F a rm B u rea u B aseball L eague. T h e f ir s t gam e Is scheduled a t O t­ta w a a g a in s t L aS alle coun ty Ju n e S th.

G eorge S trobel, w hose se rious Illness w as rep o rted In la s t w eek’s P la ln d e a le r Is no w belng ca red fo r In h is ow n hom e. H e w as b ro u g h t hom e from th e R o b erts hosp ita l M onday a fte rn o o n In th e Roach am bulance. H e seem s to have Im­proved over th e cond ition th a t w as ex trem ely a la rm in g la s t w eek, b u t It Is understo o d th a t p rog ress to ­w ard recovery w ill be very slow.

M rs. N ana C ro a ts , o f C hicago, I Is a g u es t a t th e T. P . K errin s I home.

Mrs. M ary R osenberger. 68 , died a t th e P o n tiac hosp ital T u es­day m orn ing . F u n e ra l services will be held In P o n tiac F riday m orn ing a t 9 o ’clock w ith b tfrtal th e re . S he w as th e widow of C onrad R oeenberger and a sis te r- in-law of M ichael R osenberger. of C h a tsw o rth . T h e fam ily resided h ere ab o u t 30 y ea rs apo.

C a rl K netfe l is redeco ra ting and rem odeling the In te r io r of his bus­iness bu ild ing to b e tte r »c o m m o ­d a te h is tav ern , lunch room an d ta ilo r shop. T h e room in T he G rand , occupied b y the M elater 1 ta v e rn , h as also been redecorated* and th e W atson bu ild ing , occupied by th e Carl M llstead cream s ta ­tion , has been in th e hands of p a in te rs th is w eek.

Mr*. M innie B andy re tu rn ed from U rban* S u n d ay , w here she w as ca lled la s t w eek by the Illness, of h e r s is te r, M adge P o rte rfie ld . T he la t te r w as in a hosp ita l fo r ab o u t ten days ta k in g trea tm e n t fo r ca rbuncles and com plications, b u t is now a t h e r hom e in U rbana. Mrs. B andy Is expecting her son, D. D. B andy, an d w ife, from C hi­cago, to a rr iv e a t th e S. J. P o r te r ­field hom e D ecora tion Day fo r a visit.

MASONIC LODGE HOLDS PAST MASTERS’ NIGHT

P a s t M asters’ N ight, an an n u a l observance of C hatsw orth Mason- ls lodge, was m ade a de ligh tfu l f ra te rn a l and social occasion last T h u rsd ay even ing under th e dl- re tion of W orsh ip fu l M aster O. D. W illstead and h is fellow officers. T h ere w ere g u es ts from F orrest an d P ip er C ity lodges. The fo l­low ing past m a ste rs filled the s ta ­tio n s : C harles Low n, A lfred H itch . C arl M llstead, C. T. H am m ond, C lair M cClain, C lair K ohler, A d­dis G ard , J . D. Cooper, C lark S tan fo rd , R ikus H lppen and A. E. L ansdale .

As m aste r o f cerem onies, C harles Lown conducted the eve­n in g ’s cerem onies in te restin g ly and in ad d itio n to responses from m em bers an d vtslto re , an excep­tio n a lly p le asa n t f ra te rn a l sp ir it p reva iled . A good program of e n te r ta in m e n t w as provided by m em bers and frie n d s of th e lodge. Dr. W lllstead , Mrs. J . A. L eggate and Mrs. C. G. M llstead p resen ted an e n te r ta in in g ske tch . C. G. Mil- s tead gave Borne excellent rea d ­ings and th e M isses Blm a and F ay e S h a fe r an d A rth u r G. W a lte r p layed several se lections, MIbs E lm a acted as accom pan ist and th e o th e rs as saxophone d u e ttia ts . Miss F ay e S h a fe r a lso favored the au d ien ce w ith a vocal solo.

R e fre sh m en ts w ere served and th e e n tire ev en in g 's observance w as enjoyed by those p resen t.

c u m n m n o N

The “C lass of ’J * ’’ held IU th ird annua l reun ion a t th e hom e of W illis B. P earso n May 2«. T he sam e loyal sp ir it th a t ca rried the class th ro u g h fo u r y ears of h igh school responded w ith e igh teen of tw en ty -fou r m em bers b e in g p res­ent. T h e re w ere th ir te e n guests am ong whom w ere Mr. and Mrs. H. W. McCulloch an d son, W alte r, and Mr. W illiam K lb ler.

A bo u n teo u s picnic d in n e r w as served a t long ta b les placed on a la rg e screened-ln porch. A fter d in n e r Mr. and Mrs. McCulloch an d Mr. K lb ler gave sh o rt ta lk s and several o f th e g ro u p to ld of In te re s tin g and e n te r ta in in g h ap ­penings o f school days.

Ice c ream , a ball gam e and then m ore Ice cream w ere th e m ain d i­versions o f th e a fte rn o o n . C aro ­lyn S chroen an d Mr. McCulloch w ere th e opposing p itchers w ith a close gam e being played.

A sh o r t business m eeting was held , p resided over by W illis P earso n , w hose en th u sia sm Is m ainly responsib le fo r the o rg an ­isa tion .

T h is class Is th e only one w hich | h as held reun ions. T he frien d - 1 sh ip and co-operation of he group h as proven va lu ab le and In te re s t­ing to all.

W is M duels. ^ t SUMMER men

\ VT B FFB CTIVB HATCH O F H A T ST

8 . C. W H IT E LEGHORNS ------------------W H ITE, BARRED, B U flF R O C K S ____8 . C. REDB, W H IT E WYANDOTTB8 _B U F F ORPINGTONS _________________W H IT E MINORCA8 __________________JER SEY W H IT E GIANTS ____________

per 1M

O ur B reed ing F locks a re a ll S ta te A ccredited a a d B lood Toots HATCHES BACH MONDAY AND THURSDAY

W IS T H U F F H A T C H B H YFA I USURY

Noxt to th e P o st OfficeCHATSW ORTH

▲cross from th e F oot Ol

H enJd-E um m cr or Tho Tr c k r t U y n d y c

SCHOOL PIC N IC FRIDA YD A V I D ’ S

ECONOMYGROCERV iC b a tsw o rth 's school picnic,

p lanned fo r W ednesday , has been postponed to F rid a y , du e to the ]

1 rainy w ea th er. If the w ea ther is ; j not fit fo r an o u td o o r picnic F rl- j < day, It will be held In the h igh ]school gym nasium . Anyone who can ta k e a “ lo a d ” to K em netx grove w ill oblige by having th e ir • car a t th e g rade school a t 8 :30 a. m. All ch ild ren of the local schools, as well as adu lts , a re w el­come, w ith th e provision th a t each brings som e co n tribu tion for the d in n e r table.

7 9 * : ;

SPECIALS F O R MAY 81 AND JU N E 1 AND 8

♦ ♦MICHIGAN POTATOES, U. S. No.

1 G rade100 l b s . __________

♦ ♦NEW ENGLAND C O F FE E

p er lb. ------- 17c 8 lbs. _ _ _ 50cGOLDEN GOOSE C O FFE E

per l b . ____ 25c 8 lbs. ____ _ 72c

G IR LS' 4-H C1A B .MEETING

So th a t no g trls w ishing to jo in the G irls ’ 4-H C lo th ing Club will be d isappo in ted we ta k e th is m eans of te lling you th a t If you wish to en ro ll you m ust do so on or before th is m eeting , S a tu rday , Ju n e 1st, a t the h igh school. T here a re no dues to be paid by 4-H m em bers. If you have a slip p a t­te rn p lease b ring it. M others In ­vited, especially th o se who d id n o t get to a tte n d th e f irs t m eeting .— Miss M aude E dw ards, lead e r; Mrs. Jam es Slown, a s s is ta n t leader.

PREM IUM F L A K E CRACKERS

2 ca rto n s ____,_________ 10c

♦ ♦

.OREO SANDW ICH COOKIES

p er p o u n d -------._____ 29c

SANK A C O FFE E

CARD O F THANKS

W e w ish to ex tend o u r sincere th a n k s to al} f rie n d s an d neigh­bo rs w ho gave us th e ir sym pathy an d paid tr ib u te to th e m em ory o f 't h e la te M rs. Jo lrn Schroen In perso n a l serv ices, f lo ra l tr ib u te s an d o th e r deeds of k indness. BRUNO SCHROEN AND FAM ILY

A dvertise rs a r e ou t ness.

fo r busl-

P IP K R CITY W IL L HAVEM EM ORIAL SERV ICES

M em orial day a t P ip er C ity w ill be observed u n d e r th e ausp ices of Gibb P o st, A m erican Legion.. T he p ro g ram w ill be h e ld In R ailroad park , b eg in n in g a t 2 o ’clock, b u t If th e w ea th e r Is un favorab le , <t will be given In th e opera house. Rev. C h a rles S m ith , p as to r of the M ethodist E piscopal church , is to de liv e r th e add ress.

F ollow ing th e p rogram , th e Am ­erican L egion an Legion A uxiliary led by th e P ip e r C ity M unicipal band , w ill p roceed to C alvary and B ren ton cem eteries to pay hom age to th e so ld ier dead .

T he P la ln d e a le r saves you m o­ney on dally p ap e rs and m aga- slnss.

per pound 44cS an k a Coffee Is rea l coffee of the

f in est qua lity w ith th e ca ffe ine r e ­moved. You w ill be su rp rised a t Its w onderfu l flavor.

♦ ♦B A K ER ’S

OOOOJ2 fo u r o unce <

S U R E JE L LFO R JAM S AND JE L L IE S

2 ca rio u s -------- . . - ------- _ ------- H e

CERTO, 25c♦ ♦

SUMMER SAUSAGE S w ift’s P rem iu m T h u rtn g e r S ausage, by th e p iece o r h a lf pie ce,

p e r pound ----------------- -— — ------ 24c

S A • F T

V a l i a n t r * , A m e r i c a n s

A MEMORIAL DAY THOUGHT

The soldiers of three wars, who will inarch on M emorial Day, loved peace, but gave up the pursuits of peace, because they loved their country more.

It is die fervent wish of every American today that the future may ask no similar sacrifices of our sons, but we honor those brave ones, liv­ing and dead* who did have the courage and the patriotism to serve their country in times of heed.

Citizens Bank of Ckatswordi’ ^ y {

^Isa jaumrlh j QfinotS

Friday & Saturday SpecialsB lue R ibbon PEA CHES,

TZ “ ’___ 45*

OUR SPECIA L PEA B BRR YC O F F E E ______ 15*

CRUSHED P IN E A P P L E — No. 1 cans O O ^ a

3 f o r ------------------ Z O C

S W IF T S DUTCH LUNCH SALAMI, p e r pou n d ____S W IF T ’S JE W E L SHORTENING (b e tte r th a n la rd )

p e r lb. c a rto nK RAUT—C an n ed K ra u t. S No. 2

:: ^

Sw ift A Com pany h av e changed th e nam e of th e ir J a n e Goode Salad D ressing an d S and ­wich S pread . I t la now B rookfield . In o th e r w ords, Ja n e Goode h a s becom e Mrs. B rook ­field . W e a re cloelng o u t o u r J a n e Goode stock a t th e follow ing p rices:Q u art J a r s ____ > ,_________________ _ 28cP in t J a r s ------------------------------------------------ 18cO ne-half P in t J e n ____ _________ , 10c

OLBO LUNCHEON SPREAD, S lbe. S W E E T SIX TEEN OLBO, p e r lb . —SALT BLOCKS, each .GOLD MEDAL SALT, p o re , d e a n , w hite , 100 lbe.

: : B ig i

♦ ♦CHICKEN FEE D S

S ta r tin g M ash, 100 lbe.

per lb.

F IN E OR W ID E BOG NOODLES 2 packaged _

B ig E gg G row ing M ash, 1 0 0 tbs. O yste r Shells, 100 l b e . _________ 72c

17*

OHIO BLU E T IP MATCH­ES— C arton of 6 boxes ----------- 28*

BLUB RIBBON BATH ROOM TISSUE O Q a 3 10c ro lls ____ L « j (

T hese are the 6c slse

FANCY GREEN BEANS, 2 lbs. 19*

S u n k ls t LEM ONS p e r dosen ____ 19*

DA-LTTB C L E A N SE R la rg e ca rto n __________ 12c

W a te r so ftener, c leanser and s te r ilise r . In tepid w a­te r It Is w onderfu l fo r clean­in g pain ted w alls and w ood­w ork.

SN ID E R CATSUP, 14 os.b o ttle ____________15c

BISQUICK, Ig. ca rto n 81c SOFTA8IL K CA K E FLOUR,

la rg e ca rto n ________ 2 0 cW tt»

SPECIA LL E V E R BROS. 8 0 A P

F R U IT TA RT COOKIES, per ib. 1 9 4

L IF E BUOY OR LUX T O IL ­E T SOAP | A ,3 o a k e e _________ l u C

BLUB ROSE RICE f r i j 3 p o u n d s ------------ i l V

L arg e LJMA BEANS2 lbe_____________ 1 8 4

' LUX:ruin maa

LUX T O IL E T SOAP, S LIFEBU O Y SOAP, S h a

FRUITS AND VEGETABLES AT MARKET PRICE

CASH & CARRYJOHN W. HEDCEN, Proprietor

m . w o

WE APPRECIATE YOUR PATRONAGE

Try Pbundealer Want Ads for Results

Page 6: THURSDAY. MAY 30. 1935 F. R. BECKMAN LARGE … · John and Gertrude Kemmer. At ... Madeline Crandall, 246; Gerald Kemmer, 247. Sullivan— John P. Blackmore. Merle C. Corbin, 261;

R U m l m

t-Jk A DON iSTHC

W i f i ’l l

TTvJ _ ■ M M M N H M M M

MAC MAC KNOKS W HAT’S GOOD FOR HIM BY MUNCH

HOP* I 'M COIN' 1 0 A REM. &MUKA T»«»S TIME 'H GTT A 6 0 0 0 haircut ,

WHY 1 c'Noo ttfrs atYreRNOW, MAC--------

t h <ce r iR i r i tM EWOZ JUS.1 PRACTICE

111. SAY f t wvjz

:-” t e

OUST "t h i n k o t ACC THE SODAS WE COULD BUYK iR t h a t money

u y -.;:»?*•

aw , e n o wMAC — I ’EL

SEE THAT YUM GET A RtAC TRIMMIH ’THIS

T , I M E / ^ r

♦Lr* ■i

INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. — A handsome adonis of the screen with a rough and ready disposition may ride the bricks in the annual 500-mile race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway here May 30.

He is Richard Arlen. s ta r ot the movies and an expert on com­bustion m otors in his own right.

Arlen has made a bid to ride as mechanic with his good friend P ete r De Paolo, winner in 1925, who is attem pting a come-back th is year. De Paolo has accepted the application and Arlen must now pass m uster before the A. A. A. Contest Board and receive permission from his studios.

Regardless of whether he rides or not, Arlen will be a member of the De Paolo pit crew and not for picture purposes because he is capable of je rk ing out a spark plug and analyzing the m otor con­dition as well as any other mem­ber o f P e te 's mechanical family.

AT THE LOCAL CHURCHES In Flanders Fields . . .■-

The Sabbath Day

S H E R IF F 'S SALE

By V irtue of an Execution is­sued o u t of th e C lerk ’s office of th e C ircu it C ourt of L ivingston C ounty, and S ta te of Illinois, and to me d irec ted , w hereby I am com­m anded to m ake the am o u n t of a certain ju d g m en t recen tly ob ta in ­ed ag a in st Mrs. Ida Phillips, George P h illip s and E dw ard P h il­lips. in favor of W illiam L. O’Con­nell. Receiver of the M elvin S tate B ank of M elvin, Illino is, ou t of th e lands, tenem ents, goods and cha tte ls of the said Mrs. Ida P h il­lip®, G eorge P hillips and Edw ard P hillips, I have levied on th e fol­lowing p roperty , to-w it:

All of the r ig h t, title and in te i- es t of Mrs. Id a P hillips, George P hillips and E dw ard P h illip s and of each and every one of them in and to the follow ing described real estate , to -w it:

The N orth -east Q u arte r (N E j) of Section F o u rteen (1 4 ) and the South H alf ( S I ) of the N orthw est Q u arte r (N W J) of Section T h ir­teen (13 ) a ll in Tow nship Tw en­ty-five (25 ) N orth , R ange Eight ( 8 ), E ast o f th e Third P rincipal M eridian, C ounty of L ivingston and S ta te of Illinois.

T herefore, according to said com m and, I sh a ll expose F o r Sale a t Public A uction, all the right, t it le and in te re s t in the above nam ed Mrs. Id a P hillips. George P hillips and fedward P h illip s in and to the above described p roper­ty, on Monday, the 24th day of Ju n e , 1935, a t 2 o ’clock P. M., a t th e N orth F ro n t Door of the Court H ouse In P on tiac . Illinois.

D ated a t Pontiac , Illinois, th is 27 th day of May, 1935.

EDWARD KAMMERMANN. J13 Sheriff of L ivingston County

Text: Psalm 100; John 4:20- 24; Coloss la ns 8 :15-17 .

The In ternational Uniform S un­day School Lesson for Ja n e 2

• • •

WHILE we call Sunday the Lord's Day. it is Inevitably

associated in the S crip tures, and In conception and practice, w ith the Jew ish Sabbath . Sunday Is a C hristian in stitu tion .

The Lord’s Day in its h isto ric and mechanical aspects needs no defense. We need only look at spheres ot modern society where a day ot rest Is unrecognised, where men and women go hurling on day after day in the roadnee* of business, and the eren greater madness ot pleasure, to realise how ruinous such a course Is to the individual and how destruc­tive to the best Interests of society.

Rest in m an's life is as essen­tial as work. Relaxation is as needful as energy. Man can no more live w ithout rest than be can live without food.

I t is obvious that an in stitu ­tion. valuable tor man’s life, can become surrounded with formal and drastic rules tha t nullify in some degree much ot its sp iritand its value.

• • •

THIS was what happened with the Jewish Sabbath. Men be­

came more concerned about Its meticulous and formal observ­ance. according to certain narrow Ideas, than about the value and meaning of the day itself.

Because they believed that it was wrong to work on the Sab bath, they were ready to conclude that It was wrong to heal upon the Sabbath and to perform other acts of grace and goodness

In worshiping the husk o. the Institution, they had lost regard for Its inner reality So Jesus found It necessary to remind men that the Sabbath was made for man and not man for the Sab bath. By his specific acts he chal­lenged the narrowness of unduly stric t Sabbatarian conceptions.

Ju st hew the Jewish Sabbath

gave place Id the early church to em phasis upon he first day of the week. Instead of the seventh, as a day of rout end ot worship is not clear.

The meaning ot the Lord’s Day was found not 1a negations and in s tr ic t rules concerning not do­ing th is and not doing that, but In the m anifestation el joy and worship. The l-ord's Day was to be a day of Inspiration and re newaL

• • •vpH E history of the Lord's Day

in our own tim e la fairly fa miliar. Around the Christian Sunday, as around the Jewish Sabbath, there arose an atm oe phere of tradition and strictness of usage and practice.

In many homes and commutil ties th is was carried to such ez ten t as to make the day one ot hardship and dull dreariness ra the r than one of light and loy

To whistle on the Sabbath, to go tor a walk Id the woods, to do an hundred and one things not Inherently wrong in themselves and th a t might be conceivably ol value eren on a day of rest and worship, was to desecrate the Lord's Day.

This was not tru e In every Puritan borne nor in every Purl tan community T h e r e were homes, like the w riter's, where Ideas were strict and practice faithful to rigid rules, but where nevertheless. Sunday was a day of light and loy where there war real pleasure rnd rest In going to church, and where the Intervals of a day spent largely In the home were enlightened by the joy ot home life, companionship of friends and the music and re Juicing that have always been as soclated with the Christian re­ligion.

Is not our great task today to restore to life the real values of Sunday as It has thus existed, and to avoid at the same time the m aking ot the day a lornml institu tion , a bunion, rather than a relief, to be individual and to the community?

W hiskers W ill Flow U ntil H e W ins Race

L u th e ra n C hurches

"A C hangeless C hrist fo r a C hanging W orld .”

C h a rlo ttei 9 :4 5 —-Sunday school and B ible class.

10 :45— D ivine service.W e shall hold o u r annua l con­

g rega tional m eeting in the a f te r ­noon.

t/!f

C hatsw orth8 :3 0 — Sunday school and B ible

class.9 :3 0 — Divine service.The Ladies’ Aid will m eet on

T hursday afte rnoon .T he L u ther League will m eet

T hu rsday evening.

vV

G erm an ville8 :1 5 — EM vine service.

| 9 :1 5 — Sunday school and B ible class.

T he L u ther L eague will m eet T hursday evening.

Text for S unday: M ark 16: 14-

20. O ur L ord’s Ascension.A. E. K alkw arf, P as to r

----- fc -----E vangelical C hurch

Sunday School— 9 :3 0 a. m. M orning W orship— 10: "0.E. L. C. E .— 7:00 p. m. E vening W orship— 7:30.P ra y e r M eeting, W ednesday a t

7 :30 p. m.C hoir R ehearsal, W ednesday ,at

8:15 p. ru ._O ur D istric t M inisterial Conven­

tion will be held here T hursday and F rid ay , Ju n e 6th and 7th.

F red O. S troebel, P asto r

B ap tist C hurch

Bible School— 10:00 .W orsh ip— 11:00.B. Y. P. U.— 6:30 .E ven ing Service— 7:30 .P ra y e r m eeting, T hu rsday at

7 :30 . C hoir p rac tice a t 8 ::1 6 .V acation church school begins

Ju n e 10th . Ail boys and g irls from 4 years and up a re Invited.

E . W. C rockett, P asto r

INDIANAPOLIS, I rd .— George "Doc” M ackenzie may be eligible fo r the baseball nine of the House of David before he wins a 500-mile race.

The Edington, Pa., flash has de­term ined to let his whiskers grow in a Van Dyke beard un til he

FORREST NEWS

captures the big prize of autom o­bile competition and his whiskers will float in the summer breeseu he whisks abou t the Indianap­olis Motor Speedway here on May

M ackenzie has not fared so well In his s ta rts in the big-time al­though he has been a worthy con­te n d e r about the d irt tracks. He had a fea tu re Californian race in hie pocket un til he ran on t of gas a short distance from hia goal bu t recen tly led a good field to victory a t Reading, Pa.

Mach in his favor, M ackenzie will have a capable car th is y e a r

by Gil P irrung o f S t

Mrs. Bessie P epperd ine r e tu rn ­ed hom e Sunday from C hicago, w here she spent th e w in ter w ith her son.

Mrs. L. J. Pope and d au g h te r , M ary Jan e , w ere D ecatu r w eek­end v isito rs w here they w ere look­ing fo r a house p rep a ra to ry tom oving there.

H. H. W alk er Is w ork ing as sec­ond tr ick o p era to r fo r th e W abash in p lace of Mr. T hornell, who was called aw ay by th e d e a th of a re l­ative.

Mrs. L. F . Thom pson re tu rn ed hom e M onday from Cleveland, O., w here she wan a delega te to th e lad les ' aux ilia ry o f th e B. of R. T. convention.

Mr. and Mrs. ▲. H. R ando lph

and fam ily w ere in W ilm ington, F rid ay and S atu rday , when they a tten d ed th e g rad u a tio n exercises of a rela tive .

T he A m erican Legion A uxiliary held th e ir poppy sa le S atu rday , in charge of the p residen t, H azel Metz, and Poppy C hairm an Vivian B roadhead , assisted by th e follow ­ing G irl Scouts: G lenna T rim m er, Ileen F lem ing , M arjo rie and D or­o thy S chllpf, Lois R u th P a r t­ridge, R o lay lne H lppen . About f 26 waa rea lised .

W an ts S ep ara te

S ep ara te m ain tenance fo r h e r­self and tw o aona, Thom as I and H arry 4, la aaked by Mrs. L acy O lsoa, w ho filed a su it S a tu rd ay In th e liv ln g a to n county d rg iii t co u rt rngnlnet h e f husband , H enry E. O lson, P o n tiac prison guard .

w ~J * '*

W e arc the Dead. Short days ago

W e lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,

Loved and were loved, and noto we lie

In Flanders fields.— John M cC rac ( 1S7 2 1 9 1 S)

STRAWN NEWSMiss Alice R am sey, C orrespondent

tt , f

In F lan d e rs fields th e poppies blow betw een th e crosses, row on row , th a t m ark o u r place . . . ” In th e A m erican m ilita ry ■ 'F landers F ie ld ” cem etery a t W aereglieni, B elgium , p ic tured nbove. 366 U. S. doughboys rest In peace.

kii PaNo,5Z3

y y -

N o .514

L _ - 1

Mr. and Mrs. A nton R ing ler, of N orm al, and Miss R u th T hurm an , of B loom ington, visited w ith rela-

] tives here Sunday, j Mr. and Mrs. C harles S ahler, of P ax ton , w ere v isito rs Sunday a fte rn o o n a t th e hom e of E dw ard and Miss K a th e rin e Adam.

| Mr. and Mrs. W illiam G ordon. :of W heaton , w ere v isito rs S a tu r­day a t the hom e of h e r au n t, Mrs. A. T. W hitlow , and fam ily.

T he q u aran tine^ was lifted last W ednesday from th e W. A. Som ers hom e, as th e sm all d au g h te r , R ita, had a ligh t case of scarle t fever.

H arry T ja rd es, g ra in dea le r, is In sta llin g a new tw en ty -ton ca­pacity w eighing scales. He is a l­so bu ild ing an add ition to his of­fice.

Mrs. F. M. S traw n and h e r son, Nevoy, of O ttaw a, were ca lle rs in th is v ic in ity M onday. They w ere re tu rn in g from a tr ip to Mobile, A labam a.

Mr. and Mrs. L ouis W agner and tw o ch ild ren an d Mr. an d Mrs. H arry K lm m el, o f Cullom , w ere v isito rs S unday afte rn o o n a t the O. O. Read hom e.

Mrs. W illiam Lee, d a u g h te r . Miss M ildred, Mrs. A dam K lehm and Mrs. O. O. Read w ere shop­pers a t B loom ington S atu rday .

Mrs. E. D. C am m erm an, of Jackson , M ichigan, and Mrs. W ill S tro h , of Sibley, w ere v is ito rs last F rid a y a t the L. A. M eyer hom e.

Mr. and Mrs. C arl H u b er J r ., and ch ild ren , of M orton, w ere w eek-end gu ests a t th e hom e of h is paren ts, Mr. and Mrs. C arl H u­ber Sr., and fam ily.

Mr. and Mrs. E m il B auer, Mr. and Mrs. E lm er B auer and E rn e s­tin e and A aron B auer, of Hoopes- ton , w ere gu es ts Sunday at th e A ndrew L ehm an home.

B ernard K untz, son of Mr. and

Mrs. John K untz, has enlistc-d a* C hanu te a ir field, llan to u l.

Mrs. M argaret Sm oot, h e r son, R obert, and Mrs. E lizabeth K laum berg, of Chicago, spen t sev­era l days here lust week w ith re l­atives.

Mrs. E lizabeth K untz, Misses A ugusta and K atie K nauer, Mrs. John K untz, Mrs. Selm a K untz Mrs. H erm an K n au er and . son. F ra n k , and Mr. .and Mrs. ^John Lans, a ttended th e fu n e ra l of an a u n t, Mrs. Jo h n Schroen, a t th e G erm anville L u th e ran chu rch S a t­u rday afte rnoon .

T he Jun io r-sen io r b an q u e t was held last T hu rsday evening a t the W oodm an hall, served by Mrs. T heresa H ornlckel. T h e h igh school faculty , senelo rs and Ju n ­iors, num bering tw en ty -th ree , a t ­tended. T oasts w ere given and a th re e piece o rc h e s tra e n te r ta in ­ed. The scenery them e re p re ­sented the "W ilds of A frica .” T he p arty m otored to C hatsw orth and a ttended a show la te r.

- ------ - Pa -------

FORREST NEWS

S tu d en ts of th e eigh th g rad e held a farew ell p a rty fo r th e ir teachers, V. A. L indqu ist, an d Miss M arcella K lm ber, la s t T h u rs ­day evening a t th e gym nasium .

Mrs. A. B. W alker, of Mt. Olive, re tu rn ed to her hom e on F rid a y , a f te r a visit w ith h e r son, H. H. W alker, and fam ily, here.

T h e facu lty of the high and th e g rad e schools, who served th e Lions club guest n igh t d in n e r r e ­cen tly , cleared and have tu rn e d over to th e G irl Scouts $23.25, which Is to be applied on a cabin fund.

FOR SALE — R ubber s ta m p pads, black, pu rp le , b lue. No. 1 size 25c.— -The P la in d ea ier.

— P la in d e a ie r w an t ads pay.

1\

FT ER E Is an ideal frock to r sp o rts w ear, P a tte rn 614. The back s trap s a re kept In position by the shap ing of th e fro n t

ot ib is frock, and the papel in th e w aist fro n t con tinues dow n th e sk ir t and ends In a kick p leat. S u itab le m a te ria ls a re seer­sucker, c rass , o r linen.

P a tte rn s a re sized 11 to $ (19 to 17 b u s t) . Size 15 req u ires 3% yards of S9-lncb fabric.

C harm ing sim plicity la tb e keynote of P a tte rn 621, su itab le fo r sp o rts or house w ear. The sleeves a re cu t In one w ith the w aist. Dart fitting and a p leat In fro n t give w idth to th e sk ir t. S hould be m ade in percale, g ingham , o r linen.

P a tte rn s are sized 14 to 46. Size 18 req u ires 1% y ards of 25- fnch fabric.

To secure a p a tte rn and step-by-step In structions, fill o n t th e coupon below, being ra re to m ention th e nam e of th is news* paper.

A MOTH PR O O F BAG

GIVEN

FREEW ITH

EACH W IN T E R GARMENT

CLEANED

Have your spring dress­es. coats, suits, hats and drapes cleaned now. Leave orders with

WILL C. QUINN the Druggist

Every dress measured — no shrinkage.We call and deliver each Tuesday and Fri­day.

STRAWN & MURRAY

R E L IA B L E C L E A N E R S__Hatters, Furriers, Dyers— Kankakee

> 1 "H X 7 H "l H i l l | | .1 | . ■l"r'!-H -X -X -X -X -X -:-X -!i':',l"H"l I 111 1 u 1 I

FASHION BUREAU, 103 PARK AVENUE, NEW YORK

Enclosed f in d .............cents. P lease send m t tb s p a tte rn schecked below, a t 16 cents each.

P a tte rn No. 614 S i z e .................. t A

P a tte rn No. 623 S i z e ..................

Nam e ................................................................... .......................................

A ddress ................................................................................................. ..J *

City oeoooooeoeeooooeooooeoOeoo## 8 tftt0 • o o • • • • • • • • •Nam e of th is n e w s p a p e r .................................................. • • • • « • • •

-C I

WHEN IN CHICAGO STOP AT

H O TE L CRILLO NM ichigan B ou levard a t l l t h S tre e t

WHERE FRIENDLY HOSPITALITY AWAITS YOU I SiigW Rooms from $1.50 Double Room From $2.60

ALL WITH PRIVAlfe BATH280 Room s F ire p ro o f R adio in ovary room

On# block from U nion bus s ta tio n — G arag e P a rk in g Space

• To an y re a d e r o f tb e P la in d e a ie r w ho m ails In tb la ad v e rtise m en t w o *111 Issue a G uest C ard e n titlin g you to a d isco u n t o f 2 5 % on accom m odations.

1 Dole,

vr&OM .

Page 7: THURSDAY. MAY 30. 1935 F. R. BECKMAN LARGE … · John and Gertrude Kemmer. At ... Madeline Crandall, 246; Gerald Kemmer, 247. Sullivan— John P. Blackmore. Merle C. Corbin, 261;

- . v"w T " .

THURSDAY, MAY SO, 1085

. k.

VjflllH

THE CHATSWORTH PLAIN DEALER, CHATSWORTH, ILLINOIS

P R O F E S S I O N A L

O. D. WILLSTEAD, M. D.PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON

♦OPFIG R IN CHA TSW ORTH H OSPITAL Office Hoara: 1K)0 to 4:00 p. m., dally, eoccept Bondar: a Lao Saturday araulllf 7:00 to 0:00; Sunday by appointment Offlca eloaad Thuraday afternoons.

Gat a Haaltb Eaaaalaatioa Bafara Your Naat Birthday

H . L. LOCKNER, M. D.PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON

♦Succoaaor to Dr. P. W. Palaaac

Offlea Ovar Virginia Thantra

PHONXS:OSloa 1IIB-S Rraaldanoa lSIE-1

DR. BLUMENSCHE1NDENTIST

OSloa Ovar Cttlaana Bank

CHATSW ORTH. ILL.

W . T. BELLDENTIST

♦O Sica O ver T . E. B urns’ 3 torn

CHATSW ORTH, ILL.

X a tlerBY CHATSWORTH TOWNSHIP HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS

VOL. x u i THURSDAY. MAY 30. 1935 NO. 19

LIFE IS JUST ONE “DON’T AFTER ANOTHER

/6 k

V*1H ?r

« # •

j e t

DR. A. W . PENDERGASTOPTOMETRIST

♦O ver D ecker's D rug S to reFA IR B U R Y , ILLIN OIS

At D orsey Sisters* S to re 2nd end 4th T h u rsd ay s each m onth w**

DR. B. f. REESMAM £r W6V1-.

SEN IO RS H A VE PARTYMONDAY EVENING

M onday evening. May 27th , the sen io rs enjoyed th e ir la s t social function of the year, a p a rty which they gave in Room 21. T he fac­u lty m em bers w ere the only o ther guests. T h is y ea r’s class party d u rin g the closing days of school, was an Innovation as no g ra d u a t­ing class In recen t years has bad an a f fa ir of th is type.

T h e m ovable desks In Room 21 m ake th is room an Ideal one for such an a ffa ir and th e room was a rra n g e d in p a r ty fash ion w ith flow ers fu rn ish in g th e deco ra­tions.

T he e n te r ta in m e n t of th e eve­n ing w as “ M u rd er” w hich provid­ed p rac tice fo r an y prospective law yers, “ M ichigan" and “ F ifty ."

In the gam e of “ M ichigan" the boys’ p rise w en t to A lbert W alters, and th e g ir ls ’ p rise to H asel Mon­ah an .

R efre sh m en ts of sandw iches, pickles, olives, coca, ice cream an d cookies w ere served a t the close of th e evening. T he re fre sh ­m en ts w ere in charge of Ja n e W arn er, w ith Jo sep h in e Feely,

| G enevieve M onahan and Cecele B ergan assisting .

T he e n te r ta in m e n t was in 'c h a rg e of M ary J a n e B aldw in w ith Gwen B row n and W illiam S terren - berg as helpers. T he deco rating

• was done by P a u l H enrlchs. Joe Cooney, B e rn ad in e McEvoy and Lois F ield ing.

— T—CARDS TO BE GIVEN

OUT FRIDA Y AT 1 :15

Every s tu d en t of C. T. H. S. is 'expected to be p resen t F riday , May 31st. a t 1 :15 , when report ca rd s w ith a record of th e sem es­te r ’s w ork will be given out.

S tu d en ts shou ld inspect th e ir ca rd s ca refu lly so th a t if any er-

' ro r has been m ade it can be cor- ; rec ted a t th is tim e.

COUNT Cl. A. A. POIN TS

T h ro u g h o u t th e school y ea r the g irls of C. T. H. 3. w ork fo r G ir ls ’ A th le tic A ssociation po in ts th a t they m ay ea rn an aw ard a t th e end of th e year. T hese po in ts a re k ep t by po in t se c re ta ries who a re e lected from each class. F o r the p as t w eek th ese g irls have been fig u rin g up po in ts so th a t they m ay find o u t who Is elig ib le fo r a n aw ard .

P o in ts m ay be ea rn ed got only for a th le tic a t ta in m e n t bu t also for g en e ra l m e rit in school w ork. P o in ts a re given fo r scho larsh ip , a tten d an ce , p u n c tu a lity , c itiz en ­ship, p a rtic ip a tio n In school a c tiv ­ities such as p lays, l i te ra q r co n ­tests, chorus, an d a lso fo r a th le tic m erit.

D uring th e p as t few w eeks th e g irls have been ta k in g te s ts on gym nastic s tu n ts d u rin g physical tra in in g periods in o rd er to ea rn m ore G. A. A. cred its .

Two h u n d red po in ts a re neces­sa ry to secure an aw ard . F o r the freshm en th e aw ard is a sm all C, for th e sophom ores, an arm band , for th e Jun iors, th e class n u m e r­als, and fo r th e sen io rs , a big C.

No lis t of those receiv ing aw ards is ava ilab le a t th is tim e, bu t th re e rew ard s w ill be o rd ered and th e g irls w ill receive them la te r.

TW EN TY -N INE STUDENTSTO GRADUATE FRIDA Y

Rev. J . W. R. M aguire will be the sp eak e r for C. T. H. S. com ­m encem ent F rid ay , May 31st, at 8 o 'clock in th e gym nasium .

T he p rog ram will include the p resen ta tio n of d ip lom as and m u ­sic by th e glee clubs.

E x tra cha irs w ill be secured for the occasion, in o rd e r to try to ac­com m odate th e frie n d s of th e g rad u a te s and th e p a tro n s of the school.

SCHOOL PIC N IC F R ID A Y

R ain th is w eek h as so m ew h atdam pened th e sp ir i ts of th e s tu ­d en ts w ho a re lo o k in g fo rw ard to th e a n n u a l school p lcnle In K em - n e t t ’ g rove on W edneeday. I t has been postponed to F rid a y an d If th e w ea th er Is u n fit fo r an o u t­doo r picnic It w ill be held In th e h igh school gym nasium .

ADM INISTRATOR’S NOTICE

E s ta te of Je n n ie K. B a rre tt , de­ceased.

T h e und ersig n ed A d m in is tra to r of sa id E sta te , hereb y gives no­tice th a t he will a p p e a r befo re th e C ounty C ourt of L iv ingston C oun­ty , a t th e C o u rt H ouse in P o n tiac , aa the th ird M onday in Ju ly n ex t; a t w hich tim e a i l persons hav ing c laim s ag a in s t sa id E s ta te a re no­tif ie d a n d req u ested to a tte n d fo r th e p u rpose of h av ing th e sam e ad ju s te d .

D ated thlB 20 th day of M ay, 1935.

FR A N K H. H E R R ,A d m in is tra to r

A dslt, Thom pson & H e rr,A tto rn ey s J6

A D M IN ISTRA TRIX ’ NOTICE

E s ta te of M arg a re t H ab e rk o rn , Deceased.

T he undersigned A d m in is tra trix of said E sta te , hereby gives no tice th a t sh e will a p p e a r before th e C ounty C ourt of L iv ingston Coun­ty, a t th e C ourt H ouse in P on tiac , on th e th ird M onday in Ju ly nex t; a t w hich tim e all persons hav ing claim s a g a in s t said E s ta te a re no­tified and requested to a tten d fo r the purpose of hav ing th e sam e ad ju sted .

D ated th is 16th day of May, 1935.

H ELEN HA BERK O RN .A d m in is tra trix

Adsit, Thom pson & H err,A tto rneys m 23-J6

-M ighty good new s In th e ads.

OsteopathGENERAL PRACTICE

Pits* and hemorrhoid* removed without loaa of time. Positive relief from pros- tattc distress. Special attention to nea- ritls end colitis. Consnltetton free.

Office Over Ong’s StorePONTIAC, ILLIN O ISTolophono. Office 4262

Residence 7C44

L. E. BERTMANNO PTO M ETRIST

PONTIAC - - ILLIN OISS o u th 31dq, S quare

New low prices on F a rro w Chlx W H E N CALLED FO R a t th e h a t­chery o r dow ntow n s to re A FT E R MAY 12th . All chlx from hea lthy , p u re-b red atock. Q uality M atings, W H IT E o r BROW N LEGHORNS, ANOONAS. BA R R ED , B U F F OR W H IT E ROCKS, S. C. REDS, B U F F ORPINGTONS. W H IT E W YANDOTTBS, BLACK MINOR- CA8 , |7 .2 5 p er 100; »36.26 per600. S h ipp ing p rices sligh tly h ig h e r. Special M atings 2c a chick h ig h e r th a n Q u a lity M atings. S ta r M atings W h ite L eghorns 4c a chick h ig h e r th a n Q uality M at­ings. L arge type W hite P ek in D ucklings, 14.00 p er 25; $15.00 per 100. H e a d q u a r te rs fo r Red Com b feeds. F u ll line of b rood ­ers an d p o u ltry supplies. C ustom h a tch in g , ch ickens eggs, 2 | c per egg; duck eggs, 4c per egg ; tu r ­key eggs 6c per egg, goose eggs 8c per egg. D ow ntow n s to re a t 220 E as t F ra n k lin S tre e t. Main p lan t a t 909 N orth S h erid an R oad.

FA R R O W C H IC K E IU E S P eo ria , I llin o is

WAKEURYOUR UVER BILE—

M ISHIT CALOMELAnd You’D Jump Out of Bed in

the Morning Karin’ to Go

r a i t Bs It. They e a lr s o w the I f t your down — d out

T A TL E R ENDS 13TH YEAR

T his Issue of T he T a tle r is th e fina l one fo r -th is school year W ith th is Issue closes the th i r ­teen th y ea r of T h e T a t le r ’s ex is t­ence. W e wish to express our th a n k s to th e pub lishers of T he P la in d e a le r fo r th e ir courtesy in p ub lish ing o u r new s bl-w eekly, th ro u g h o u t th e school year. To o u r pa trons w ho a re p a tien t enough to read ab o u t o u r a ffa irs , and b ea r w ith o u r sho rtcom ings we a re also g ra te fu l. W e have tried to give as ac c u ra te an a c ­coun t as possible o f o u r various ac tiv itie s and o u r school work.

T h is year T he T a t le r w as u n d er th e m anagem en t of tw o T a tle r s ta ffs who w ere responsib le fo r a l te rn a te Issues. T h is has given m ore pup ils an o p p o ru n lty to e n ­gage In Jo u rn a lis tic w ork. T h e T a tle r s ta ffs and th e adv iser also wish to th a n k th e typ ing com m it­tee w hich has helped In p re p a r­ing o u r copy th ro u g h o u t th e year.

— T—JU N IO R S EN TER TA IN

SEN IO R S AT MARDI GRASBANQUET THURSDAY

T he an n u a l Ju n io r-sen io r b an ­q u e t w hich was held In th e gym ­nasium la s t T h u rsd ay evening a t 6 :3 0 w as in th e n a tu re of a M ardl G ras revel. T he gym nasium w as

! deco ra ted w ith p a p e r festoons, (s tream ers and balloons, w hich (gave a very gay appearance . T h e i beau ty of the decoration# w as riv ­aled on ly b y the b eau ty of th e lovely gow ns of th e g irls w hich

| m ade th e room gay w ith th e ir col- jor.

T h e long tab les w ere decorated w ith sw eet peas an d favors of sm all slow ns, w hich served th e purpose of ho ld ing sm all s ilver n u t cups.

B igh t sophom ore g irls , d ressed as p a rtic ip a n ts In a M ardl G ras ca rn iv a l acted as w aitresses. T he costum es Included a clown, gypsy g irls , In d ian m aids an d a Scotch h ig h lan d er.

T he delicious d in n e r w as served by th e lad les of th e E vangelical Church a n d th e m enu w as as fo l­lows: F ru i t cocktail, ham , m ashed po ta toes, Uma beans, perfec tion sa lad , ro lls . Ice cream , angel food cake an d coffee.

D u rin g th e d in n e r th e Jo lly S ailo rs four-p iece o rc h e s tra played for an ap p rec ia tiv e audience.

J im N ew m an, a s to a s tm a ste r, in troduced th e follow ing, who r e ­sponded betw een cou rses w ith a p ­p ro p ria te rem a rk s :

G eorge S aa th o ff — W elcom e to th e sen iors.

H en ry K y b u ri — S en io r r e ­sponse.

Mr. K lb le r— R ing M aster.H enry B ork— T he M an on th e

F ly ing T rapese.Mrs. N orton— S pectato r.After the dinner the class will

was read by Jane W arner, and the class prophecy by Jan e Fielding.

The party of revelers then pro­ceeded to the Virginia Theatre, where they enjoyed “Carolina."

— T—Don’t forget the school plcnle

has been postponed to Fkiday, In­stead of being held Wedneeday.

'f: '

, j ^ 4 . ’ V >MU. .-fa'.-.’, / ' . ^ _ _ _

T A T L E R S T A F F NO. 1

E d ito r in Chief ........ M ary Ja n e Baldw inA ssistan t E d ito rs ..............E ileen Lawless

| H enry Borkj Senior R e p o rte rs ........G w endolyn Brown

M ary F rances F rah crJu n io r R e p o rte rs .................. Ju n e F ielding

Evelyn C arney Sophom ore R e p o rte rs ....H e rb e rt Schuler

Corine Y ountA th le tic R e p o rte r ..............H enry K y b u nA ss 't R e p o rte r — ......... .....Jim N ewm an

SCRAPS IN SC R IPT

P h y llis B eagle, w ho w as to have given a toa^t on “ T he C low n” a t the Ju n io r-sen io r b an q u e t was 111 th a t even ing and u n ab le to a t­tend.

T h u rsd ay , May 23d, happened to be Miss T ib b e tts ’ b irthday . Som eone found It o u t an d p re p a r­ed a b ir th d a y cake w ith lighted cand les, w hich w as b ro u g h t In d u r in g th e d esse rt a t th e banquet th a t evening. Miss T ib b e tts re­sponded w ith an Im prom ptu “ th a n k you” speech.

T h e Jun io rs have been m issing D oris R lbordy from th e ir ranks. To te ll h e r how m uch they really d id m iss h er som e of th e g irls ca lled on h er th e even ing of the b an q u e t to te ll h e r abou t th e ir plans.

S em este r exam s w ere held Mon­day an d T uesday of th is week. As u su a l, a ll p u p ils m ak in g an aver- age of 85 o r b e tte r Were exem pt. T he sen io rs had th e ir exam s last week.

F o llo w in g a tim e-honored t r a ­d itio n a t C. T. H. S., th e sen iors appeared, in th e assem bly In th e ir caps and gow ns on th e la s t reg u ­la r day of school w hich w as F r i­day. A ccording to th e custom the u n d er classm en rem ain ed . seated w hile th e sen io rs m arched ou t, am id en th u s ia s tic ap p llau se a t d ism issal.

— T—SEN IO RS TO LEA V E

GYMNASIUM A M PL IFIE R S

A fte r Investigation and m uch d iscussion as to w hat to leave as a sen io r m em orial th e class has decided upon a n am p lify ing sys­tem fo r th e gym nasium .

T h e need of th is has been show n In m any public e n te r ta in ­m ents in th e gym. A pparen tly th e re a r e “d e a d ” spo ts In th e room w here very l i t t le said on th e s tage can b e h ea rd . T hen th e room Is a lo n g o n e and th o se in th e back row s o f th e balcony h av e alw ays had d ifficu lty in h ea rin g .

The kind of a system to be pur­chased has not been decided upon, but representatives of the class are investigating various proposi­tions. Both the class and the school board who are Interested in the Installation wish to proeeed cautiously as many of the system* In uae would not be entirely sat­isfactory for our purpose.

Not only the students of O. T. H. 8., but also the public will get the benefit of the seniors’ gener­osity. We feel that they are to be congratulated upon thetr selec­tion.

REV . A. E. K A LK W A R F GIVES BACCALAUItEATE SERMON

Rev. A. E. K alw arf of the Lu- j th e ra n ch u rch addressed the large aud ience w hich g a th ered last Sun- i day evening for th e an n u a l bacca- j la u re a te service in the high school , gym nasium . Rev. K alkw arf wove his ad d d ress around th e them e: “ W orkers W ith G od.” T he sp eak ­e r pointed o u t th a t h ith e r to the sen io rs as s tu d e n ts had been u n ­d e r those in a u th o ri ty a n d had been d lrocted as to th e ir w ork and conduct. Now, acco rd in g to th e class m otto , “ L ife Is O ur School," and th e re will be no def­in ite d irec tio n from ou tside sourc­es. T he se n io rs w ere u rged , th e re fo re , to become "w o rk e rs w ith G od.”

T he sen io rs , In the trad itio n a l g ray caps and gowns, en te red the au d ito riu m , w hile E lm a S h afer played “ M arch R ellgeuse.” T he S crip tu re read in g was read by the R everend Mr. S troebel o f th e E vangelical church . T he R ever­end Mr. W o h lfa rth , of the M ethod­is t chu rch gave th e invocation . T h e g ir ls ’ glee club of th e high school sang . “ Send O ut Thy L ig h t” by Gounod a f te r the p rayer. A ft­e r th e se rm on th e boyB’ g lee club san g " P ra is e Ye Je h o v ah ” by G ounod. T he R everend Mr. C ro ck e tt of th e B ap tist chu rcn , pronounced th e benediction , a f t ­e r w hich th e g rad u a tes m arched from th e a u d ito riu m to the s tra in s of th e recessional.

— T—ANNOUNCE L E T T E R W IN N ERS

• “A th le tic le tte rs have been e a rn ­

ed by the fo llow ing a th le te s in foo tball, b ask e t ball and trac k : B ork, B ailey , Bess, P e rk in s and K yburs won le tte rs In a ll th ree spo rts . Cooney. W ittie r, E hm an an d H um m el won th e ir aw ard s in tw o spo rts . In football the p layer m u st p a rtic ip a te in m ore th a n half th e to ta l q u a r te rs ; In b ask e t ball, m ore th a n o n e - th ird ; in track , he m u st place In a big m eet o r win a f ir s t In a d u a l m eet. T ra in in g and e lig ib ility req u irem en ts m ust be m et also . I t is possib le th a t th e re a re som e e rro rs in th is lis t j of le tte r w inners. In football th e re w ill be seven le tte r men re- tu rn in g ; in b ask e t ball, one ; in tra c k , fou r, so, w ith th is y ea r 's i rese rves to depend on, Conch Col- | 11n s will have th e nucleus of an a th le t ic squad to s ta r t w ith in the fall.

F o o t B allH en ry B o rk , A lbert W alte rs ,

L e s te r P uffer, G len P erk ins. H enry K y b u ri, F loyd E dw ards, W ayne C ording, Jo e Cooney, C laude B ailey , J im N ew m an, Ju s tin B h­u tan , G eorge S aathoff, J u n io r W ittie r , B lo ice Bess. K enneth H um m el, Jo e M iller and W illiam S te rre n b e rg .

B a sk e t B a llClaude Bailey, Bloice Bees,

Henry Bork, J o t Cooney, Charles Helnhorat, H ew y Kyburs, G len Perkins.

TrackClaude Bailey, Bloice Bees.

Henry Bork. Oloa Perkins, Henry Kyburs, Paul lo rn , Junior W it­tier. Kenneth Hummel.

jnffc&v

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AS U T T LS AS D O W N ,Belence Monthly

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Page 8: THURSDAY. MAY 30. 1935 F. R. BECKMAN LARGE … · John and Gertrude Kemmer. At ... Madeline Crandall, 246; Gerald Kemmer, 247. Sullivan— John P. Blackmore. Merle C. Corbin, 261;

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M .

CHATSW ORTH. ILL. HmU«i at Fraak W. b l a r)

VtdBM dkf and Thursday May 9» and SO

Guy K lbbee — an d —

Aline Mac Mahon— In—

“Mary Jane’s Pa”F rid ay an d S aturday May 31 a n d Ju n e 1

Liberty Giving F ou r S tars Tense Drama

T hrill ing Story V ictor M d a g lm In

“The Informer”Sunday an d Monday

Ju n e 2-8Continuous Sunday 1 to 6

M atinee 20c-10c Evening SOc-lOc

Mammoth Melodrama!

Je a n H arlow and WilliamPow ell in

“Reckless”Tuesday and Wednesday,

J u n e 4-5

Roes Alexander and Gloria Sutar t in

“Maybe It’s Love”Thursday, F riday, Saturday,

Ju n e 6rT-9

The P ic ture of the M onthf Biggest Screen Sensation

Hit!„ „ Janies Cagney in

^ ’G-Men” ___ _Coming Attractions:

K atherine Hepburn iu “ Break of H ea r ts .”

Shirley Temple In “ Our L ittle Girl.”

v” 7 ’T’r ' ’ * *"• • • • • • • • ‘C ViJiV.yi

THE CHATSWORTH PLA1NDEALER, CHATSWORTH, ILLINOIS' * i

THURSDAY, M AT 80, I M S

W e a re a g rea t and pow er­ful nation, able to lick all en­emies except the ones we elect to office.

A free land Is one where a m an makee a fa i lu re of bis own life but knows Just how to run the country.

So long as the voice of the people cry "G im m e” the re will always be a Huey Long or a Doc Townsend to do the promising.

Every year dozens of d riv ­ers crash into th e sides of m oving tra in s , bu t such th ings have never put a Tail- road o u t of business.

M B E R T

N E W S G L E A N I N G S

New T ea ch e r a t F o rre s t

T & THOMPSON,PONTIAC ATTORATTORNEY, i

CALLED SUDDENLY j

CHATSWORTH BALL TEAM KEEPS UP

A WINNING PACE

FO U E-H CLUB G IR LSO RGANISE NEW UNIT

A C ha taw orth u n it of the 4-H club w aa organized an d had th e ir

. f irs t m ee tin g S a tu rd ay a t the high By m aking every h it count a n d ' , chool b u u j j a g ln ch a tsw o rth .

I T here

W h a t makes the farm re ­lief crisis so cruel in the life of a congressman Is tha t they used to be able to stall off such th ings with free garden seed.

R ob C hurchThieves broke Into St.

Catholic church a t H errin recen t­ly and s to le euchar ls t lc vessels and conta iners valued a t $1,000 by the Rev. R obert Degasparl. The theft was discovered at 5 :30 in the m orn ing when the p r ies t a r ­rived a t the church to conduct mass.

toGood Will M essengers

Messengers of good will from Bloomington spread out over Cen-

were ten who enrolled following officers were President, Ruth Ford ;

B. R. Thompson, p rom inen t a t- j to rney and civic leader of Pontiac ,

M urray Wallace, of n e a r P o n -jd led a t his home the re a t S o 'clock 1 tlac. Is to be principal of F o rre s t ( F r id a y m orn ing from a h e a r t a t - advantage of the breaksgrade schools next year. H e has ’ tack. , the C hataworth Cardinals won and thebeen an Ins truc to r ln th e R u tland | T h e dea th of Mr. Thom pson te r- ' t h e i r second victory of the year by choaen;grade schools du r ing the p a s t ' m lna ted a record of d is t inguished defea ting a fine ball club from Vlce Marlon Berry;year. _ [service In his profession, and in f Cullom by a pcgre of 10 to 6 a t t h e ' g ^ ^ t a r y , Joan Groeeubacb;

all m a tte rs Identified with the high tohool g rounds Sunday, T re a s u re r H ar r ie t Felt- Club Re- d v lc life of Pontiac. B o m In A Small crowd turned o u t to p o r te r Jo 8 ,m ’Recreatlon

Mary's Melvin In 1874. He w ent to Pon- th e game. The C ha tsw orth L«aderi f lernadlne Ehm antlac ln 1899 as an Ins truc to r In squad s ta r ted out s trong by scor- j who wlsh to Jo)n mu8tth e s ta te reform school. L a te r lng a run in th e opening and add- en ro ,j Ju n e l8the s tudied law ln the office of R. lng fou r more in the second. W ith 3. Mcllduff and la ter became his one o u t ln the f lra t. Collins drew | law partner. This pa r tne rsh ip a pass and a tr ip le by Shipper was te rm inated by the dea th of scored him easily ; Finch drew a Mr. Mcllduff ln 1917. He Berved pass and F. Kyburz Singled to as county judge one te rm , 1914- score Shipper, but Finch was 1918 and soon af te r jo ined ln a th row n ou t a t th ird . Culkin was p ar tne rsh ip with Bert W. Adstt. hit by a pitched ball and Stebblns This firm was la te r en larged by s ingled to r igh t to score Kyburz. the addition of Jesse J . H err. Culkin stole hom e and Stebblns

up to the pres- scored before F inefle ld hit to the pitcher, m aking the count 5 to 0.

8RUNIGA PRODUCE COMPANY

8E B . . . TRY . . . AND BUY a D eL aval S ep ara to r fo r as li t t le a s $1.00 a w eek. L ib­era l trad e -in a llow ances on old se p a ra to r . P h o n e 87R2 C hatsw orth .

V IR G IL L E A TH ER S, Mgr.

llliaeSISMMMStMMISMtMIMIIMtlltllfllll* tickets to a Three-1 league ball game and o the r messages of good

BATH EVERY MONTH ! will. T h e bunch that visitedn r K i r r n r n a i / v r C hatsw prth were also at Cabery,IF NEEDED OR NOT Kempton, Cullom and F orrest .

TO QUEEN’S TASTE A nother caravan visited Gilman._____ P iper City. O narga, Thawvllle,

Roberts and Melvin.Keeping well depends so much on keeping clean th a t modern hea lth workers h a t e adapted John Wesley's famous s ta tem en t re ­garding the rela tion of cleanliness to Godliness. The modern version reads, "C leanliness is next t« H ea lth fu lness ."

Will A ttend UniversityO. H. Roll, principal of the lo­

cal h igh school, will take a te work a t the University linois th is sum m er. Mr. Roll has spent previous sum m ers in the em-

History shows tha t plagues and pioy 0f the U. S. d e p a r tm e n t ot scourges were most prevalent in ag r icu ltu re , w ork ing a t eradlca- those countries th a t paid the l e a s t , tion of the barberry . Mr. Roll a t ten t ion to personal and coni— .will w ork ou Ills M aster’s degree .]

,l»(4n it£ cleanliness. W ith th*} .f-C ullom Chronicle. 1m odern san ita tion ,

n a v e ! * "'p rac tica lly disappeared. G re a t , Denied R e h ea r in g

1 Dr. Alice L. W ynekoop, aged

tral I l linois Tuesday ln approxl- which continued niately 60 au tom obiles divided in- en t t im e. 'to 18 o r 20 teams. T hey visited ] Mr. Thompson was governo r of Cullom came back ln the fo u r th 100 com munities, d is t r ib u ted free the 44th d is t r ic t of Ro tary clubs. Inning to score th ree runs on a

~ a t ru s te e ln the P resbyter ianchurch , president of the high school board and an honored and respected citizen. He m ade his la s t public address on W ednesday preceding his dea th when he ad­dressed the Pontiac Kiwanis club a t a noon-day luncheon, on “ Serv­ice Clubs."

Mrs. Thompson died in 1929.Surviving are two sons, RobertD. and Ralph M. T hom pson; two cen te r field. I

gl *}” b ro thers , Mont Thompson, ot Mel- Cullom th rea tened somewhat in 0 '* vin. 111., and Clyde Thom pson, of the eighth as H lrs te in drove one

Paxton, 111., and b y th ree sis ters , out for a home run. G uest was Mrs. Cesta Orr, of Adel. Iowa; torced to s tr ike -ou t four batsmen Mrs. G er trude Pierce of El Paso, in the final period but not b e fo re ' Texas, and Mrs. Lyde Peck, of Deany could single and score. i K enilworth , 111.

single, a brace of walks, and a two bagger, m aking th e score 5 to 3. The Cards were able to count two scores again in the fourth Inning by two singles and several errors. The Cardinals added ano ther run ln the seventh on timely h itt ing. In th e e ighth they also netted two runs as Culkin walked and Sleb- blDS singled. C. Kyburz pounded out a two-bagger as Guest flew to

■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ H a a n m n i

Tauber’s Mercantile StoreCHATSW ORTH. ILLIN O I8

M EN’S NEW BLACK OXFORDS sizes 6 to 1 1 ----------------------

MEN’S W H IT E OXFORDSBizes 6 to H ______________

M EN’S NEW DRESS STRAW HATS Blzes 6J to 7 J ....................... ....... ..

M EN’S LIGHT COLORED SUMMER TROUSERS sizes 29 to 42, $1.69 a n d ___________________

$1.98$2.98

98<s$1.95

1 *

coming Oi many filth-borne diseases

HOUSE CLEANING TIM E

If it were left to me «. m * 1 This time would never

Stebbins and Guest pitched flue ] ball for the locals, allowing only e igh t scattered hits, walking th ree and whiffing pine a | the p l a t e . 'S tev&ii was forced to take the bench for the visitors. The Cards

Specials for Friday and Saturday

NEW PEAS2 pounds

str ides have been made iu thq fcre- • u i . .. lllcvention of diseases even since t h e ;Chlcago physician and welfare iyith*bonlis snd tahlnT i* * s ta l r ![ g a thered eleven hits, six passesworker, has been denied a 8U- , Wi^h books and tables, lamps a n d , and gix wh|ffed a , the p late frombath became som eth t ing m ore a Satu rday night inst itu tion .

In the S ixteenth Century this Hon on charges ' s ta te m e n t about good Queen Eliza- d a u g h te r in-law.

prem e court review of h e r convlc-I chairs,'A n d rip carpets off the floors

Stevens and Deany.of kill ing her ' I 1* u“ T he Cardinals will play th e i r ln-R he ta Wyne- A* d “ ang them on a ne o u t ' ltial game in th e Big Six L e a g u e , I

beth made news: “The Queen h a th |koop. Mrs. W ynekoop is doing

» - B built herself a

W e Take O rders fo r

Rubber StampsPrompt Service Guaranteed

THE PLAINDEALEB

------ ----- b a th w here shebathe herself once a month w h e - 1 m a n ’s prison, the r she require it or no.”

This was news Indeed when one considers th a t th e f irs t b a th tub

her “ s t r e tc h ” at the Dwight Wo-I doors.' I ’d never notice th ings th a t she So very plainly seems to see.

POTATOES New, 10

Life BuoySoap, 2 bars

--- --------- — «s e m i S o l e

Toilet Paper OR/i 4 rolls .

i.W ere I th e home to run

Full t im e and VoWdateer fire- Such th ings would not be done______________ _ men of I llinois c i tie l and villages As s tr ipping shelves of all theybuilt In the United States was ex- will a t te n d the E leven th A nnual » hold,hlbited as a curiosi ty to gues ts F ire College a t the University of Of medicines worn out and old,a t a party in Cincinnati du r ing the Illinois J u n e 11-14 inclusive. T he And razor *’ ’early N ineteenth Century. The college Is sponsored by the 1111- ------tub was denounced a s a luxurious nois i rem en 's Association andand undem ocratic vanity. A l i t t le the s ta te f ire m arsha l , S herm anla ter , P h ilade lph ia was so shocked V. Conltas. The course will offera t th e Idea of w ashing the whole e lem en ta ry work for those a t tend -bodv th a t a law was passed pro- lng th e f i rs t time, and advancedhib it ing all ba th ing du r in g the work fo r those who have a t tended

' Sunday at S trawn. S trawn usu- ' a lly has a good team but the lo­cal boys will be anxious to s ta r t th a t league ou t right.

!

W HEAT1E8

k

4

blades andBoap

‘And all t h e 'o t h e r to i le t dope I never use, but th ink I may And calmly th row ing it away.

W ere I the ru le r here I ’d live from year to year,And never th ink to mop the s ta irs Grimsley

A. B. McOOLLUM'S

CENTRALTHEATRE, FAHtBUBY

taxed all bath tubs and in Boston 1 one had to get a docto r’s permls- And leave no place to sit and read.

P a r t ic u la r a t ten t ion , he added, will be given to th e vo lun teer de-

sion to take a ba th as it was con- p a r tm en t , with sessions on th ree L ” 1 \ T"~ ' J jsidered a very risky under tak ing , days offered for the Instruction of , ® ° Ti* a, ° U

, Q uain t people, these ancients, [firem en of this class. And never ,Urn 11 ln8,de o u l 'But should we feel too proud ------- 1® -------abou t o u r progress in cleanliness? , W hen J a n e A ddam s, world fa-

Thursday, May 30 I T he common d r ink ing cup and the mous social service w o rk e r andContinuous Show 2 :30-11 ro lle r towel, favorite way s ta t ions founder of H ull House, Chicago,

of h itch-hiking germs, have not died last week. G overnor H enry completely vanished from some H o rn e r te rm ed h e r “ a g rea t ex­par ts of Illinois. Tuberculosis, a em p la r of civic p rogress .” " I t

Exclusive Showing!Gay Girls! Gay Songs!

MAURICE CHEVALIER— ln—

“FOLIES BERGERE”— with—

Ann Sothern and Merle Oberon

B ut she is in com mand And once ag a in I s tand A figure lost an d pale and gaunt I cannot find a th ing I want And it will be a week o r more Before the rugs a r e on the floor. But all she says Is hom e would be

disease which Is carried from per- has been given to few to achieve A dreadfu l place if left to me. son to person, k illed 4103 people so com pletely th e goal of h u m a n l- i -— E dgar A. Guest

Typhoid, ta r ian endeavo r ,” G overnor H orn ' “*■

Friday, May 31FAIRBURY HIGH SCHOOL

COMMENCEMENT

in Illinois last year, which proper san ita t ion and clean­liness have done so much to s tam p out, sti ll exists ln some sectlousof the state .

Research scientists have proved th a t many individuals who become til l i terally hand themselves a sickness. Disease germs are transfe rred from the person who is 111 to some object, then to the

er said. “The e n d u r in g monu- ] B E C K ER -H H EPLERm ent to J a n e A ddam s is bullded [ -Last Satu rday , May 18, Rever- ln the h ea r ts of m ank ind . The -end Adkins, of the P resbyter ian universal t r ib u te to her , spoken in church of Crown Poin t, Ind iana , many lands and in m any tongues, read the ceremony un it ing In mar- will be a song th a t will be su n g r iage Miss Maxine B ecker and Mr. as long as apprecia tion of great. Curtis Shepler, both of Chicago, hum an service exists. Death has Maxine Is the d a u g h te r of Mr. closed the ca ree r of th is m atch less and Mrs. J . C. Becker, of Onarga,

Cardinals AB H RFinch, 2b ........ —..... ...3 1 0F. Kyburz, 3b ........ 4 1 2Culkin , c -------------- ...2 1 4Stebbins, p ........ -..... ...5 3 1Finefleld, bs _____ ...5 0 0H. Kyburz, l b ___ _3 1 9Bergen, i f ________ 4 11 0Collins, r f ________—2 0 2Bork, cf ........ -..... ._1 1 0Shipper, cf .........— ...2 1 1Grimsley, l b _____ ...2 0 0C. Kyburz, if -...... 1 1 0Guest, p __________ ...2 0 0

Totals ________ 37 11 10Cullom Cubs AB H R

Koehler, cf .............. .5 2 0R. Deany, rf _____ .4 0 0B. Deany. 3b .......... 4 1 0Hlrstein, lb .......... 3 3 2Sadler, if _______ o.... « 0 0F arber , c ________ .3 0 1Miller, ss .................. ...3 0 1D. Deany, p ........ . 3 2 1Van Alstyne, 2 b ___ _1 0 0Stevens, p ________...,4 0 0Onken, cf _____ .2 0 0

Totals .............. .34 8 5

LEMONS Ig. size, 5 for

------------------«

TRU-VAL-U

COFFEE 1 lb. bag

Corn Flakes'Post Toasties

2 PACKAGES

:23c

21cPLYMOUTH ROCK

CATSUP large bottle 12c

FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES—Phone 30C A S H P A I D F O R E G G S

COMMUNITY GROCERYPLIN EY DANCEY, O w ner

Score by in n in g s—C hatsw orth ___ 140 200Cullom _______000 300

------- S3 ——

12x— 10020— 5

Saturday, J u n e 1 BARGAIN DAY

Thrills! Chills! Mystery! 8, S. VAN B IN E’S

Philo Vance Mystery

“CASINO MURDERCASE”— with—

P au l Lukas and Alison Skipworih

d a u g h te r of I llinois whose lifelong purpose has been to he lp the h u -hands of a well person and event­

ually to the mouth. Physicians man family.”and ngrses who come in contact ------- hu -------with contagious diseases daily. Mayor Revokes License

and a g ra d u a te of o u r high school. She has been employed In Chica­go since h e r g radua tion . Mr. Shepler’s people live in P i t tsburgh . Pennsylvania , bu t he has resided

Job may have had his t r o u ­bles bu t the re 's no th ing ln the record to show th a t he ever tr ied to shave around a fever blister.

seldom are affected because of the Mayor Fred H ,e r th of P on t , ac> application of extrem e cleanliness. revoked th e tavern llcen8e of

W ith a num ber of contagious M ande„ B a rn e t t th a t cU lagt ------------------diseases exceptionally prevalen t T h u rsd ay nlght- m „ aId chigan avenue,a t th e moment, personal clean!!- he waa convInced th a t the p lace

had Bold liquor to minors.

Sunday an d M onday Ju n e 2-3

Continuous Sunday 2:30-11 RUDY VALEE

“SW EETM USIC”— with—

ANN DVORAK

P I P E R C I T Y(From Today’s Piper City JoanuU)

Jotjn Kelly Is leaving today for Chicago, and will accompany a group of Ford dea le rs on a special tra in to Ind ianapolis to a t tend the autom obile races.

9 STARS! 6 SONGS!

2 BANDS! 100 GIRLS!

T uesday and W ednesday Ju n e 4-5

KAY FRANCIS — In—

“DR. MONICA”— with—

J e a n M uir an d W arren W illiam

ON OUR STAGE TUESDAY

Community Talent Contest Finals!

8 A cts! All F in a l tats!of th e oom m unity,

o r f in a l honors!

ness is most im portan t. Hands should be washed several times a i day in addition to washing them i before meal times. Known con­tact with a case of any disease should cause the individual to wash his hands immediately and perhaps apply some mild an tisep­tic solution.

Mothers who are acting as n u rs ­es for children who a re sick at hom e should be careful th a t they do not Infect o th e r members of the family. Dishes and linens from thesick room should be boiled. A .coverall apron should be worn G er tru d e Day a t tended the funer- :

] while a t tend ing the pat ien t and a * ®*.ihe Ir uncle, Herschel Day, a t left In the sick room. E very th ing ; Sftturday.psstble should be done to p r e v e n t : ®ophomore class of P. C. C.th e germ s from hitch-h ik ing from 3&v® a P*r ^f * t the s c h o o l - 1th e sick person to the well ones by h 0U8® a f te r the c o m m e n c e m e n t ' means of unclean hands and ob- 1 p rog ram last evening ln honor of jects.— By Charles A. Freck, Edu- ] M,*B Eileen Kellogg, of the high ' ca tional D irector, I llinois T u b e r - 18ch° o1 facu ltL who *■ no t r e t u r n - ] + eulosls Association. , *n 8 to P iper City nex t year. Miss

ln Chicago fo r th e pas t six years, where he la employed by the Car­bide and Carbon company, on Mi-

.The cong ra tu la t ions and best |

wishes of th e ir many f r ie n d s go with them .— O narga L eader and Review.

F r id a y a n d S a tu rd a y

of 4- W e a r e offering a t special 4*Mr. and Mrs. C letus Day,Cham paign, Allen Day and Miss prices th is week-end H oneg­

ger Bros. Chick F eeds:

32% Supp. .- $2.75 Chick Starter $2.55 Chick Grower $2.25 Egg M ash___$2.30

In keeping w ith G overnor Hen

ry H o rn e r’s p rogram for highway safety , th e S ta te Division o f H igh­ways baa Issued calls fo r b ids fo r In sta lla tion of f la sh lig h t signals

| s t 184 g rade crossings on 80 rail­road lines In Illinois, E rn s t U eb- e rtnan , ch ief highw ay sa g lae e r , announces.

------- m ---------You can te ll who a re

h ea lth ies t th e ones w ho

a p ro d u c t o f th e Im aglna-

t ,0n" * jjPk ' ’

K ellogg w aa p resen ted w ith an ! end ta b le by th e c lass a s a to k e n ' [ of rem em brance. {

McCormick - Deering M ilkers

K e e p

t h e

B a c t e r i a

C o u n t

D o w n

T h e P ip er C ity schoo ls closed th e ir y e a r’s ’ w ork th is w ash and on T uesday m o rn in g th e p u p ils w ere p r ese n ted w ith th e ir re p o r t card s. M onday a f ta rn o o a th s pu ­pils of th s th re e lo w er room s e n ­joyed a closing picnic. Because of ra in th s a f fa ir tu rn e d o u t to be an Indoor picnic b u t th s young­s te rs th o ro u g h ly en joyed a n a f te r-

‘ room s.lo a c h tor th e oo- _

t r e a t b y th s te ac h e rs f t o th s e n jo y m e n t<5

Don’t confuse H onegger’s £ su p p lem en t w ith o th e rs of

le e r p ro te in . Mill feeds a t : Z M iddlings $1.85, B ran |1 .8 5 , X M eat S craps $8.30.

J B rin g In you r p o u ltry , eggs an d cream .

PRODUCT

D I R TFIGHTS A LOSING BATTLE •

D in fights a loclag battle Uaoiesm Is pro is c u d by L o w i B l O T H l I I L IN O L E U M L A O Q U B lt'-F o r th is smooth, durable finish m akes linoleum so easy to clsao tha t w iping w ith a dam p d o th removes aU d in . M oreover, this high-grade lacquer preserves th s orig inal beauty o f new lino­leum, brightens o ld linoleum , s a d greatly increases the Ills o f both. L o w g Br o t h e r s L IN O LEU M LACQUER dries w ithin one hour

’ it is applied.

AIR YM EN w ho h av e h a d lo n g experience

w ith m ec h an ica l m ilk ­e rs p ra ise th e M cC or­m ic k - D eerin g fo r i ts fe a tu re s o f s a n ita tio n . T h ey re p o rt p ro d u c in g m ilk w ith a low er b a c ­te r ia c o u n t th a n ever b e fo re , d u e to th e fa c t t h a t th e M cC orm ick- D eerin g is so easy to k eep c lean .

T h e fu lly - en clo sed , n o -o il, n o -sp rin g p u lsa ­

to ry th e tw o -p iece te a t c u p assem b ly ; th e re ­p laceab le c y l in d e r in th e p u m p ; th e v acu u m t a n k ; t h e p o s i t i v e v acu u m re g u la lo r a n d v a c u u m g a u g e ; t h e o n e-p iece s a n ita ry p a il c o v e r ; a n d th e a n ti­freeze s ta ll cooks a re o th e r fe a tu re s o f re a l i m p o r t a n c e o n t h e M c C o r m i c k - D e e r in g M ilk er.

A demonstration will be arranged for any 1 tim e you way. ,

SEE THIS W-30 ON DISPLAY NOW

N. M. LaROCHELLETRUCKS—TRACTORS—r j

CHATSWORTH, ILLINOIS‘115’ ^ ‘L 1 *. S f t f j f t* ! . f ' ” < v* \f # /

4 , y \ / / . ' . « f t w ' v *♦ * v • * ! - » , -

t r y : ' /• v • \‘y t * . ’ - •

’ &;-• - i v

— ITi■

:4bi