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Marshall Evening Chronicle du lieu suivant : Marshall, Michigan • Page 3

Lieu:
Marshall, Michigan
Date de parution:
Page:
3
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

MARSHALL EVENING CHRONICLE Publined, De Eroopt Bundiy: by J. M. a CON 227 West Michigan Avenue Consolidating and Succeeding atpounder, Establiahed terman, Established Established News, Established W. A Entered 1. Becond Ulasa Matter at the as Mararall, nichigan, under Act of March 3.

1870. Marshall Evening Chroniole la deliyered by carrier in the city artier strict for Afteen cents per week. The price by mail In Calour aty 1s $3.00 per year; $1.50 for sty montha; $1,00 for three Calhoun County, the price 18 $5.00 per year; 02.60 or alx months; $1.25 for three All mail subscriptions are ayable strictly in advance, and the paper La discontinued when the me expires. Advertising Representative: Boheerer Chicago, National Drive: New York, 415 Lexington Avenue. Member Michigan League of Home Dailies 4 1 Good Doctrine Still "I know that my retirement will make no difference in its cardinal inciples; that it will always fight for progress and reform, never tolerLe injustice or corruption, always fight demagogues of all parties, always ppose privileged classes and public plunderers, never lack sympathy with poor, always remain devoted to the public welfare, never be satisfied 1th merely printing news; always be drasticaKy independent; never be Me pttack wrong, whether by predatory plutocrary or predatory overty." JOSEPH PULITZER, Founder New York World prti 10, '1907.

"GENTLEMAN JIM" Since that night in New Orleans, in far-off 1892, hen he danced rings around the "unbeatable" John imes J. Corbett had been a national figure. He was a ew type in the prize ring. A lithe, graceful, comely nth capleasing manner, he was a refreshing contrast in ear Ice and, deportment to the rough-house brawlers whom Sullivan was the roughest and the brawliest. A xer, rather than a fighter, Corbett demonstrated the astery of science over brute strength in the Sullivan enpunter.

But his reign as champion was brief. Five bars. later he surrendered the crown to FitzsimmonsLanky Bob," of freakish physique, with the torso of a bavyweight, the spindling legs of a bantam, clumsily buffling, but a finished boxer, with the fighter's lion Part. The stage called Corbett, where, he won and held a ace, partly on his merit, partly on his pugilistic career ed the glamour of his championship and ex-championip. In the legitimate drama i it was his privilege to eak the lines of George Bernard Shaw, and subsequentto find a permanent niche in vaudeville as a monologist.

In his busy life, he broke into journalism by way of column of sports comment and was graduated into literure by a popular magazine, in an autobigraphy, colorIlly captioned "The Roar of the Crowd." Pugilist, actor, man of letters, he tripped along the rsatile years with the springy step and seeming fitness an adolescent. At 60 he looked like 30. The miracle his eternal youth was accounted for by a regimen of mperance, with especial care as to diet. The first ruurs of come his to indisposition him seemed incredible to a public who that regard as a stranger quite to illness, a centenarian, would have the stride and stature of a lutenant. Homer Mrs.

Flossie 0'Dell Phone 053 Abandoned Coupe Found The brown Chevrolet coupe, be(ging to Mayor Norman H. Weiof Albion, was found by puty Sheriff Warren Thompson 'this village, abandoned about VAKE UP YOUR LIVER CALOMEL id You'll Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Rarin' to Go you feel sour and sunk and the world punk, don't swallow a lot of salta, water, oil, laxative candy or chewing a and expect them to make you suddenly et and buoyant and fall of gunshine. 'or they do It. They only move the rola and are movement doesn't get at cause. reason for your down-and-out ins is your liver.

It should pour out two nds of liquid bile into your bowels daily. this bile is It not just flowing freely, your food un't digest. decays in the bowels. bloats up your stomach. You bave taste and your breath is foul, often breaks out in blemishes.

Your head and you feel down and out. Your whole en is poisoned. takes those good, old CARTER'S TLE LIVER PILLS to get these two Ends of and flowing They freely contain and make you bile "up wonderful, nless, gentle vegetable extracts, amazing a it comes to making the bile flow freely. ut don't ask for liver pills. Ask for Carter's le Liver Pills.

Look for the name Carter's le Liver Pille on the red label. Resent otitute. 25c at all stures. 1991 C. M.

Ca eight miles southeast of Homer on a crossroad, one mile south of the Fisher school house and one mile east, 1. Tuesday evening. One front wheel, the motor. head, and several other parts had been taken from the car. It was returned to its owner.

Extension Group Met The Homer- -Albion Extension group met at the home of Mrs. Glenn Anderson, Tuesday morning. Dinner was served by the first division under the direction of Mrs. H. P.

Sherrard. Mrs. A. H. Sherman and Mrs.

H. J. Nichols acted as leaders for the afternoon. The topic was, -Cleaning Hints. Later a review of previous lessons and discussions of books being read by the members was enjoyed.

The next meeting will be held March 31 with Mrs. T. H. Smith in south Hillsdale street. Born February 14th to Mr.

and Mrs. Everett Snyder of Grand Rapids, a son, Everett, jr. Mrs. Snyder was formerly Miss Rena O'Dell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Ora O'Dell, near Eckford. Mrs. W. J. Webster entertained the Jolly Neighbors club Tuesday afternoon, Following the business meeting a program was enjoyed.

The next meeting will be held with Mrs. Ruth Watts, Tuesday afternoon, March 7th. Rev. J. A.

Rogers of Harbor Springs, a former Homer resident, visited his sister, Mrs. Arthur Rule, and family, here Tuesday. Miss Marjorie Jarvis was in Jackson Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs.

Carl Crane of Grocery Specials For Friday and Saturday SALAD DRESSING, Quart Jar 19c do, Eckrich Nut, 2 lbs. 15c CORN, 8 oz Del Monte Whole Kernel 5c SALTED PEANUTS, lb. 7c GOLD DUST Scouring Powder 4c -WHITE NAPTHA SOAP, 2 for 5c Campbell's TOMATO SOUP, Can, 6c GRAPE NUT FLAKES, Pkg. SALMON, Monarch, 8 oz. Can 13c ORANGES 288 176 size, doz 16c, 32c Crosby's Grocery pa 160 We.

Deliver. THE EVENING CHRONICLE, MARSHALL, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1933 PAGE Which all members had 'parts was much appreciateder The 4-H Sewing club met Wednesday evening at the home of Mrs. county E. S. leader, Warwick.

met with Miss the Bathe. judging contest was conducted and refreshments were served. all Mrs. visited Frank her Schafer sister. of Marsha: Pritchard Wednesday.

Mrs. Myrtie Bell and friend of Battle Creek visited Mr. and Mrs. Frank Elting Wednesday. Mrs.

Nellie Shumway and Alta, Mr. and Mrs. Shumway and Marjorie Goff were in Battle Creek today. Rev. W.

H. Bailey of Spratt, will take up his duties here as pastor of the Baptist church, March 5. UNION CHURCH Thursday services: Choir and Bible study. The hour is 7:30. The attention of our people is called to 'this Thursday hour of worship and.

devotional study of the great book of Christian religion. The go pel of Matthew will occupy cur attention for the coming months, especially during Lent. Sunday services: Morning wor-' ship and sermon by the pastor. The series on the "Seven Lamps of Architecture," is ended. Next Sunday resume of the gist of the seven will be New material will be added.

You will be interested in this last sermon, giving the inner gist of the last, seven weeks. A new series of Lenten sermons will be announced at the close of the service. Church school at 11:30 continues full of interest to all conconcerned in the fuller knowledge of the great facts and living ideals of the Christian faith. There is a wide variety of courses and classes so that the needs of all may be well met. The Sunday evening vesper service and Christian Endeavor continue with increasing interest and profit, we believe, to all who attend the services.

With fine cooperation of the young people and the pastor, the worship service is carried out in a helpful way. The story Sunday evening will give the life and work of that splendid Christan woman, Isabella Thoburn, one of the finest missionaries to India. You will be interested in her life. The Christian Endeavor groups continue their studies and discussions under adult leaders. The senior group will study another in the serles of great religions of the world, and be name, Zovcastrianism, the religion of the land of! Persia.

This faith was founded about 600 B. C. and claims about .100,000 adherents today. The leader will be Erma Green. All young people without similar religious relations are invited to attend the evening meetings.

Christian Endeavor as a service is interdenominational, international and racial in its implications, tunities and privileges. Union invites you, China to Run Four Lotteries WASHINGTON, Feb. China will raise money to promote aviation and highways thru four state lotteries. Commerce. department reports from Shanghai show that 50 per cent of the lotteries of 5,000,000 yuan each, will be distributed in prizes.

Hammond, were 'called Here' Tuesday by the death of the former's father, 8. A. Crane. Miss Alice of Ann) Arbor spent Wednesday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.

Es F. Campbell. and Mrs. Herbert Nowlin attended the auction sale held at the Bennie Patterson farm, near Concord, Tuesday, and reported a large crowd attending. George Ansterburg has been I nominated for village president on the -Democratic ticket instead of Thomas Smith, who was nominated at caucus, Feb.

16. M.r Smith plans to be out of the village during the summer and 'declined to.run: Floyd Shear has been nominated as trustee in place of Mr. Ansterburg. Mr. Mrs.

Alfred Aldrich have moved from the Mrs. Alice Humphrey house near Eckford to the T. I. Smith farm near Cook's Prairie church, recently vacated by Bert Nowlin and family. Mrs.

Stella Warner, teacher in the Potter rural school will entertain the Potter Community club Saturday. evening, Feb. 25th at her home in Albion. The operetta, "The Quest of the Parasol," scheduled to be given at the house, Tuesday evening, 28 by the children of the grades of the Homer public school has been postponed until Tuesday evening, March 14th, on account of so many in the cast being ill with' German measles. Mr.

and Clarence McCone of Jewelesburg, is visiting Mr. and Mrs, George McAdams. Mr. and Mrs. John Maybe of visited relatives here on Wednesday.

Mrs. Percy Pearson and son of Jonesville visited Mr. and Mrs. A. W.

Smith, Wednesday. America's Unsolved Mystery (Concluded from Page 1) as John Hughes Curtis, the Norfolk, Va. boat bullder who claimed to. have established contact with the kidnapers thru a long course: of darigerous negotiations at. sea.

The Curtis hoax WAS exposed, the boat builder paid a $1,000 fine, recelved a year's suspended sentence for "obstructing justice," and returned home to' Norfolk. Once a leader of Norfolk's exclusive society, today finds him An outcast, living precariously with his wife and two children, in' a little cottage ten miles from the city. His bost-building business has gone." The little money saved by his wife has gone. The company once headed is bankrupt. Judgments of.

$10,000 are held against him. The profit from the occasional. sale of. a marine engine keeps his family alive. Irving Bitz and, Salvatore Spitale were linked together in the underworld partnership that hopefully called upon to search the dim puirlieus of gangdom for the kidnapers.

Until they were authoriznegotlater with the kidnapers, they' had pursued successful, it minor, "careers as rum-runners and proprietors of unimportant New York speakeasies, without too much molestation from the police. Since tie" Lindbergh case, Bitz has been arrested four times for alleged association with criminal events including two homicides, an attempted jail break, and a payroll robbery. Spitale has been arrested twice In connection with homicide cases, more on charges of earrying concealed weapons; and his speakeasy. has been raided twice in the past twelve months. In each case he has "beaten the rop." But he leads an uneasy life.

Dr. John. F. Condon, the "Jafsie" who conducted negotiations with the kidnapers thru newspaper "personal" columns, and finally gave Lindbergh's one of $50,000 their in. bills emissaries thrown Ool.

over a cemetery wall the darkness of March night-still instructs the, students of Fordham University in the Condon is never free from the aftermath of the tragedy. Constantly he is called upon to "Identify" photographs of police suspects, and to confer with detectives still working on the solved case. Colonel. H. Norman Schwartzkopf, head of the New Jersey state police, subjected to political attacks thruout the year for the failure of his organization to track down the abductors, is today 8 "lone still working on the case and still determined to solve the mystery.

A proposal was before the New Jersey legislature today to reduce his salary from. $9,000 a year to $5,000, stinging reflection not only of the times but of the polltics that have become inextricably involved in the case. .0 Morris 'Rosner, operating on the fringes of police and under world, and commissioned to negotiate with the kidnapers, as were -Spitale-and Bitz, is one of the few. characters. who appears to have dropped from sight since the summer of 1932.

In June, he testifiled before "the Bronx county grand jury then Investigating the case. Later that month he testified in a suit for $1,500 brought against him by. an attorney, that he had never received any money from Lindberg or any other person for his share in the case The 'Rev. H. Peacock.

dean of An Episcopal church in Norfolk, pursues 8 somewhat cloistered life in' that city. Whenever: discussion of the Lindbergh kidnaping arises, he is pointed out as dne who was cruelly misled by John Hughes Ourtis, and who wittingly 'helped to give the hoax -wide publicity, Rear Admiral Guy Hamilton third of the "negotiators" leads retired, life somewhat. akin to: that of. Dean Scottish nurse- Lindy Flies Again Colonel Lindbergh Emerging from the seclusion that has virtually shrouded his whereabouts -since the fatal kidnaping of his child. a year ago, Col.

Charles A. Lindbergh takes to the air again. He is shown at New. ark airport preparing to on business flight to Baltimore. maid who underwent weeks of police inquisition, and whose sweetheart, Henry (Red) Johnson, was dramatically dragged into the case because of that association- and his "flight" to Connecticut is still in the Lindbergh household.

Miss England, Gow to returned, become after a little Jon Lindbergh. Johnson, deported because "he lacked proper papers for alien residence, has not returned to this country. William J. Allen, middle-aged negro whose chance discovery of the baby's body added murder to kidnaping has fallen on evil days at Hopewell. For a time he WAS "exhibited" to the bidly curjous people at circuses or carnivals, but.

this capitalization of the tragedy aroused such resentment this means of livelihood was eventually denied him. recelved nothing for finding baby and altho for a time he worked' for a Philadelphia contractor, he has been without work for months. His family is destitute. Tekonsha News MRS. R.

R. MILLER Chronicle Staff Correspondent BAPTIST AID The meeting of the Baptist Aid was held Wednesday with the husbands as guests. Dinner was served at 1:00 o'clock. At the bustness meeting the following committees were appointed: Work, Mrs. T.

J. Doolittle, Mrs. Milford Rainey, Mrs. Garrett; social, Mrs. Jesse Lette, Mrs.

Frank Thomas, Mrs. Addie Smith; program, Mra. Doolittle, Mrs, Arthur reception, Mrs. F. B.

Palmer, Mrs. Roy Sanders; flower, Mrs. D. G. Martinson, Mrs.

Ronald Schafer; pianist, Mrs. Frank Cowles: chorister, Mrs. H. A. re-.

porter, Mrs. Granger. COBBLESTONE R. S. A.

MEET A meeting of the Rural Schbol Association of the Cobblestone trict was held at the 'school house Wednesday evening. There was an attendance of thirty, A "presidents" program was given. Hives 'of .32 presidents were read by Mrs, Corlew, Mrs. -Clara Hodges, Miss Veronica. Tobalskl and Joy Hensler.

A talk on the life of Washington was given by Miss Edith Doolittle and a talk on by Robert Corlew. A review of an article from the Detroit paper on preparing the White House for the new occupants was discussed by Mrs. Corlew and Mrs. C44- ford' Doolittle. Patriotic featured the program.

Retreshments In charge of Mrs. Charles Sanford were served after the pregram. PENNY SOCIAL There was good attendance at the penny social. given. by.

the Union Guild at the hall Wednesday. serving recelpts were $17.49. The later evening program WAS appropriate 'to the day. The following program was given: Community singing of Mt. Vernon Bells; reoitation by Junior Schue; play, "Betsy Ross and Flag" by the Campfire Girls; ing' by J.

E. Shedd; musical reading. Mrs. E. W.

Randall with. accompaniment by Mrs. J. E. Shedd; exercise by five boys; exercise by thirteen girls, and singing of America.

CAMPFIRE GIRLS ENTERTAIN The Campfire Girls. entertained their mothers at their room In the Stroud home Wednesday evening. The company of twenty. enjoyed a Washington and: A Washngton cake and individuil Cherry ples were Items clever Washington Ex- Sues Mix Mrs. Victoria de Olazabal Bringing suit against Tom: Mix, cowboy, screen star, for $50,000 in promissory notes, assertedly past due, Mrs.

Victoria Forde de Olazabal, wife of the Argentine consul at San. Francisco, and former wife of Mix, is shown appearing in court in Los Angeles. Mix alleges that- the $50,000 was to be used to provide a home for their daughter. Thomasina, but declares that is impossible since his -former. wife has romarried.

Michigan News GRAND RAPIDS- -Chester R. Rose, 46, was killed' instantly and his brother-in-law, John Way, 38, seriously injured today, when their automobile crashed into a street car here. Physicians said Way probably will ALMA Patricia Howard, six years old, was drowned late yesterday when she fell thru the ice on Pine river. More than 200 volunteer workers were dragging the river today for her body. MANISTEE- city.

commisand City Attorney Campbell today were considering bids on municipal power plant survey. MUSKEGON-Dr. John Parker Stoddard, living graduate of the University of Michigan, celebrated his' ninety -eighth birthday at the Old People's home here yesterday. JACKSON-More than 250 welfare dependants will be given jobs on highways near here as soon as weather permits. city mission voted night.

HOW TO STOP A COLD QUICK AS YOU CAUGHT IT If throat is sore, crush and dissolve 3 Bayer Aspirin. Tablets. in as shall Take Bayer Aspirin Drink Full Glass glass of warm water according to direc- Water. of and gargle accordlions in package. ing to directions.

Almost Instant The simple method pictured above is the way doctors throughout the world now treat colds. It is recognized as the QUICKEST, safest, surest way. For it will check an ordinary cold almost as fist as you caught it. Ask your doctor about this. And when you buy, see that you get the real BAYER Aspirin Tablets.

They dissolve almost instantly. And thus work almost instantly when you take them. And for a gargle, Gen- Relief In This Way uine Bayer Aspirin Tablets dissolve with speed and completeness, leaving no irritating particles or grittiness. Get a box of 12 or bottle; of 24 or. 100 at any drug store.

Bayer Tablets Ask your druggist about the recent price reduction on the 100 tablet size Bayer Aspirin. NO TABLETS ARE GENUINE BAYER ASPIRIN WITHOUT THIS CROSS 0 Regularity of Dividends Building and Loan Associations have a story to tell you that cannot be duplicated by any other financial institution in the world--that story is "Safely." During good times and bad, Building and Loan has kept faith with its members. Never a Dollar of Principal Lost Regularity of Dividend Payments For 43 years the NATIONAL has never missed a dend date or lost a dollar of any member's investment. The National Moan Investment Company Detroit's Oldest Building and Loan Association 1250 Griswold Street, Detroit, Michigan REPRESENTATIVES MINA L. PIERCE, 613 W.

Michigan, Marshall, Mioh. W. H. HAMMOND, Burlington, Mich. Lu Luckies Please! I Lake Como, Italy In every corner of the world, both here and overseas, wherever you find joy in' life, 'tis always "Luckies They're mild and how they please! It is truly a joy to discover that And smooth, perfect combination that means -mildness that comes real Character cigarette and Mildness pleasure of the these fine these tobaccos are finest tobaccos.

Please!" Strike! Character born of the -Character and Mildness Lucky For two reasons CIGAR because ted" TIES.

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À propos de la collection Marshall Evening Chronicle

Pages disponibles:
21 245
Années disponibles:
1894-1939