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Marshall Evening Chronicle from Marshall, Michigan • Page 3

Location:
Marshall, Michigan
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

EVENING GHftNICLE MICHIGAN. 1ft, 1934 Consolidating And Succeeding Ejcpburfde-f, Tekonsha flews, Established Tftfe Xlarshall Evening Chronicle is delivered by carrier city carrier district for fifteen cents per week. The price by, mail to Cal- houn County Is $3.00 per year; $150 for ste months; $Lw Tor three months, butslde Calhoiin County the pi-Ice Is $5.00. per $2.60 for inbhths; $1.25 for three months. -All mail ate payable strictly In advance, the Is discontinued wnen the time Na'tfonal Advertising Cihic'Bgo.

8S E. Watiker Drive; New York; 415 Lexington Avenue. Ji RS Second Class -Matter at the Postofflee at Marshall, Michigan, qgdBfrAct of March 3, ijftg? Good Doctrine Still "1 know that my retirement will make no difference in Idacardinal principles, that It will always fight for progress 'aha reform, never ate corruption, ttlwayft fight demagogues tff all parties, Always oppose privileged Masses and public plunderers, never lack sympathy with the always remain devoted tb the public welfare, never be sAtlisfled with merely, printing news; always be drastically Independent; be afraid to attack wrong, whether by predatory plutocracy or JOSEPH PULlTZEfe, Founder New York 'Wdfld April 10, 1607. Member Michigan League of Hctine CIASS, Thte sentotv of the Httmer presented blown" at the Homer opera house tyedhesday and Thursday evenings. The high school orchestra bnder -the- direction of Bob dard- hei 1 played several numbers before (and after the play.

The boys' Glee (club and the "rube band" gave several between acts talter furnishing' much amusement to the 'audience, All their find ireeeiyed much. taking part Hele "BteVe TobliSS, Keith Dye, BRIEF FOR THE LIQUOR BUYER. Pity the poor liquor buyer! Confronted.as is by a bewildering array of new and old brands.X is very much lifte Alice in Wonderland. He is, rjowver, beginning to Understand that the gentle art of gyjpls being practiced upon him. Many of the whiskies being as ''blended)' whiskies, for example, arejHferibr even td products of the third-rate bootlegger: What do the d.

tillers mean by That is what the public rms a right to know. If the blend is compounded of raw alcpnbj, prune juice, camomile tea, vinegar and paregoric, as it sometimes is if the palate is any judge, the fact should stated on the label. The public patiently endured bathtub gin and rotgut whisky for more than a decade, because of a certain peculiar legal situation; it now has the right to demand good liquor at reasonable pices. Dunn, Ruth Bentyarn, "after, ClinOTd I'd 'The proceeds of Inese pmys will Jte used to pay expenses at graduation Mrs. 'IftBtaecca Wardwell, wife of Ernest 'Wferdwell, suffered a stroke Wednesday morning away her home in.

Wednesday afternoon. Sh'e'waS iJorn In Mos- 'cdw Feb. 6, 1871 and is'survived hy her husband, a daughter, Mrs. Edna Broiwftm. 6t Homer: sons, of Leonldas, Merrill of and 'Arey of Homer, ateo eleven giaiWchildreli ahd threa great' THineral services will be held kt the home Saturday afternodn at 2:00 o'clock Bev, Jenne of the Methodist ehuwai officiating and 'burial In cemetery.

MR. SNELL ON CHILD LABOR. Commenting on the President's message, Representative Snell of New York, Republican House leader, said, he noticed that the greatest Democratic applause Came when Mr. Roosevelt mentioned the abolition of child labor under NRA codes. But, sourly added Mr.

Snell, "It had been abolished in the northern Republican sUtes for a generation. The only place he has abolished it is in his own Democratic-controlled southern states." If Mr. Snell will stretch his memory back as far -as l.ist May, he will remember the year's most ghastly ex- hibM of child labor strike of child mill workers who had been laboring long hours for miserable wages, in some" cases as low as $1 a week. This was not in the Democratic south, but in the region of a generation's alleged enlightenment. The state of Pennsylvania, one of the half-dozen, that stood firm for Republicanism in the landslide of 1932.

labor plague spot of the year before had Connecticut, also one of the Republican sextet, and conditions were changed there only by the leadership of a Democratic governor, Wilbur L. Cross. Mr. Snell may find some political ammunition in the but scarcely on subject. lyflss Velda daughter of and wuby of this village, and -Ffranfc -Radtke of Albion, tft Angola, Ind 'Jan.

The, bride is a graduate of Homer, high school the class 1932, The young pedple will make their home with the gtodnx's mother 1 In vi i Where Best-Known Works News MRS. B. H088 l. 4493 Election of officers of the senior e-ln 88 of Burlington high school ocoutrea-the post week officers are: President, Vlrgtntn Phelps; vice-president, Lew Clotliier; secretary and treasurer, Bell. Mr.

Streeter. CWA Inspector this district, mode cnnVnsa of the business section on Tliursdny. Tlie CWA Investigator from the Battle Creek office of Victor Blfllne. was In town Thursday 'nfternoon InvestlRatlnR several cases. Mr.

nnd Mrs. Rnv nuhitlmn nre the parents of a day morning at i nnd Mrs. John Mr. And Mrs. llvinf in the hbrtt Bmllngton, nre the aon, born youngster hns been' ton.

Thte Ladies Aid take plnoe Thursday, jlft, Jft Oom- mrnity church Miss Bates county 4-HL club lender, met with the clay nfter school Mosonlr lodge and fteiiecca rlinpter, O. 8, Will tlils pveninR at pnrty In the club rooms Members are permitted to inytye it'iui. Supper rtill be (8 The Hying room of the Poe Edgar AlUn iThe 125th anniversary of the birth of Edgar Allan Poe, one of the greatest short story writers of modern times, is celebrated this week. The nvonUy-regtored cottage in Philadelphia In which Poe lived and worked from 1842 to 1844 is to be dedicated nn the occasion. In the room shown here, Poo wrote "The Masque of the Bed Death," "The Tell Tale "The Pit and the Pendulum," "The Gold Bug" and "Tho Raven," (Central wounded And is nursed back health by his pals.

to luics to Scott, but is caught in the renter of a wild stampedes of buf- Judlth has been forced to ac- fnio Scott finally rescues her, company Beery and his gang of Brerv Is shot, arid' the two young thieves. She rebels, escapes and people start for camp. However, happiness Is not theirs yet, and the surprise that awaits them when they reach Hatton an'd Carey furnishes nn entertaining climax to picture. Winter Excursion To Niagara ROUND TRIP fiOACHES ONLY Friday or Saturday, January Lv. Marshall 10:28 P.

M. Cent. Tithe Ar. Falls, N. Y.

6:55 A. East. ReturnlnR tickets good to leave Nlngarn Falls not later 1 in, January 28. 1934, nnd connecting train from Buffalo rrf Ask About The All-Expense Trip Children of proper age half fare no baggage checked For Information Consult Looal Ticket Agent MICHIGAN CENTRAL EDUCATOR INJURED. BATTLE CREEK, Jan.

tJchrispn was not injured. Drs. El- I Us and Manly suffered shock and 19 bruises. (UP) Eldon C. Oeyer, school research director, was in serious JACKSON AOQUTTTEW condition in a hospital Here today with injuries received in an automobile accident In which two other educators were Injured.

A car driven by Geyer, in which Dr. William G. Cobunj school superintendent, and Dr. Manly Ellis, of Western State Teachers college, were riding, collided with one driven by Norrls Johnson Thursday. and Sell tbe Classified Way.

JAOKSON, Jan. Mrs. Florence Benbow, charged with negligent homicide, stood acquitted today following her trial for the death of Harry Miller, 8, who was killed, according to witnesses, by her automobile, KatsWKatataGIa WASHINqTOFTQ WOR LID I By CHARLES P. STEWART I'resv Nta'O WASHINGTON. Jan.

'ets qew and, first in Ington. la nol Ht all 'He type or indi- viilual one would exrwt to r'epre- sent so proletarian country He has xoclal tlnlsh. He Hug- rie.slM the arlsto- crut And why aotV I erlng that he was a ey.lirial armj 9 officer, already in hr I a ml when the Ro- manoffs were 'overthrown. True, there were many aristocratic radicals In long before the revolution, but no account Indicates that the then Troya- novuky waa one of them, that be Joined the Heda at just the right psychological no sooner than that. Anyway, he Is of a wholly different pattern from CoinunaBaf Maxim Litvinov, who arranged with President Roosvelt, a few weeks back, (or tbe RuKso-Amencan exchange of recognlitonu that brought Ambassador Tioyanovaky bere from his pre- vloua pout In Tok'io.

Plenty of sack- cpa ted inforinallty characterized Opuiradt! Lltvmov: Ambaamidor Troyanovsky ia as correct au envoy us ever called at the White House. He la a bmalllal) mail vertically, but a erect figure, U.D alert snapping black eyes aiyi an amlatik. vivacious inurmer. Alexander Troyanovsky BY LESLIE Central Press NEW YORK. Inwardly ipeah g.

Wail bjanWrB. Mft IB- creasirigly opposed' to PreflMent Roostevelfs monetary plans. 'On- tbe other hand, the Wall Street apecu- attve element is enthusiastic. Wall Street has been divided Into two sharp groups since the advent of ihc Roosevelt the toanh- era and the The itub lie d6ea not seen) aware of this. BOND FEARS ALLAYED ICven though Wall Street oppoae President Roosevelt's monetary plans, they uevertbeleaa admli Rev.

T. nti Schedule for tfprrier church': Sunday school at 9:30 o'clock; mom- ling worsttitJ 'o'clock, the topic will be the Same Space" Epworth League 6:00 o'clock evening praise service, at 7:00 o'clock With subject "dhrlstlan Wednesday evening prayer meeting at 7:30 o'clock Monday evening, Jaa 22 the ladle are ft "Comrnunity supper a program and social will be PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Eldridge M. MiiOehee, minister. Sunday morning, service at 10:00 The subject, wlU "A 81aVe Who Thought! Re WW Sundiay school hnmediately following. The Junior Group will meet from 3:00 to 4:00, o'clock, The Sunshine, Group will meet 4t, 1 sOO o'clock using (or their subject; Holy Oommuhlpn." A siteclal, vice has been brranged for Sunday evening when the Houghton family will furnish the music.

minister will give a brief talk, op the subject "Moiterh Families." STu JOE CnMndSt Sunday school at 10:30 o'clock. Questions from I Samuel 9-13. a J. Lindsey, superlhtenttent. CLARENDON M.

E. CHURCH The schedule fcr the Clarendon church: Sunday, school at 10:30 o'clock; morning worship 11:30 o'clock. Classes for all ages pre provided at the Sunday school hovm Mrs. Daniels was a Battle Creek visitor Wednesday. Gene Winchell of Jackson has returned home after few- days visit with his uncle and aunt, Mr and.

Mrs. Claude Groesbeck brother, Bruce Winchell. Mrs! Maude Moore is on, the sick Ust. Mrs. Seth Bowerman spen Thursday with in Marshall Mrs.

A. W- Don-Is has returnee where' she attended" Evnodlcal executive board meeting Mr. and Mrs. RusseH Cortright of Albion were In fiomer Wednes- that they are udroltly When tbe president made cleat that $6.000,000.000 In government re would be Wall Street bankers (eared that government securities would flood the mar. ket, ip the encluslpn of all private financing.

Then along came the on revaluation of the dollar at a stabilized and there WM a raab to buy government A ode of tbe Mir. and Mrs. John Jackson vis ted Mr. and Mrs F. N.

Kerr In Jackson Wednesday, Edgar Yaudea, son of Mr and Arthur Yaudes of east Home underwent an operation for ap pendlcltla at the Albion hosplta last Tuesday. He is said to be progressing nicely, Plans are being made for the annual Masonic and O. E. S. ban qiiet to be held at the Masoni hall.

Feb. 22 Mrs. Amelia Trader is sejiouslj cJ at the home of her daughter Mrs. Carl Reynolds In east Homer Mrs. L.

S. Dye is ill at her horn in Everett street. Mrs. J. Snyde who has -been '111.

for some weeks is much improved, AU Star Heads blitzed dollar makes' It greatest Investments tp the world, tf not the greatest The dblliw mo much actual gold behind It, that bo difficult for the government to keep Ita value In forelgii markets depreaww) to. or 60 per, cent, of roriner value agalnat rencies. Of course, government boudii or fall' with tie value 01 dollar In foreign exchange STABILIZATION iFUNp It the dollar be kept AQWI lp foreign even tb'CO ceut of its old- 'twp to aAipib the purpow 10 that. New Zane Grey Film "Thundering Herd' five fojtmer picture stars In the cast, Para- mount'a production of Zlane Grey's with dolph Scott and Judith Allen in the leadtaW KAes Is now playing at the Garden theatre. Metnte Harry Raymond Button the trio pW' is, augmented by such stellar players as Buster Qrabbe.

Noato Beery, Blanche Priederici picture, directed by Henry tiyk romance and Judith daughter of Noah 1 1 Longer Biqqer Fisher Bodies (4 inches more room) Blue Engine 80 horsepower 80 rvsiles an hou; Faster acceleration greater economy at touring speeds increased smoothness and quietness New, larger all-weather brakes Smart new styiing lypicaiiy low Chevrolet prices if I't UfW (ftl CUA I here nbw, for the first time: the car I b'y to arid Chevrolet for 1934! And if you aren't among to attend gala introduclory abowiug, you're going to miBB one of the biggest, exciting eyenta of the whole motor car year. There never has been a neiy Qjevrolft model with BO many basic and sweeping advanceu as this one. Its anything you've seen or anything you will see in motpr cars for 1934! CHEVBOLET MOTOR COMPANY. DETROIT, MICHIGAN, Quirch Chevrolet Sales I 480 E. Mich.

Avc. tfsl with low-priced cur.

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About Marshall Evening Chronicle Archive

Pages Available:
21,245
Years Available:
1894-1939