Document 220225

FOUR.
Mrs. Joseph Tesho is ill and confined to her bed.
Miss Lura DeWitt and Mrs. John
Bohnsack were Bay City callers on
Monday.
Robert A. Mills of Hastings
spent the week end with his sister,
Mrs. B. C. Patterson.
Mr. and Mrs. H. McGregory and
family of Shabbona spent Sunday
afternoon at the F. McGregory
home.
Miss Johanna Hommel of Saginaw came Monday to be the guest
of Mrs. D. C. Elliott and other
friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Lorentzen and
•children visited Mrs. Lorentzen's
•sister, Mrs. Wm. Smith, at Juhl
on Saturday.
Mrs. E. M. Taylor left Wednesday to visit the remainder of the
week with her daughter, Mrs. Ken•neth Warren, in Detroit.
Mrs. Wm. Wetters left for her
home in Detroit Tuesday morning
after visiting with her mother,
Mrs. John A. Caldwell, over the
week end.
Donna Mae and Marlene Lorentzen, children of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Lorentzen, of Marlette, former residents here, are ill with
whooping cough.
Mr. and Mrs. John Whale have
bought the house on South Seeger
street recently vacated by the Geo.
Eabideaus and will move there in
the near future.
-Dick
Krug of
Ubly spent
Wednesday night at the home of
Bobbie Morrison and attended the
Boy Scout party at the high school
as Bobbie's guest.
Mr. and Mrs. O. G. Squires of
Flint visited their daughter, Mrs.
.Stanley McArthur, Monday and attended the Lenten retreat in the
Evangelical church.
John A. Benkelman is still a patient in the Morris hospital and his
condition is quite s%rious. No
marked change has been apparent
in the past few days.
The Woman's Society of Christian Service meeting will be held at
the home of Mrs. John McGrath,
Mar. 16, at 2:30. The leader will
be Mrs. Earl Douglas.
Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Ealph
Young and Mrs. George Young
Saturday were Mrs. Geo. Young's
son-in-law, Ezra Bremer, and Bert
Cole, both of Columbiaville.
Walter Anthes, who has spent
the winter in California, expected
to leave Monday of this week for
Texas and from there will go to
Florida before returning home.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Olrich of
Pontiac and Alfred Freeman of Detroit came Saturday and attended
the Heron-Davidson wedding reception at the Nick Alexander
home in Grant township.
Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Wanner attended a Gideon rally at the Wilber
F. Jones home at Gilford Wednesday evening. Mr. Wanner, president of the organization, spoke on
the topic, "Peas in a Pod."
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Bohnsack of
JBay City enjoyed Sunday with the
rf owner's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J.
~H. Bohnsack. A delicious dinner
was served in honor of George's
"Mrthday which was near that date.
Mrs. Chas. Kilgore of Deford
;and Mrs. Harold Biddle of Decker
returned to their homes Monday
;after spending several days with
-their sister, Mrs. Ealph Youngs,
'assisting with the moving.
Mrs. Ealph Ward, Mrs. Arthur Little and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Little
attended the funeral of Mrs. Myrtle Dorman Andrews, wife of Delbert Andrews, in the Methodist
church in Caro on Friday afternoon.
Mrs. Jos. Sahlmark and daughter, Linda, of Detroit, came last
Thursday to spend a few weeks
with her parents, Dr. and Mrs. P.
A. Schenck. Dr. Sahlmark is expected to spend the«,week end in the
Schenck home.
Guests in the J. D. Sommers
home over the week end were Mrs.
Sommers' sister, Mrs. Pauline Ackerly, nurse at Dowagiac, and Geo.
Born of Wakelee, Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Wolf of South Bend, Ind.,
and H. S. Harmon of Emmett.
Eev. and Mrs. Clarence Graham
and son of Detroit were week-end
guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs.
C. U. Brown. Eev. Mr. Graham
preached morning and evening in
the Baptist church in the place of
the Eev. Mr. Green, who had previously been announced.
A few of Dickie Dillman's friends
helped him celebrate Ms fifth birthday Saturday afternoon. For lunch,
guests were seated around a table
which was graced with a birthday
cake which had five candles. Ice
cream was served. Guests included
Freddie and Susan Tyo, Martin
Kercher and Dickie Joos.
Members of the Townsend club
met in the Omar Glaspie home on
Monday evening. A program of
music and readings was presented
by Mrs. Isaac Gingrich and son,
Orland, Mrs. George Hartsell, Mrs.
Frank Hall, Mrs. Ella Vance, Mrs.
Herbert Bartle, Clem Tyo and Mrs.
Omar Glaspie. Potluck supper was
served. The meeting of the auxiliary will be held next Monday evening at the home of Mrs. Herbert
Bartle.
CASS CITY CHRONICLE—FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 1944.
Norman Kitchen of Pontiac spent
from Saturday until Monday with
his sister, Mrs. Arminta Eohrbach.
Miss Sharlie VanWinkle of Sagi-*
naw spent the week end with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Grant VanWinkle.
Miss Betty Shepherd of Detroit
spent last week in the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Eay Fleenor, returning to
Detroit Friday.
Week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Fred White were their daughter
and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Jos.
Gast, of Flint.
Mrs. Harold Asher left last
Thursday to spend a week with her
husband, Pvt. Harold Asher, in
Fort Knox, Ky.
Janet Wright, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Wright, is ill and
has been confined to her bed for
the past two weeks.
Miss Caroline Garety was a
guest Saturday night and Sunday
of her sister and husband, Mr. and
Mrs. John Sweeney, in Detroit.
Mrs.
Carrie Lewis of Deford,
Mrs. Frank Fisher of Caro and
Mrs. Sarah Kennedy of Bay City
spent the week end with Mrs. Sam
Blades.
Mr. and Mrs. John Garety and
children of Wisner visited Mr.
Garety's sisters, Miss Caroline
Garety and Mrs. Marie Sullivan,
Saturday.
Eev. and Mrs. Melvin Vender,
Mrs. Ernest Croft, Mrs. B. F. Benkelman, Jr., Mrs. J. H. Bohnsack
and Mrs. Martin McKenzie spent
Wednesday in Flint.
Tommy Fritz, who has been with
his mother in Chicago, accompanied his father, Francis Fritz, home
Sunday and is with his grandmother, Mrs. I. A. Fritz.
Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Keating entertained over the week end, Eobt.
Keating of Ypsilanti, Miss Mildred
Karr of Lansing, and Mrs. L. E.
Karr of .Traverse City.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Battel in Pleasant Home hospital,
a son, Mar. 3. He has been named
for his grandfathers, John Benjamin, and weighed eight pounds.
Miss Alice Anthes was a guest
at dinner and overnight of Mr. and
Mrs. Mack Little and family on
Wednesday in honor of Miss Anthes' birthday which was Thursday.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Wells Sunday afternoon and Monday were Mr. Wells' mother, Mrs.
Lillie Wells, of Mayville and a
cousin, Orel Smalley, of Lake
Orion.
Mrs. Herb Ludlow and children
and Mr. and Mrs. John West accompanied Herb Ludlow to Millington Sunday from where he left
with a fellow-worker for Detroit
where they attended a Detroit Edison company school of instruction
for a week.
Mrs. Celia Edgerton, who has
spent several weeks with relatives
at Brown City and Clio, returned
to her home. Friday. Mrs. A. C.
Edgerton and son, Andy, of Clio
brought her home and were guests
over night of Mrs. A. C. Edgerton's parents, Dr. and Mrs. I. A.
Fritz.
A group of farmers met at the
Hay Creek schoolhouse Wednesday evening, Mar. 1, and discussed
keeping farm account books and
questions on income taxes. Edwin
Baur, agricultural teacher of the
Cass City school, was the instructor
of the evening. The group brought
lunch and engaged in a good time.
Friends and neighbors of Mrs.
Clara Spaven surprised her Friday
on the occasion of her birthday
when about 30 enjoyed potluck
dinner in the home of her daughter-in-law, Mrs. Watson Spaven.
Bingo was the entertainment for
the afternoon. Mrs. Spaven was
presented with a gift from the
group.
(
Mrs. Eobt. Hoadley was guest of
honor Friday evening when Mrs.
Harold Wells entertained the officers of Echo Chapter, O. E. S., in
the Wells home. Visiting and
games were enjoyed and the hostess served light refreshments. The
guest of honor, whose marriage
was announced recently," was presented with a gift from the group.
The Woman's Missionary society
of the Presbyterian church met
with Mrs. G. A. Tindale Thursday
afternoon, Mar. 2. Mrs. Claud Karr
was assistant hostess. Mrs. John
McGillvray conducted a devotional
service and Mrs. E. M. Taylor and
Mrs. Ernest Eeagh gave talks on
the American Indian, using maps
to designate various
locations.
Light refreshments were served.
Twenty-nine attended the regular meeting of the Ladies' class of
the Methodist Sunday school last
Thursday at the home of Mrs.
Thqmas Colwell. The husbands
were also invited to the meeting
which started with a planned potluck dinner at noon. A birthday
cake with five candles honored
those whose birthdays come in
March. Those having anniversaries this month are: Mrs. John
Whale, Mrs. Kate Fike, Mrs. Anna
Patterson, Mrs. H. M. Willis, and
Mrs. Thomas Colwell. Devotionals
in charge of Mrs. Colwell were
readings from a Lenten booklet,
"The Sanctuary."
Mr. and Mrs. George Bartle visited Mr. and Mrs. Carl Eitter near
Bad Axe Sunday.
The Pomona Grange will meet in
the Millington Methodist church
for a daytime meeting on Tuesday,
Mar. 14.
i Mrs. David Horton of Detroit
earae Wednesday of last week to
visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Eichard Bayley.
Mrs. Jean Opie of Fowlerville
spent from Tuesday of last week
until Saturday with her sister, Mrs.
Mary Strickland.
Mr. and Mrs. Alex. Purlaki of
Harrisburg, Pa., came Monday of
last week to the Harve Streeter
farm which they have purchased.
Mrs. Edith Bardwell of Detroit
came Monday evening and is spending a week or so with Mr. and Mrs.
Clif Champion and other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Bartle visited the Chas. Hendersons in Novesta Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Henderson are recovering from recent
illnesses.
Miss Wanda Karr of Cass City
and Mrs. Alice Huffman of Caro
spent last week end at Bloomington, Ind., as guests of Cadet Harold
E. Huffman.
Mrs. Kenneth Parker left for
Fort Pierce, Florida, Wednesday
morning to be near her husband,
S 2-C Kenneth Parker, who is stationed there.
Miss Alice Anthes entertained
a group of young ladies overnight
Saturday. Guests were the Misses
Anna Kastraba, Ruth, Schenck,
Winnifred Orr and Martha Knoblet.
Mrs. Clara Streeter of Prescott
came Monday from
Gagetown
where she has been visiting in the
Leslie Beach home, to visit some
time with her cousins, Mr. and Mrs.
Harve Streeter.
Guests at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Leo Hall Sunday were Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Mopin and family
of Caro and Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Forshee and daughters, Harriett
and Carlan, of Akron.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Seed and
son, Donald, spent Saturday with
Mrs. Geo. Seed and Mrs. Delia
Lauderbach and attended the final
games of the district basketball
tournament here that evening.
Mrs. Kenneth Doverspike and
daughter, Cheryie, of Erie, Pa., are
spending two weeks with the former's aunt, Mrs. John McGrath, and
other relatives. Mrs, Doverspike
is the former Dorothy Schenck.
John A. Sandham spent Saturday and Sunday in St. Johns and
Lansing.
He was accompanied
home by Mrs. Sandham, who had
visited in the homes of their
daughters, Mrs. Eoy Briggs, in St.
Johns, and Mrs. Archie Vallier, in
Lansing.
Mr. and Mrs. G. P. Dupuis and
Miss Caroline Garety left late Saturday evening to spend Sunday in
Detroit. Mr. and Mrs. Dupuis visited the former's brother and family, Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Dupuis,
and children, and Miss Garety visited her sister, Mrs. John Sweeney.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Greenleaf took
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Hunt and
daughters, Sally and Jane, to Detroit Tuesday. Jane returned home
with the Greenleafs to Cass City.
Mr. and Mrs. Hunt left Detroit for
Lafayette, Ind., where Sally will
stay with her aunt, Mrs. Warn
Jackson, while Mr. and Mrs. Hunt
go to Colorado to visit.
About 20 relatives enjoyed dinner with Mrs. E. J. Brown, Sr., in
her home near Wickware Saturday
to help her celebrate her 79th birthday. The dinner was potluck with
a pretty birthday cake, the gift of
Mrs. Carrie Lewis of Deford and
Mrs. Sam Blades to grace the table. The guest of honor received
many gifts. Those who attended
were Mrs. Sarah Kennedy of Bay
City, Mrs. Frank Fisher of Caro,
Mrs. Lewis of Deford, Mr. and
Mrs. Wm. Gracey, Mrs. Thos. Nicols, and Mrs. Wm. Brown and family of Wickware, Mr. and Mrs.
Lorn Brown, Mrs. E. L. Kilbourn,
Mrs. T. C. Hendrick, Mrs. Sam
Blades and Mrs. J. S. McCrea.
PLEASANT HOME HOSPITAL
Patients recently admitted and in
Pleasant Home hospital Wednesday
afternoon included: Emerson Kennedy, Mrs. Pearl Creger, Mrs. Harold Perry and infant daughter,
Claud Martin, Mrs. Arthur Battel
and infant son, Mrs. Archie McAlpine and infant son born Mar. 6,
and Janet Perry, all of Cass City;
Max Marker of Unionville; Mrs.
Wm. McEae and infant daughter,
born Mar. 7, and Mrs. Wm. Griffin
of Decker; Newell Hubbard of Deford; Miss Dorothy Burger of Sandusky; and Mrs. Muriel McLeod
and Chloe Harmon of Caro.
Patients discharged the past
week: Mrs. David Stuckey and baby of Utica; Mrs. Alivn Ehodes and
son of North Branch; Mrs. Jerry
Heronemus and son of Deckerville;
Mrs. John Linzner and infant son,
Carl Wilcox, Irwin Knickerbocker,
and Albert Gostick, all of Unionville; PSter Adolf and Ezra Boice
of Sandusky, Stanley Lewicki and
Mell Ford of Silverwood; Mrs. Alex
Heussner and Irene Navarro of
Decker; Marvin Paape of Snover;
Marvin Greenwood and Jean LaFond of Caro; Harold Ballagh and
Maxine Osentoski of Ubly; Mrs. S.
A. Bradshaw, Orville Wilson and
the Wagner baby, all of Cass City.
Cass City, Michigan.
in This War Automatic Pilot
Greater Than Last Improves Bombing
But Wounded Have Two
Chances to One in 1918.
WASHINGTON. — The Office of
War Information says that more
men are killed outright in this war
than in the last, and that the ratio
of killed in (action to other battle
casualties is twice what it was in
1918.
However, those not killed outright
stand a better chance of surviving
than they did 25 years ago. Speedier and more effective treatment of
the wounded is keeping more of these
casualties alive. '
*
The comprehensive report, based
on information from army and navy
medical departments,, says greater
destructive power of present ordnance, greater firepower and less
stabilization in prepared positions
are taking a greater toll of men.
The army, navy and marine corps
have lost 17,929 men since Pearl
Harbor, through September 30. That
does not include missing and prisoners.
In the First World war, one army
man was killed for every six wounded, while in this war one has been
killed for every three wounded. The
navy lost one killed for every twoplus wounded in the last war, and
one killed for every one-plus wounded since Pearl Harbor.
In the last war, the marine corps
had one killed for every five wounded; now it is one for four.
Six per cent of those wounded in
the last war died, while the percentage now is 3.5, the army said. In
the navy the percentage of wounded who died was 7.35 in 1918; now
it is 3.16. Of the 7,714 marines
wounded in the last war, 12 per cent
died, compared with 3.15 in this war.
Mental cases are running far
ahead of those for the First World
war.
3,771
Aliens Interned
Out of 938,000 in U. S.
WASHINGTON. — Attorney General Francis Biddle announced that
since Pearl Harbor it had been necessary for the Federal Bureau of
Investigation to take into custody
only 14,738 aliens of enemy nationality as persons potentially dangerous
to the security of the United States.
Of this number 3,771 are now interned, 4,113 have been paroled and
1,444 released outright after hearings before local alien enemy hearing boards. The remainder were released after preliminary hearings before United States attorneys.
Mr. Biddle revealed that the 3,771
aliens interned represent less than
one-half of 1 per cent of the more
than 938,000 enemy aliens in the
United States.
Among those interned are 1,853
Germans, 111 Italians, 1,798 Japanese, 6 Hungarians and 2 Rumanians.
Climate-Controlled
Oranges and the other citrus fruits
are typical climate-controlled products. They pan be produced on a
commercial scale only in relatively
restricted areas in and near the
Ruin Created in Air Raids tropics. There oranges and their
cousins, lemons, limes and grapeCredited to Device.
fruit, manufacture generous supplies
of vitamin C, now considered so imNEW YORK.—Details of "one of portant in human diet, and thus
America's best kept military se- make it possible to ship this lifecrets"—the use of an electronically sustaining gift to less favored climes.
controlled automatic pilot—were disclosed with army approval.
The device, said by the army air
force to have been "one of the facMarch 9, 1944.
tors responsible for the devastation"
Buying price—
in raids over Europe and Asia, provides a stable platform for high alFirst-figures, price at farm; sectitude bombing "of vastly increased ond figures, price delivered -at eleaccuracy," and its use was said to vator.
be "equivalent to a material inGrain.
crease in the number of planes par- Wheat No. 2, mixed, bu. 1.59 1.61
ticipating in an attack."
Oats, bu
89 .90
The improvement was described Barley, cwt
2.57 2.60
by the army air force and the Min- Rye, bushel
1.16 1.18
neapolis-Honeywell Regulator com- Buckwheat
2.77 2.80
pany at a luncheon here. The com- Shelled corn, bushel
1.12 1.14
pany co-operated with the army air
Beans.
force on its development after ma- Michigan Navy beans, 1942
terial command officials at Wright
or older
5.30
Field foresaw the need for a modi- Michigan Navy beans, 1943
fied instrument capable of accuratecrop
5.97 6.00
ly controlling aircraft on high alti- Light cranberries, cwt
5.40
tude precision bombing missions.
Light kidney beans, 1942
The disclosures were made in acand older
5.80
cordance with army policy of in- Light kidr^ beans, 1943 crop 6.75
forming the public on major milikidney-beans, 1942
tary developments when it is cer- Dark
and
older
5.8C
tain the enemy no longer is in the
D.urk
kidney
beans,
1943
crop
6.75
dark about them. Existence of the
Produce.
autopilot was unknown previously
_
52
outside military services and the in- Butteifat, Ib
45
dustrial organizations building and Butter, Ib
28
•installing it. The improvement was Eggs, dozen
Livestock.
accepted by the army air force in
06 .09
October, 1941, and for months was Cows, pound
10 .12
standard equipment on American Cattle, pound
15
heavy bombers and some types of Calves, pound
Hogs, pound
12%
bomber-trainer planes.
Poultry.
A spokesman said loss of some
planes bearing the equipment made Rock springers
.26
it reasonable to assume that the Leghorn springers
21
18
enemy knew essential facts about it. Leghorn hens
Alfred M. Wilson, vice president Rock hens
23
in charge of the company's aeronautical division, described the autopilot as designed "to take over completely the duties of the pilot on
bombing runs" and "to hold the
plane on a designed course without
wavering." He added that it was not
designed to replace pilots, but to
give them maximum protection.
Marlette Livestock
Sales Company
Market, Mar. 6, 1944—
Top veals
......16.50-17.00
Censor Gives a Dollar;
Soldier's Wife Gets $700 Fair to good
15.00-16.00
SOUTH BEND, IND.—The censor Commons
10.50-14.00
who placed a dollar in a letter containing two others which a soldier Deacons
1.00- 8.50
had mailed his family had no idea
Best
butcher
it was the nucleus of a welcome
cattle
13.00-13.70
bank account.
Private Edward N. Kleitz, serv- Medium
:....12.00-13.00
ing overseas, sent $2 to a daughter
8.50-10.50
in a children's home and asked her Commons
to pray for her mother, af patient in
.18.50-76.00
a tuberculosis hospital. The censor Feeder cattle
increased the amount to $3—and Light bulls
9.50-10.90
persons far and wide read about it.
35.00-144.00
Mrs. Kleitz reported that in the Stock bulls
last few weeks they have sent her Best beef
and her children $700.
cows
9.50-10.00
Fair
to
good
8.00- 9.00
Yankee Doughnut Stand
New Zealand Prisoners
6.50- 7.50
Beats Army to Salamaua Gutters
Win Degrees in Germany
WITH ALLIED TROOPS AT banners
65.00-137.00
WELLINGTON, N. Z.—New Zea- SALAMAUA, NEW GUINEA.—Solland university has just gained its diers call it "the Salamaua Salva- 3est hogs
.13.60-14.10
first graduates inside Germany. A tion army," and it's been doing a
new degrees list includes war pris- roaring business. Somehow Red 'Jght hogs ............10.50-12.50
oners who have completed study Cross workers John Taylor of Roughs
10.50-11.80
courses.
The first graduates are Capt. J.
H. Hall, former newspaper editor
and later public relations officer of
the New Zealand Expeditionary
force, who was captured in Greece
and has just been graduated as a
Bachelor of Laws, and L. D. Lee,
who received a Bachelor of Commerce degree, for which he had
completed most of his study before
his departure overseas.
New U. S. Gun Can Hit
Bomber 12 Miles High
DENVER. — A new heavy gun
which will fire a shell 12 miles high,
or twice the present ceiling of bombers, was revealed by Maj. Gen. L. H.
Campbell Jr., chief of ordnance.
General Campbell described the
new weapon as a 120-millimeter gun,
which can throw its projectile 60,000
feet, and at the same time can be
used at lower levels. The gun is "the
most beautiful thing I ever saw,"
Campbell said. The gun, he said,
was much better than the Germans'
88-millimeter.
Austrians and Italians
Reported Fraternizing
PORT BOU, SPAIN.—A division of
Austrian alpinists ordered to rout
about 10,000 Italian troops loyal to
Premier Marshal Badoglio from the
French maritime Alps fraternized
with them instead and even supplied
them munitions, a border dispatch said. This state of affairs was
reported finally to have forced withdrawal of the Austrians from the region between Nice and Mfenton and
their replacement by an SS division
and a regiment of Nazi mountaineers.
HoIe-in-One Is Kept
Secret From His Wife
SPOKANE, WASH. — Golfer
Shine McKenna's friends kept his
secret well.
News that he scored a 199-yard
hole-in-one in the middle of the
summer didn't leak out until the
other day.
When the ball hit the cup he
didn't whoop with glee. He said:
"Gosh, fellas, my wife doesn't
know I'm playing golf today."
Gramercy Park, N. Y., and Leo
Schwartz of Washington,*D. C., managed to get onto the-Salamaua Isthmus ahead of the main body of
American troops. They pitched their
tent beside a huge shell crater on
the beach and started hawking their
coffee and doughnuts — as the
amazed Americans piled off their
landing boats.
Son of Guadalcanal Hero
Commands Patrol Chaser
WASHINGTON.—Lieut. Daniel J.
Callaghan Jr., son of Rear Adm.
Daniel J. Callaghan, killed when a
shell tore the bridge from the USS
San Francisco in the Battle of Guadalcanal, has taken command of a
patrol chaser, the navy has announced.
Callaghan was an end on the University of California Rose Bowl
champions who defeated Alabama
18 to 0 in 1937.
Market March 8, 1944—
Good beef steers
and heifers _>. 13.00-14.2t
Fair to good
11.50-13.0t
Common
9.50-11.00
Good beef cows —.10.00-11.3®
Fair to good
beef cows „„.„„„. 8.00- 9.5®
Stock bulls
20.00-80.0t
Canners and
cutters
;.
5.00- 7.5®
Good bologna
bulls
9.50-10.5i
Light bulls
9.00-lO.Ot
Dairy cows
70.00-145.00
Feeder cattle
..20.00-70.0®
Deacons
1.00- 9.0i
Good veal
.16.00-17.0®
Culls and
commons —
10.00-13.51
Fair to good
14.00-15.5t
Choice hogs, 200
to 250 pounds ....13.50-13.8t
Choice hogs, 250
to 300 pounds ....12.50-13.5t
Heavy .....,
12.00-13.00
Light hogs
10.00-12.5t
Roughs
10.00-12.0t
Sale every Wednesday at 2 p. m.
Sandusky Livestock
Sales Company
W. H. Turnbull
Worthy Tait
Auctioneers
Cemetery
Largest and Finest Stock Ever
in This Territory at Caro,
Michigan.
Charles F. Mudge
Local Eepresentative
Phone 99F14
CARO, MICHIGAN
PHONE 458
How to Write a
Want Ad
WASHINGTON. — The Office of
Price Administration lowered the
down payment requirement for
house purchases from the 33% to 20
per cent.
Liberalization of the down payment is in line with settled OPA rent
control policy to relax provisions of
the rent regulation affecting sales
where the situation permits. The
action was taken in recognition of
some abatement in the acute pressure for housing in centers of war
production for the country as a
whole.
NEW YORK.—The German news
agency DNB said that three more
Germans had been executed for
"defeatism."
The broadcast, heard by U. S.
government monitors, reported that
one of those executed, a 45-year-old
waiter, was accused of trying to "undermine the morale of the home
front by making extraordinary disruptive statements in inns and expressing defeatist views to customers." The other two men were 60
years old.
Wednesday's Market
at Sandusky Yards
iale every Monday at 1:00 P. M.
Down Payment Cut for
Home Buyers by OP A
Three Germans Executed
For 'Defeatist Views'
From Field to Battleship
Farm products such as leather,
wool, cotton, turpentine, lumber ge
into the structure of a modern ship.
FURNITURE FOR SALE
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Article.
How many.
Size and style.
Color and finish.
Material and
construction.
6. Used how long.
7. Conditions.
8. Special features.
9. Original cost.
10. Price and terms.
11. Reason for selling.
12. When and where
it can be seen.
13. Name, address
and phone number.
EXAMPLE
LAEGE Overstuffed Davenport.
Soundly built, hardwood frame,
full-spring-and-web construction.
Taupe mohair cover, three loose
cushions. Used 8 months, shows
no wear. Cost $80. Moving to
smaller house. Your opportunity
at $35. Call at residence any
day but Sunday, 6872 Washington Ave., Cass City. Phone 777.