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HOME at the SPARTA FOUNDRY CO. Wwkl'i Largest Producer* of Piston Rinc Castings THE SENTINEL-LEADER PUBLISHED WEEKLY IN ONE OF MICHIGAN'S MOST PLEASANT AND PROSPEROUS AGR ICIJLTURAL AND INDUSTRIAL COMMUNITIES WATCH- criptlon on time. VOLUME 61—ESTABLISHED 1876 SPARTA, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 15, 1937 NUMBER 28 1' 4th ANNUAL SUMMER SHOPPING EDITION SPONSORED BY THE SPARTA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE FROM JULY 15th TO SEPTEMBER 16th INCLUSIVE Shopping Edition To Be Issued Next Ten Weeks Beginning with this week and for the next ten consecutive weeks up to and including September 16. the Sen- tinel-Leader will issue the 4th annual summer shopping editions sponsored by the Sparta Chamber of Commerce. Each week an effort will be made to reach more than 2000 families within the shopping area of Sparta through these newspapers and circulars. A new picture and message will be released on these special advertising pages each week. We call your atten- tion especially to these pictures which have been sent 'a us by a large city newspaper. It is said that the artist received $250.00 for painting each or- iginal picture. The advertising In these spccial shop- ping editions makes it possible to sccure the best merchandise values possible by trading with local mer- chants. These cooperating merchants and dealers are interested In the grow- th of Sparta and are deserving of your support. Mrs. Francis Brown Injured By Train Monday Morning Mrs. Francis Brown. 36, wife of Frank Brown, was injured critically last Monday morning when the auto- mobile she was driving was struck by a Pere Marquette railway train at the Gardner St., crossing. Attendants at St. Mary's state that her skull was scalped ln addition to t. i serious fracture, but reported Wednes- day that her chances for recovery are fair. Mrs. Brown was returning home after having driven her husband to work on the WFA sewer project. The car was completely demolished. Ranger Is Crippled on First Test Cruise GOVERNMENT AIDS FRUIT GROWERS IN SECURING PICKERS BAKING BUSINESS IS FIG EMPLOYER, SAYS PERCY OWEN "Iii i-p'vc ul ul the .atest labor-sav- ing equipment used in largr, modern bakeries, the American baking indus- try is the third largest employer among our various industries." This statement came from Percy Owen, president of Michigan BaLerles, Inc. "The baking Industry employs 200. wage earners with a payroll of approx- imately $250,000,000 annually." Mr. Owen further commented "And with better hours, better wages and better working conditions have come greater efficiency." Referring specifically to the payroll of Michigan Bakeries. Inc.. bakers of "Michigan'" bread and rolls, he said that the total amount was in excess of $450,000 annually, with 350 persons be- ing employed. The following additional facts, re- lating to the volume of bread ngredl- ents used by Michigan Bakeries, he al- so cited: 85,000 barrels of flour; 6 tons of lard per week; 8 tons of sugar per week; and 15 tons of yeast pes month. MARX BROTHERS FEA- TURED AT OUR THEATRE Friday and Saturday of this week Our Theatre is presenting "The Go- Getter" featuring George Brent jad Anita Louise. Movie fans are warn- ed by critics to be prepared for a shock right at the beginning of the picture. The story is taken from Peter B. Kyne's celebrated novel. Sunday and Monday the Marx Brothers appear An their hilarious comedy "A Day at the Races." The Marx Brothers need no introduction or ballyhooing. Whoever has seen them once will not miss them whenever they appear. July 20 and 21, the usual double fea- tures will be shown. 'They Wanted to be Married" with Betty Purness a s a n heiress and Gordon Jones a newspaper cameraman, and "Thunder ln the City" with Edward G. Robinson in the lead. Both pictures are crammed with thrills and plenty of excitement, the latter showing Robinson in a powerful role. More peach pickers will be needed in the Sparta area this year than ever before, according to local authorities. The National Reemployment Service will have a representative at the City Hall in Sparta every Thursday morn- ing to register and direct those want- ing this work. This free government service will also send out applicants who register in the Graid Rapids and other offices. Local fruit growers wanting help can call the Grand Rapids office (tele- phone 93468 > o r write or call at the dis- trict office 110 north Ionia Ave. Pick- ers will be referred out to their farms. Every man or woman sent really wants to work and has been carefully inter- viewed by the district or itinerant of- fice. The Sparta office will receive orders and refer competent pickers. GENERAL MOTORS BUILDS 13 MILLION CHEVROLETS Another milestone ln Industry was reached Wednesday .when the 13-mil- lion Chevrolet rolled off the assembly line ln the Flint plant of the Chevro- let Division. General Motors Corpora- tion. In spite of interrupted production. Chevrolet's 13th million car was pro- duced in a period of just two days more than 11 months, the second shortest million-unit period in the company's history. Officials stated that the de- mand for the 1937 models has exceeded anything heretofore known, and that, but for the frequent interruptions of output since Jan. 1. production and workers' wages would have shattered all previous records, and the present milestone would have been reached from 60 to 90 days earlier. SMALL PEACH CROP VINCENNES. Ind.—A peach crop of 50.000 bushels, only 40 per cent normal, was predicted by Leslie Pierce, United States farm expert, today for Knox county, Indiana's leading fruit-producing county. Sub- zero weather and drought of the last two years killed many trees, he said. MISS ILA BRAYBROOK WEDS ILLINOIS MINISTER A pretty wedding took place at the Church of Christ at Bailey Friday af- ternoon a t 4 o clock, when Rev. Eld- r e t h Russell and Miss Ila Bray brook were united in marriage by the Rev. Donald Moore. Franklin Pitman act- ed as best man and Virginia Oee was maid of honor, with Miss Ila Moore playing the wedding march. The bride wore white silk crepe and carried Cademan lilies and Acelia. The maid of honor was dressed in yellow organdy and carried a mixed bouquet. The church was decorated with roses and lilies. The oouple left after the ceremony for Eldorado. Illinois, where Rev. Rus- ael is minister of t h e Church of Christ FARMER'S UNION PICNIC AT JOHNSON PARK SATURDAY, AUG. 14. The Ottawa-Kent-Allegan County Farm Union Organizations selected their officers and committee chairmen for the Third Annual Western Michl- | gan Farmers' Union Picnic at Johnson Park, near Grandville. The picnic will be on Saturday. August 14, 1937. The committees are already active in laying plans for the securing of prom- inent speakers, arranging for an at- tractive sports program and entertain- ment young and old the whole day long. ICE CREAM SOCIAL The Christian Endeavor of Ballarc' Corners announce an ice cream social to be held on Gillet's lawn at Ballards. July 22. Everyone is welcome. Use printed stationery to express your personality. Typewriter ribbons for all makes of machines. 75 cents. Sentinel-Leader Spar la.—Adv. STAN" GOES ON AN ERRAND OF MERCY fit V 'I r~^3H W i a When tbe kerosene oil gives oat in a home where die farmer's wife is desperately Ul with t h e flu, Robert Armstrong as "Stan." in the new Hollywood talking picture by that name, drives his track b&utard to deliver a supply ai tbe fuel. Ht is seen at tbe left. tbe ofl better while tbs Doctor, in the background, tends to the sick. Tbe Elm is sponsored by the Standard Oil Company ot Indiana. _ (Pfcotn (rum tUOymoo4 prudtttoi by G. Wolff. Im.) Open Air Program, Sparta, July 15 Soon after being launched at Bath, Me., the Ranger, Commodore Harold S. Vanderbilfs America's eup con- tender met with disaster on her first test run and lost her mast. Towed to port it fyad to undergo repairs to fit it for competition with other American ships for the honor of meeting the British challenger, Endeavor II. Scene above shows the Ranger at the time of her launching. Peach Crop May Exceed Record Pro- dustion 011898 The season has been unusually fav- orable for the State's fruit crcps. Spring freeze damage was limited to small areas and was relatively light. Ample moisture has produced excellent growth and. wnlle much fruit dropped during June. a good setting remains and much thinning is found nccessary, especially of peaches. Present prospects indicate the follow- ing percentage increases in production over last year: apples, 50 per cent; peaches. 66 per cent; plums, 49 per cent; cherries, 24 per cent; and grapes. 65 per cent. If these indicated increas- es are attained it will be the largest Michigan production of apples since 1920, of peaches since 1398, and of grapes since 1932. and the largest cher- ry crop for this state on record. While the pear crop is relatively large It was also large last year, and the present outlook L« f o r a production 30.000 bush els smaller than in 1936. ON RECEPTION COMMITTEE FOR N2A CONVENTION H. J. Kurtz, editor of the Sentinel- Leader and Mrs. Kurtz have been chos- en as members of the reception com- mittee for the National Editoiral As- sociation Convention which convenes in Detroit next Monday. Over 1000 edi- tors of daily and weekly newspapers of the United States are expected to at- tend the convention. Other members of the reception com- mittee include: Mr. and Mrs. Schuyler Marsha.'!, St. Johns Republican-News; Mr. and Mrs. George B. Doliver, Battle Creek Moon- Journal : Mr. and Mrs. Vernon J. Brown, -Mason Ingham Couu'y News; Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mac Donald, Gay- lord Herald-Times; Mr. and Willard Crandell, West Branch Herald. Mr. and Mrs. Leon D. Case. Water- vliet Record; Mr. and M.-S. E. J. Mc- call. Grand Haven Daily Tribune; Mr. and Mrs. Harold Pringle, South Hav- en Dally Tribune; Miss Helen Adams. Dundee Reporter; Miss Marion Carter. Crystal Falls Diamond Drill. HASN'T STOPPED READING THE PAPER YET ! Editor, Sentinel-Leader; I wish to thank you for your comments on my talk the other day. You know what to say and how to say them. I read the Sentinel-Leader ev- ery week. Your paper is great and in my humble judgment it Is getting better all the time. I congratulate you upon your suc- cess. Very Sincerely Yours. (Rev.) A. O. Odegard First Baptist Church BAND CONCERT IN SPARTA SATURDAY A band concert will be held in the business district of Sparta next Satur- day evening. The program ls present- ed with tbe compliments of local bus- iness men in connection with the Sat- urday night summer programs arrang- ed by the Sparta Chamber of Com- merce. SPARTA LOCALS Arthur Post. Frank Conran and Rus- sel and Bob Conran saw the doubie- header game between Detroit and Cleveland ln Detroit last Saturday. Mrs. Rebecca Scott and sister. Mrs Alice Woodliff have been cntertaWlng their Ulster, Mrs. Delia Finney, and Mr. and Mrs. Tom Wheeler, Mrs. Dora Lynn and daughter. Dcloris from Met- ropolis, 111., f o r a f e w days. D. A. Biddleman was a guest at the Radio Convention banquet heid in Grand Rapids at the Morton hotel Tuesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. James Cattell enter- tained at dinner Sunday. Mrs. Reb- ecca Scott. Mrs. Alice Woodliff of Sparta. Mrs. Delia Finney. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Wheeler, Mrs. Dora Lynn and daughter Dcloris of Metropolis, 111., a n d Mr/ ind Mrs. Roy McDonald and son of Cedar Springs Walter Bloomer, who has been 111 sine*; Friday, was taken to Blodgett hospital on Tuesday for treatment. The 13th annual Scott reunion was held at Sparta. July 10. Relatives from Mt. Pleasant, Caledonia, Grand Rapids and Cedar Springs were present. Of- ficers elected were Welcome Scott, pres., Oris Scott, vice-pres., Anna Cat- tell. sec'y and treas. There were 42 present with 5 visitors from Metropolis, Illinois. The State Future Farmers of Amer- ica has a 65-piece band playing at the Cherry Festival in Traverse City this week. The band spent last week at Cadillac rehearsing. Members of the band win their places by competition. Norman Bradford, of the local chapter, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Bradford, won a place in the band by playing ihe piccolo and flute. Miss Emma Bradford has been ill in Blodgett hospital for several weeks. Friends are wishing her a speedy re- covery. The Norton Community Club picnic which was to have been held on Thurs- day has been postponed until Satur- day. July 17. Mrs. S. R. Thomas of South Bend. Ind., accompanied by her son. Stan- ley. Jr.. of Detroit, were week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. J. W. Smith. Mrs. T. & DeYoung and children are vacationing in their house car at Brown's Landing at Hess Lake for a j few weeks. Mesdames John Shook. Hine Smith. | Jesse Bettes and S. E. Bellgraph were Friday guests of Mrs. T. C. DeYoung at Hess Lake. Extra Copies Of Sentinel- Leader V.'e have an order for fifty extra copies of last week's Sentinel-Leader placed by a national advertising agency. This organization seemed so well pleased by the way in which their dis- play advertisements were handled in last week's Issue that they wish to secure 50 extra copies dated July 8, 1937. for the purpose of general dis- tribution and will pay 5 cents for each paper up to 50 that we can procure for them. We have exhausted our supply of ex- tra papers, so hope our subscribers will cooperate with us in our efforts to secure additional papers. If your pa- per of last week is In fairly good con- dition, bring It to the Sentinel- Leader o/.'ice this week and receive five cents in exchange. MANY OUT-OF-TOWN RELATIVES, FRIENDS ATTEND GAUT FUNERAL Out-of-town relatives and friends who attended the funeral of Noble Gaut last Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Roy Randall of Grand Rapids; Mrs. Amanda Gaut and Mr. and Mrs. Fritz Balance of Hastings: Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gaut; Mr. and Mrs. Earl Gaut, and Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Gaut of Flint; Mr. and Mrs. Will inn Neal and Robert of Detroit; Mrs. Dora Rutherford of Fre- mont; Mr. and Mrs. William Ruther- ford and son of Fremont; Mr. and Mrs. Archie Haring of Casnovia; Mr. and Mrs John Darling. Mr. and Mrs. Char- les Darling. Mr. ?nd Mrs. Or ville Dar- ling, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hackmuth, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hicks, all of Grand Rapids; Mrs. Anna Try ant and daugh- ter of Lansing; Mrs. Albert Uplinger of Rockford; Barney Lubber and son, Miss Lou Hamilton, Mrs. Althea Blanchard. Mrs. Devos of Coopersville. ANNUAL BODELL REUNION CELEBRATED JULY4TH The Bodell reunion was held July 4th at Gordon Park with 75 present. Lorenzo Bodell of Sparta was the old- est descendant and was elected pres- ident. with Mrs. Mary Cadwell of Kent City clected secretary and treasurer. There were members present Iiom Casnovia. Kent City, Sparta, Newaygo, Coopersville. Muskegon. Grand Rapids. Paris. Belling, Reed City. Scottville. Pontiac and Detroit. CHUBBUCK SCHOOL REUN- ION AT ESTLOW'S LANDING GOLF MATCH SUNDAY A golf match will be staged between the Creston-Bowler golfers and the Sparta-Bowler golfers at Camp Lake Golf Course next Sunday morning. July 18. at 8 o'clock. Local golf enthus- iasts and friends are invitad to attend the match The .-.econd annual reunion of the Chubbuck School will be held at Est- Mr and Mrs. Hairy Watki— visited i tows Undln *- HcSR Lake on S at , urday " his brother. Prank and family. Tuesday Picnlc dinner - tormer TAX NOTICE I win be at the Peoples' State Bank every Saturday during July to collect village taxes. Julia Collins. Sparta Village Treas. and Wednesday of this week. Frank Watkins. Sr„ who is staying at Ionia for several months, was also home for | a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Amos Rhamy enjoy- ed a trip with their house car from Friday until Tuesday stopping at Niles, Coloma and Watervleit. While in Niles they attended the wedding of Miss Ruth Harrington, a home economics teacher in Sparta two years ago The groom was Richard Stroll, also of Niles. The ceremony took place at the Niles Presbyterian church. Ell O. Roberts, member of Kent County Soil Conservation, who recently underwent an operation at St. Mary's hospital, is reported to be gaining in strength, but still ln a critical condi- tion. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Gage of St Petersburg. Fla. and Miss Mildred Reece and Robert Gage of Mishawaka, Indiana, were Sunday guests of A. O. Johnson and W A. Schaefer families. Mrs. Bert Meier and daughter. Car- oline. of Howard City were visitors of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Brack on Tuesday. Mrs Brack accompanied them on a i trip to Montague. MORN IN GSTAR SCHOOL REUNION The Annual Get-te-gether of the former and present members of the Morningstar School District will be held Sunday, July 25 a t the Algoma Grange Hall. Pot-luck dinner at noon followed by a good program. CARD OF TH ANKS We wish to thank our relatives and friends for their kind expressions of sympathy during the sickness and death of our dear husband and father. Mrs. Victor Swenaon and family ' CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank all the friends and neighbors for their Interest, sympathy and assistance during the Illness and death of our dear wife and mother. Edward E Bradford Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Caukin. MACCABEE NOTICE The Maccabees are planning a pic- nic supper Tuesday evening. July 20. at the home of Emma Gillam. Every- one is urged to go. Ladies meet at 2:30 p. m at Gilletfs store The gen- tlemen will come for 6: JO supper. Every lady is to bring table service for her family. Pot-luck supper and a good t.me for all. All women are urged to go in the afternoon. Gov. Murphy To Attend Muskegon Centennial July 17 To the sounds of bursting bomb.% boat whistles, factory sirens and bells. Governor Frank Murphy will officially open the Muskegon Centennial and Lumberjack Festival, mammoth 8100.- 000 civic celebration, on Saturday, July 17th. and 15 days of revelry will follow. For what Muskegon, Michigan, term3 her 100th birthday party. 130 civic or- ganizations have combined with the ai-J of Federal. State. County and City Governments to review in graphic manner the history, romance and gen- era' development of a colorful century. A stockade-enclosed "Tont.-nnial City, covering 54 acres, has been erectcd on Muskegon's waterfront, with log ex- position buildings, old-time lumber camp, saw mill in operation, cook shanties, bunk houses, fire tower, trout stream, waterfall and blockhouses. The U. S. National Forest exhibit. U. S. Department of Agriculture and 106 oth- er major showings representing Indus- try, education, history, art. transporta- tion. commuTiication and various other phases of ancient and modern life are being placed. The Mart Exposition building and Hf.cklcy Field Stadium are also being utllired. More than 300 professional enter- tainers will participate. A 60-foot out- door stage has been built. A five-day pageant." The Passing of the Pine", in- cludes a costumed cast of 900 char- acters. The famous Alma Lumberjacks' Band will play, along with 11 ether bands. Percy Graingnr. internationally known music composer and director, will personally conduct the National Music Camp Band of Interlochen. Na- tive Otlawas are moving Into the' In- dian Village. Live oxen, buffalo, bears and a modern Noah's Ark iilled with live animals, a monkey circus and an exhibit of marine li'e a.-e to be seen. I2u racing carrier pigeons will be re- leased. There will be old fiddler's and flap-Jack-eating contents, and 1.000 watermelons given away. Provisions have been made to accom- modate 500.000 visitors. Hotels, boats, tourist and private homes will provide housing. CAMP LAKE DRAWS NEWSPAPER CRAFTSMEN Mr. and Mrs. Bolander of Youngs- town. Ohio, who have been spending two weeks at Camp Lake are return- ing to their home. Mr. Bolander is with the Youngstown newspaper. Mr. and Mrs. Burt of Grand Rapids are spending the summer at the Stauf- fer Colony. Mr. Burt ls associated with the Grand Rapids Herald. Mr. McKenna, of the Grand Rapids Herald, and his family, are located next door to the Burts. and down the shore to the west is Mr. Montgomery of the Grand Rapids Press. CARD OF TTiANKS We wish to express our heartfelt thanks and appreciation to our neigh- bors and friends, and Mr. anrl Mrs. Bettes for their kind deeds and expres- sions of sympathy during our recent bereavement, the loss of our husband and father. Mrs. Edith Helsel and family. Editors To Attend Detroit Conven- tion Next Week The Sentinel-Leader, cooperating with 270 daily and weekly newspapers in Michigan, will serve Jointly as host nex» week to approximately 350 news- paper editors Srom all parts of the United States at a three-day conven- tion in Detroit and a four-day state tour. Through the medium of the Michi- gan Prass association, newspapers are taking the lead in a movement to pub • licize industrial and vacation resources of the state, awarding a Pontiac de luxe sedan to the outstate editor who writes the best published presentation of Michigan. Speakers at the Detroit Convention. which opens Monday. July 19. include Edgar Guest, poet; W. G. Cameron of the Ford I.* ,1 company; Charles F. Kettering of General Motors; W. F. Wylle, Cincinnati Post; and James G. Slahlman, Nashville Banner, president of the American Newspaper Publishers' association. Gov. Frank Murphy and Mayor Couzens have also been invited to speak. Editors will visit Greenfield Village at Dearborn and the Pontiac automo- bile plant. The three Detroit daily- papers will be host at a formal ban- quet. A special air-conditioned train will take the visiting publishers from De- troit to Grand Rapids Thursday morn- ing. July 22. where Senator' Arthur Vandenberg has been invited to apeak at a luncheon at the Pantlind hotel. At Muskegon the editors will /isit the Lumberjack Carnival and Centennial Exposition, following a dinner at the Elks' club with Archie McCrea. editor of the Muskegon Chronicle, serving as to a.st master. Taking a pullman train out of Mus- kegon at midnight, the party will ar- rive early Friday (July 23) at Traverse City in time lor breakfast at Leelanau county resorts. Thence they go by train to Petoskcy for an automobile caravai over the famed shore drive of -cenlc beauty to Cross Village. Indian Maid- ens will serve refreshing drinks; a tribe will conduct ceremonial dances. At Mackinaw City the party will be conveyed by state highway department ferry ovei to Mackinac Island and thence by horse carriages to the Grand Hotel for two days' stay. A pullman train will return the editors to De- troit. Monday. July 26. The state highway department and the four tourist bureaus are cooperat- ing with the Michigan Press associa- tion in helping to handle the state tour and to arrange constructive pub- licity for the state. Philip T. Rich. Midland Daily News, who is chairman of the press convention bureau, tele graphed an invitation to President Roosevelt to address the editors at Mackinac Island. A personal invita- tion was also conveyed to the White House by Senator Prentiss Brown. Claude Riley of Ontonagon ls presi- dent of the 62-year-old state press as- sociation; Chester M. Howell of Ches- aning Ls vice-president, and L. E. Towe of Jonesville is treasurer. H. J. Kurtz, editor of the Sentinel-Leader Is vice- preaw'dent of the 5th dLstrlct. Central offices are maintained at East Lansing. Subscribe to The Sentinel-Leader. CAPITOL NEWS By GENE ALLEMAN Michigan Press Association teachers and pupils are urged to be present. CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank the friends and neighbors. Sparta business men. Sparta Band boys, the Sootch Camp Crowd and the cla* of -87 for the beautiful floral tributes at the death of our dear husband, father and brother; also Em- ory Anderson, the Rev. Stevens, the Rev. Odegard. Greta and George Bet- tes for their helpful servces. also thos* who loaned their cai-s or assisted *n any way. Rose Gaut Mrs. Charles 3aur Mrs. George White Mr*. Fred Olson LANSING—Six months of history at the state capitol have done much t o ] reveal the personality of Frank Mur- phy. governor. Working quietly with apparently no effort to assume the Rooseveltian role of aggressive leadership. Governor Murphy obtained results from the leg- islature that surprised his critics. One month ago prospects for a July 1 rec- ord of achievement were dismal ia- deed. The two houses were caught In a quagmire over civil service: labor re- lation bills appeared in a bewildering succession. The one tendency in legislation which appeared early in the session and continued until the hectic night of adjournment was an indulgence to help home districts solve their local prob- lems of government by granting libera! state aid. MURPHY'S PHILOSOPHY Differing from President Roosevelt ln his philosophy of government. Mur- phy t_-iieves in the traditional balance of government. He has kept "hands off" of the legislature even to the point where responsible party leaders charg- ed him with being "aloof." He con- siders that the Judiciary should retain Its independence. He exalts the func- tion of the executive branch. Declining to impose a -must" pro- gram on the legislature. Murphy invit- ed leaders to hear his views. He let it be known that legislative perogatives would be respected by the executive office. The results were obvious. The leg- islature went on a spending, adding ap- proximately 25 millions to tbe pre- viously record high budget of the state Only two new important sources of in- come were added: tl» A use tax de- signed to obtain revenue from out-state sales, and <2> higher liquor prices through a 55 per cent gross profit in- stead of 40 per cent. Paced with a huge deficit. Murphy ! pleaded with legislators on the final night for a saving clause by which he I rould pare appropriations 10 per oent. J This privilege wai extended, and if the I budget Is balanced. Murphy can claim personally for doing it. LIBERAL LEGISLATION It is rather risky to use the word "liberal" these days, for tnat phrase means one thing to the A. F L. and another thing to the C. I. O. This is best illustrated by the labor relations bill which as finally adopted was the fourth one to bear the num- erical title of "House Bill 571". First came the original bill sponsored by the governor drafted by his legal advisor with the aid of the attorney general's office. Labor objected to a require- ment of mediation before the right to strike, so a substitute bill was brought out of the house labor committee with the governor's personal endorsement. This measure swung to the other ex- treme, in the opinion of employers. The senate sought a compromise through three democrats and three re- publicans. and a senate substitute bill merged for the house substitute bill. Passed by the Senate, the new sub- stitute bill went to the House where laborites protested loudly. It was about 1:30 a. m.. June 26—90 minutes after technical adjournment— that the fourth bill arrived from Mur- phy's officc with the blessing of the A F. of L. It was later that morning when the new bill was finally passed by both the house and the senate. A threatened house revolt was averted by Speaker Geonre Schroder who pro- claimed the measure to be as near ideal as Michigan legislators could make it. THE C. I. O. OBJECTS While the American Federation of Labor approved the aetup for peaceful picketing—really the heart of the new bill—the Committee on Industrial Or- ganization has announced vigorous ob- jection. What is libera; to the A. F of L Ls reactionary to the C. I. O. All of which merely proves that labor is in disagreement over policies and principles. Murphy has refused repeatedly to use fore* to require compliance with state law. as contrasted with the democratic governors of Ohio and Indiana He has been consistently friendly with la- bor ir. Its struggle for new power. If he signs the new labor relations Continued on page 8) i

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Page 1: HOME THE SENTINEL-LEADER PUBLISHED …spartahistory.org/newspaper_splits/The Sentinel Leader/1937/The...our various industries." This statement came from Percy ... tender met with

HOME at t h e

S P A R T A F O U N D R Y C O . W w k l ' i Larges t P roduce r*

of P i s t o n R i n c Cas t i ngs T H E S E N T I N E L - L E A D E R

PUBLISHED WEEKLY IN ONE OF MICHIGAN'S MOST PLEASANT AND PROSPEROUS AGR ICIJLTURAL AND INDUSTRIAL COMMUNITIES

WATCH-

cr ip t lon o n t i m e .

VOLUME 61—ESTABLISHED 1876 SPARTA, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 15, 1937 NUMBER 28

1 '

4th ANNUAL SUMMER SHOPPING EDITION SPONSORED BY THE SPARTA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE F R O M JULY 15th T O SEPTEMBER 16th INCLUSIVE

Shopping Edition To Be Issued

Next Ten Weeks B e g i n n i n g wi th t h i s week a n d fo r

t h e n e x t t e n consecut ive weeks u p t o a n d inc lud ing S e p t e m b e r 16. t h e S e n -t i n e l - L e a d e r will issue t h e 4 t h a n n u a l s u m m e r shopping ed i t i ons sponsored by t h e S p a r t a C h a m b e r of C o m m e r c e .

E a c h week a n e f f o r t will be m a d e t o r e a c h m o r e t h a n 2000 f ami l i e s w i th in t h e s h o p p i n g area of S p a r t a t h r o u g h t h e s e newspape r s a n d c i rculars .

A n e w p ic tu re a n d message will be r e l e a s e d on these special a dve r t i s i ng p a g e s e a c h week. W e call y o u r a t t e n -t i on especial ly to these p i c tu re s wh ich h a v e been sent ' a u s by a l a rge c i ty n e w s p a p e r . I t is sa id t h a t t h e a r t i s t r ece ived $250.00 fo r p a i n t i n g e a c h o r -ig ina l p i c tu re .

T h e adver t i s ing In these spcc ia l s h o p -p i n g ed i t ions m a k e s it possible t o s c c u r e t h e best m e r c h a n d i s e va lues possible by t r ad ing wi th local m e r -c h a n t s . T h e s e coopera t ing m e r c h a n t s a n d d e a l e r s are in te res ted In t h e grow-t h of S p a r t a a n d a re dese rv ing of your s u p p o r t .

Mrs. Francis Brown Injured By Train

Monday Morning Mrs. F r a n c i s Brown. 36, wi fe of

F r a n k Brown, was i n j u r e d cr i t ica l ly l a s t Monday m o r n i n g w h e n t h e a u t o -mobi le she was d r iv ing was s t r u c k by a P e r e M a r q u e t t e ra i lway t r a i n a t t h e G a r d n e r St., crossing.

A t t e n d a n t s a t St . M a r y ' s s t a t e t h a t h e r skull w a s scalped ln a d d i t i o n t o t.

i ser ious f r a c t u r e , but r e p o r t e d W e d n e s -d a y t h a t h e r c h a n c e s for recovery a r e f a i r .

Mrs . Brown w a s r e t u r n i n g h o m e a f t e r hav ing dr iven h e r h u s b a n d t o work on t h e W F A sewer p ro j ec t . T h e c a r was complete ly demol ished .

Ranger Is Crippled on First Test Cruise

GOVERNMENT AIDS FRUIT GROWERS IN

SECURING PICKERS

BAKING BUSINESS IS FIG EMPLOYER, SAYS

P E R C Y O W E N

"I i i i-p'vc u l u l t h e . a tes t l a b o r - s a v -ing e q u i p m e n t used in l a r g r , m o d e r n baker ies , t h e Amer ican bak ing i n d u s -t ry is t h e t h i r d larges t e m p l o y e r a m o n g o u r va r ious indus t r i es . "

T h i s s t a t e m e n t c a m e f r o m P e r c y O w e n , p re s iden t of Mich igan BaLerles , I n c .

" T h e bak ing Indus t ry employs 200. w a g e e a r n e r s with a payrol l of a p p r o x -i m a t e l y $250,000,000 a n n u a l l y . " Mr. O w e n f u r t h e r c o m m e n t e d " A n d wi th b e t t e r hours , bet ter wages a n d b e t t e r w o r k i n g condi t ions have c o m e g r e a t e r e f f i c i e n c y . "

R e f e r r i n g specifically t o t h e payrol l of M i c h i g a n Baker ies . Inc. . b a k e r s of "Mich igan ' " bread a n d rolls, he sa id t h a t t h e to t a l a m o u n t was in excess of $450,000 annua l ly , w i th 350 p e r s o n s be-i n g employed .

T h e following a d d i t i o n a l f ac t s , r e -l a t i n g t o t h e volume of b r e a d n g r e d l -e n t s u s e d by Michigan Baker ies , he a l -so c i t e d : 85,000 bar re ls of f l o u r ; 6 t o n s of l a rd p e r week; 8 t o n s of s u g a r per week ; a n d 15 tons of yeas t pes m o n t h .

MARX BROTHERS FEA-TURED AT OUR THEATRE

F r i d a y a n d S a t u r d a y of t h i s week O u r T h e a t r e is p r e s e n t i n g " T h e G o -G e t t e r " f e a t u r i n g George B r e n t j a d A n i t a Louise. Movie f a n s a r e w a r n -e d by cr i t ics to be p r e p a r e d f o r a shock r i g h t a t t h e beg inn ing of t h e p ic tu re . T h e s to ry is t a k e n f r o m P e t e r B. K y n e ' s ce lebrated novel .

S u n d a y a n d M o n d a y t h e M a r x B r o t h e r s appea r An the i r h i l a r ious c o m e d y "A Day a t t h e Races . " T h e M a r x B r o t h e r s need n o i n t r o d u c t i o n o r ba l lyhoo ing . Whoever h a s seen t h e m o n c e will n o t miss t h e m w h e n e v e r t hey a p p e a r .

J u l y 20 a n d 21, t h e u sua l d o u b l e f e a -t u r e s will be shown. ' T h e y W a n t e d t o b e M a r r i e d " with B e t t y P u r n e s s a s a n h e i r e s s a n d Gordon J o n e s a n e w s p a p e r c a m e r a m a n , a n d " T h u n d e r ln t h e C i t y " w i t h E d w a r d G . R o b i n s o n in t h e l ead . B o t h p ic tures a r e c r a m m e d wi th t h r i l l s a n d p len ty of e x c i t e m e n t , t h e l a t t e r showing Robinson in a p o w e r f u l ro le .

More p e a c h p ickers will be n e e d e d in the S p a r t a a r e a t h i s y e a r t h a n ever before , accord ing to local au tho r i t i e s . T h e Na t iona l R e e m p l o y m e n t Service will have a r e p r e s e n t a t i v e a t t h e Ci ty Ha l l in S p a r t a every T h u r s d a y m o r n -i n g t o reg is te r a n d d i rec t those w a n t -ing t h i s work. T h i s f r e e g o v e r n m e n t service will a lso send ou t a p p l i c a n t s w h o regis ter in t h e G r a i d R a p i d s a n d o t h e r off ices .

Local f r u i t g rowers w a n t i n g h e l p can ca l l t he G r a n d R a p i d s o f f ice ( te le-p h o n e 93468 > or wri te o r cal l a t t h e d is -t r i c t of f ice 110 n o r t h Ion ia Ave. P i c k -e r s will be r e f e r r e d ou t to t he i r f a r m s . Every m a n or w o m a n sen t real ly w a n t s t o work a n d h a s been ca re fu l ly i n t e r -viewed by t h e d is t r ic t or i t i n e r a n t o f -f i ce . T h e S p a r t a o f f i ce will rece ive o r d e r s a n d r e f e r c o m p e t e n t p ickers .

GENERAL MOTORS BUILDS 13 MILLION CHEVROLETS

Anothe r mi les tone ln Indus t ry w a s r e a c h e d W e d n e s d a y .when t h e 13-mil -l ion Chevro le t rolled off t h e assembly l ine ln t h e F l in t p l a n t of t h e C h e v r o -le t Division. G e n e r a l Motors C o r p o r a -t i on .

I n sp i te of i n t e r r u p t e d p r o d u c t i o n . Chevro le t ' s 13th mil l ion ca r was p r o -d u c e d in a per iod of j u s t two d a y s m o r e t h a n 11 m o n t h s , t h e second s h o r t e s t m i l l i on -un i t per iod in t h e c o m p a n y ' s h i s to ry . Of f i c i a l s s t a t e d t h a t t h e d e -m a n d fo r t h e 1937 models h a s exceeded a n y t h i n g h e r e t o f o r e known, a n d t h a t , bu t f o r t h e f r e q u e n t i n t e r r u p t i o n s of o u t p u t s ince J a n . 1. p roduc t ion a n d workers ' wages would have s h a t t e r e d all previous records , a n d t h e p r e s e n t mi les tone would h a v e been r e a c h e d f r o m 60 t o 90 d a y s ear l ier .

SMALL PEACH CROP VINCENNES. Ind.—A p e a c h c rop

of 50.000 bushels , only 40 pe r cen t n o r m a l , was p r e d i c t e d by Lesl ie Pierce, U n i t e d S t a t e s f a r m expe r t , t oday f o r K n o x county , I n d i a n a ' s l ead ing f r u i t - p r o d u c i n g county . S u b -ze ro w e a t h e r a n d d r o u g h t of t h e l a s t two yea r s ki l led m a n y t rees , h e said .

MISS ILA BRAYBROOK WEDS ILLINOIS MINISTER

A p r e t t y wedding took p lace a t t h e C h u r c h of Chr i s t a t Bai ley F r i d a y a f -t e r n o o n a t 4 o clock, w h e n Rev . E l d -r e t h Russe l l and Miss I l a B r a y brook w e r e u n i t e d in m a r r i a g e by t h e R e v . D o n a l d Moore. F r a n k l i n P i t m a n a c t -e d a s best m a n a n d Virginia O e e w a s m a i d of honor , w i th Miss I l a Moore p l a y i n g t h e wedding m a r c h .

T h e br ide wore wh i t e silk c r epe a n d c a r r i e d C a d e m a n lilies a n d Acelia. T h e m a i d of honor was dressed in yellow o r g a n d y a n d carr ied a mixed bouque t . T h e c h u r c h was deco ra t ed w i t h roses a n d lilies.

T h e oouple l e f t a f t e r t h e ce remony f o r E ldorado . Illinois, w h e r e Rev . R u s -ael is m i n i s t e r of t h e C h u r c h of C h r i s t

FARMER'S UNION PICNIC A T JOHNSON P A R K

SATURDAY, AUG. 14.

T h e O t t a w a - K e n t - A l l e g a n C o u n t y F a r m Union Organ i za t i ons selected t h e i r o f f i ce r s a n d c o m m i t t e e c h a i r m e n f o r t h e T h i r d A n n u a l W e s t e r n M i c h l -

| g a n F a r m e r s ' Un ion P icn ic a t J o h n s o n P a r k , n e a r Grandv i l l e . T h e p i cn i c will be o n S a t u r d a y . Augus t 14, 1937.

T h e commi t t ee s a r e a l r eady ac t ive in lay ing p lans fo r t h e secur ing of p r o m -i n e n t speakers , a r r a n g i n g f o r a n a t -t r a c t i v e spo r t s p r o g r a m a n d e n t e r t a i n -m e n t y o u n g a n d old t h e whole d a y long.

ICE CREAM SOCIAL T h e C h r i s t i a n Endeavor of Ballarc '

C o r n e r s a n n o u n c e a n ice c r e a m social t o be held o n Gi l le t ' s l a w n a t Ba l l a rds . J u l y 22. Everyone is welcome.

Use p r in t ed s t a t i o n e r y t o express y o u r personal i ty .

T y p e w r i t e r r ibbons f o r all m a k e s of m a c h i n e s . 75 cents . S e n t i n e l - L e a d e r S p a r la.—Adv.

STAN" GOES ON AN ERRAND OF MERCY

f i t

V ' I

r ~ ^ 3 H W i a

W h e n tbe ke rosene oil g ives o a t in a home w h e r e d i e f a r m e r ' s w i f e i s despera te ly Ul wi th t h e flu, R o b e r t A r m s t r o n g as " S t a n . " in the n e w H o l l y w o o d ta lk ing p ic tu re b y t ha t n a m e , dr ives h is t r ack b&uta rd to deliver a supp ly ai t b e fue l . H t i s seen a t t b e lef t . t b e ofl b e t t e r whi le t b s Doc to r , in the b a c k g r o u n d , t ends to the sick. T b e Elm is sponsored by t h e S t a n d a r d Oil C o m p a n y ot I nd i ana .

_ (Pfcotn (rum tUOymoo4 prudtttoi by G. Wolff. Im.) Open Air Program, Sparta, July 15

Soon after being launched at Bath, Me., the Ranger, Commodore Harold S. Vanderbilfs America's eup con-tender met with disaster on her first test run and lost her mast. Towed to p o r t it fyad to undergo repairs to fit it for competition with other American ships for the honor of meeting the British c h a l l e n g e r , Endeavor II. Scene above shows the Ranger at the time of her launching.

Peach Crop May Exceed Record Pro-

dustion 0 1 1 8 9 8 T h e season h a s been unusua l l y f a v -

orab le fo r t h e S t a t e ' s f r u i t crcps . S p r i n g f reeze d a m a g e w a s l imited to smal l a r e a s a n d w a s re la t ive ly l ight . Ample mois ture h a s p r o d u c e d excellent g rowth and . wnl le m u c h f r u i t d ropped d u r i n g J u n e . a good s e t t i n g r e m a i n s and m u c h t h i n n i n g is f o u n d nccessary , especially of peaches .

P r e s e n t prospects i n d i c a t e t h e fol low-ing pe rcen tage inc reases in p roduc t ion over las t y e a r : apples , 50 pe r c e n t ; peaches . 66 pe r c e n t ; p l u m s , 49 pe r c e n t ; cherr ies , 24 per c e n t ; a n d grapes . 65 per cent . If these i n d i c a t e d inc reas -es a r e a t t a i n e d it will be t h e larges t Mich igan p roduc t ion of a p p l e s since 1920, of peaches s ince 1398, and of g rapes since 1932. a n d t h e la rges t c h e r -r y c r o p for t h i s s t a t e o n record. Whi le t h e p e a r crop is re la t ive ly l a r g e It was also large last year , a n d t h e p re sen t out look L« fo r a p r o d u c t i o n 30.000 bush els smal le r t h a n in 1936.

ON RECEPTION COMMITTEE FOR N2A CONVENTION

H. J . K u r t z , ed i tor of t h e S e n t i n e l -Leade r a n d Mrs. K u r t z h a v e been chos-en as m e m b e r s of t h e r e c e p t i o n com-m i t t e e fo r t h e Na t iona l Edi to i ra l As-socia t ion Conven t ion w h i c h convenes in De t ro i t n e x t M o n d a y . Over 1000 edi-tors of daily a n d weekly n e w s p a p e r s of t h e Un i t ed S t a t e s a r e expec t ed t o a t -t end t h e conven t ion .

O t h e r m e m b e r s of t h e r e c e p t i o n com-mi t t ee inc lude :

Mr. a n d Mrs . Schuy le r Marsha. ' ! , St . J o h n s R e p u b l i c a n - N e w s ; M r . a n d Mrs. George B. Doliver, B a t t l e C r e e k M o o n -J o u r n a l : Mr . a n d M r s . V e r n o n J . Brown, -Mason I n g h a m C o u u ' y News; Mr. a n d Mrs. P a u l M a c Dona ld , G a y -lord H e r a l d - T i m e s ; M r . a n d Wil lard Crande l l , Wes t B r a n c h H e r a l d .

Mr. a n d Mrs . Leon D. Case. W a t e r -vliet Record ; Mr . a n d M.-S. E. J . Mc-c a l l . G r a n d H a v e n Da i ly T r i b u n e ; Mr. a n d Mrs. Haro ld Pr ing le , S o u t h H a v -e n Dally T r i b u n e ; Miss H e l e n Adams. D u n d e e R e p o r t e r ; Miss M a r i o n Ca r t e r . C r y s t a l Fa l l s D i a m o n d Dri l l .

HASN'T STOPPED READING THE

PAPER YET !

Editor, S e n t i n e l - L e a d e r ; I wish to t h a n k you f o r your

c o m m e n t s o n m y ta lk t h e o t h e r day . You know w h a t t o s ay a n d how to say t h e m .

I read t h e S e n t i n e l - L e a d e r ev-ery week. Your p a p e r is g rea t a n d in my h u m b l e j u d g m e n t it Is ge t t ing be t te r all t h e t ime . I cong ra tu l a t e you u p o n your suc-cess.

Very Sincere ly Yours . (Rev.) A. O. O d e g a r d

F i r s t B a p t i s t C h u r c h

BAND CONCERT IN SPARTA SATURDAY

A b a n d concer t will be he ld in t h e bus iness d is t r ic t of S p a r t a n e x t S a t u r -day evening. T h e p r o g r a m ls p r e s e n t -ed wi th tbe c o m p l i m e n t s of local bus -iness m e n in connec t ion w i t h t h e S a t -u r d a y n igh t s u m m e r p r o g r a m s a r r a n g -ed by t h e S p a r t a C h a m b e r of C o m -merce .

SPARTA LOCALS A r t h u r Pos t . F r a n k C o n r a n a n d R u s -

sel a n d Bob C o n r a n saw t h e doubie -h e a d e r g a m e be tween De t ro i t a n d Cleveland ln D e t r o i t l a s t S a t u r d a y .

Mrs. Rebecca Sco t t a n d s is ter . Mrs Alice Woodliff h a v e been c n t e r t a W l n g the i r Ulster, Mrs . Del ia F inney , a n d Mr. a n d Mrs. T o m W h e e l e r , Mrs. Dora Lynn a n d d a u g h t e r . Dclor is f r o m M e t -ropolis, 111., f o r a few days .

D. A. B i d d l e m a n w a s a guest a t t h e R a d i o C o n v e n t i o n b a n q u e t heid in G r a n d R a p i d s a t t h e M o r t o n ho te l T u e s d a y even ing .

Mr . a n d Mrs . J a m e s Ca t te l l e n t e r -t a i n e d a t d i n n e r S u n d a y . Mrs. Reb -ecca Scot t . Mrs . Alice Woodliff of S p a r t a . Mrs . D e l i a F i n n e y . Mr . a n d Mrs. T o m W h e e l e r , Mrs . D o r a L y n n a n d d a u g h t e r Dclor is of Metropolis , 111., a n d M r / i nd Mrs . Roy McDona ld a n d son of C e d a r S p r i n g s

W a l t e r Bloomer , w h o h a s been 111 sine*; F r i d a y , w a s t a k e n t o B lodge t t hosp i ta l o n T u e s d a y f o r t r e a t m e n t .

T h e 13th a n n u a l S c o t t r eun ion was held a t S p a r t a . J u l y 10. Re la t ives f r o m Mt. P l e a s a n t , C a l e d o n i a , G r a n d R a p i d s a n d Ceda r S p r i n g s were p re sen t . O f -f icers e lected were Welcome Scot t , pres., Or i s Sco t t , vice-pres . , A n n a C a t -tell. sec 'y a n d t r ea s . T h e r e were 42 p resen t w i th 5 v is i tors f r o m Metropol is , I l l inois.

T h e S t a t e F u t u r e F a r m e r s of A m e r -ica h a s a 65-piece b a n d p lay ing a t t h e C h e r r y Fes t iva l i n T r a v e r s e City t h i s week. T h e b a n d s p e n t last week a t Cadi l l ac r e h e a r s i n g . M e m b e r s of t h e b a n d win t h e i r p l aces by compet i t ion . N o r m a n B r a d f o r d , of t h e local c h a p t e r , son of Mr . a n d Mrs . L y n n B r a d f o r d , won a p lace in t h e b a n d by p lay ing i h e piccolo a n d f l u t e .

Miss E m m a B r a d f o r d h a s been ill in Blodge t t h o s p i t a l f o r several weeks. F r i e n d s a r e w i sh ing h e r a speedy r e -covery.

T h e N o r t o n C o m m u n i t y Club p icnic which w a s t o h a v e been held on T h u r s -day h a s b e e n p o s t p o n e d un t i l S a t u r -day. J u l y 17.

Mrs . S. R. T h o m a s of S o u t h Bend . Ind. , a c c o m p a n i e d by h e r son . S t a n -ley. J r . . of D e t r o i t , were week-end gues ts of Mr . a n d Mrs. C. J . W. S m i t h .

Mrs . T . & D e Y o u n g a n d ch i ld ren a re vaca t ion ing in t h e i r house ca r a t Brown ' s L a n d i n g a t Hess L a k e fo r a

j few weeks.

M e s d a m e s J o h n Shook. Hine S m i t h . | J esse Be t t e s a n d S. E. Be l l g r aph were

Fr iday gues ts of Mrs . T . C. De Young a t Hess Lake .

Extra Copies Of Sentinel-

Leader V.'e have a n o rde r for f i f t y e x t r a

copies of l a s t week's Sen t ine l -Leade r placed by a na t i ona l adver t i s ing agency.

T h i s o r g a n i z a t i o n seemed so well p leased by t h e way in which the i r d i s -play a d v e r t i s e m e n t s were h a n d l e d in last week 's Issue t h a t t hey wish t o secure 50 e x t r a copies da ted Ju ly 8, 1937. fo r t h e pu rpose of genera l d i s -t r ibu t ion a n d will pay 5 cen t s f o r e a c h paper up t o 50 t h a t we can p rocure for t h e m .

W e h a v e e x h a u s t e d ou r supply of ex-t ra papers , so hope our subscr ibers will coopera te w i t h us in ou r e f f o r t s t o secure a d d i t i o n a l papers . If your p a -pe r of l a s t week is In fa i r ly good c o n -d i t ion , b r ing It t o t h e S e n t i n e l - Leader o/. ' ice t h i s week a n d receive five c e n t s in exchange .

MANY OUT-OF-TOWN RELATIVES, FRIENDS

ATTEND GAUT FUNERAL

O u t - o f - t o w n re la t ives a n d f r i e n d s who a t t e n d e d t h e f u n e r a l of Noble G a u t l a s t S u n d a y were Mr. a n d Mrs. Roy R a n d a l l of G r a n d Rap ids ; Mrs . A m a n d a G a u t a n d Mr. a n d Mrs. F r i t z Ba l ance of H a s t i n g s : Mr. a n d Mrs. Ca r l G a u t ; Mr . a n d Mrs. Ear l G a u t , a n d Mr . a n d Mrs . F loyd G a u t of F l i n t ; Mr. a n d Mrs. Wil l i n n Neal a n d Rober t of D e t r o i t ; Mrs . D o r a R u t h e r f o r d of F r e -m o n t ; M r . a n d Mrs. Wi l l iam R u t h e r -fo rd a n d son of F r e m o n t ; M r . a n d Mrs. Archie H a r i n g of Casnovia ; Mr. a n d M r s J o h n D a r l i n g . Mr. a n d Mrs. C h a r -les Dar l ing . Mr . ? n d Mrs. Or ville D a r -ling, M r . a n d Mrs. H e n r y H a c k m u t h , Mr . a n d Mrs . Ed Hicks, a l l of G r a n d R a p i d s ; Mrs . A n n a T r y a n t a n d d a u g h -t e r of L a n s i n g ; Mrs . Alber t Up l inger of R o c k f o r d ; B a r n e y Lubber a n d son, Miss Lou H a m i l t o n , Mrs. A l thea B l a n c h a r d . Mrs . Devos of Coopersville.

ANNUAL BODELL REUNION CELEBRATED JULY4TH

T h e Bodell r eun ion was held J u l y 4 t h a t G o r d o n P a r k wi th 75 p resen t . Lorenzo Bodel l of S p a r t a was t h e o ld-es t d e s c e n d a n t a n d was elected p r e s -iden t . w i th Mrs . M a r y Cadwel l of K e n t Ci ty clected sec re t a ry a n d t r ea su re r .

T h e r e were m e m b e r s p resen t I i o m Casnovia . K e n t City, S p a r t a , Newaygo, Coopersvil le. Muskegon . G r a n d Rap ids . Pa r i s . B e l l i n g , Reed City. Scottvi l le . P o n t i a c a n d De t ro i t .

CHUBBUCK SCHOOL REUN-ION AT ESTLOW'S LANDING

GOLF MATCH SUNDAY A golf m a t c h will be s t aged between

t h e Cres ton-Bowler go l fe r s a n d the Spa r t a -Bowle r go l fe rs a t C a m p Lake Golf Course n e x t S u n d a y m o r n i n g . Ju ly 18. a t 8 o 'clock. Local golf e n t h u s -ias t s and f r i e n d s a re inv i t ad t o a t t e n d t h e m a t c h

T h e .-.econd a n n u a l reunion of the C h u b b u c k School will be he ld a t Es t -

Mr a n d Mrs . H a i r y W a t k i — visited i tows U n d l n * - H c S R L a k e o n S a t , u r d a y " h is b ro the r . P r a n k a n d fami ly . Tuesday P i c n l c d i n n e r - t o r m e r

T A X N O T I C E I win be a t t h e Peoples ' S t a t e Bank

every S a t u r d a y d u r i n g J u l y t o collect village taxes.

Ju l i a Coll ins . S p a r t a Vil lage Treas .

and W e d n e s d a y of t h i s week. F r a n k Watk in s . S r „ w h o is s t ay ing a t Ionia f o r severa l m o n t h s , w a s also h o m e fo r | a f ew days .

Mr. a n d Mrs . Amos R h a m y e n j o y -ed a t r i p w i t h t h e i r house ca r f r o m F r iday un t i l T u e s d a y s topp ing a t Niles, Coloma a n d W a t e r v l e i t . While in Niles t hey a t t e n d e d t h e wedding of Miss R u t h H a r r i n g t o n , a h o m e economics t e a c h e r in S p a r t a two yea r s ago T h e groom was R i c h a r d S t ro l l , a lso of Niles. T h e ce remony took place a t t h e Niles P r e s b y t e r i a n c h u r c h .

Ell O . Rober t s , m e m b e r of K e n t C o u n t y Soil C o n s e r v a t i o n , who recent ly u n d e r w e n t a n o p e r a t i o n a t S t . Mary ' s hospi ta l , is r e p o r t e d t o be ga in ing in s t r e n g t h , bu t st i l l ln a cri t ical cond i -t ion.

Mr. a n d Mrs. C l a r e n c e G a g e of S t Pe te r sburg . F l a . a n d Miss Mildred Reece a n d R o b e r t G a g e of Mishawaka , I n d i a n a , were S u n d a y gues ts of A. O . J o h n s o n a n d W A. S c h a e f e r fami l ies .

Mrs . Ber t Meier a n d d a u g h t e r . C a r -ol ine. of H o w a r d Ci ty were v is i tors of Mr. a n d Mrs . W . J . B r a c k on Tuesday . Mrs Brack a c c o m p a n i e d t h e m on a

i t r ip to M o n t a g u e .

MORN IN GST AR SCHOOL REUNION

T h e A n n u a l G e t - t e - g e t h e r of t h e f o r m e r a n d p r e s e n t m e m b e r s of t h e M o r n i n g s t a r School Dis t r ic t will be held S u n d a y , J u l y 25 a t t h e Algoma G r a n g e Hal l . P o t - l u c k d i n n e r a t noon followed by a good p rog ram.

CARD OF TH ANKS We wish to t h a n k o u r relatives and

f r i e n d s fo r t he i r k ind express ions of s y m p a t h y d u r i n g t h e s ickness and d e a t h of ou r d e a r h u s b a n d a n d f a t h e r .

Mrs. Victor Swenaon a n d f a m i l y

' CARD OF THANKS We wish t o t h a n k all t h e f r i e n d s a n d

ne ighbor s f o r t h e i r In teres t , s y m p a t h y a n d as s i s t ance d u r i n g t h e Illness a n d d e a t h of ou r d e a r wife a n d m o t h e r .

E d w a r d E B r a d f o r d M r . a n d Mrs . E lmer C a u k i n .

MACCABEE NOTICE T h e M a c c a b e e s a re p l a n n i n g a p i c -

nic supper T u e s d a y evening. Ju ly 20. a t t h e h o m e of E m m a Gi l lam. Every-o n e is u rged to go. Ladies mee t a t 2:30 p. m a t G i l l e t f s s to re T h e g e n -t l emen will c o m e fo r 6: JO supper . Every lady is to b r i n g table service for h e r family . P o t - l u c k suppe r a n d a good t . m e for al l . All women a re u rged t o go in the a f t e r n o o n .

Gov. Murphy To Attend Muskegon

Centennial July 17 T o t h e sounds of bu r s t i ng bomb.%

b o a t whist les , f ac to ry s i rens a n d bells. G o v e r n o r F r a n k M u r p h y will of f ic ia l ly open t h e Muskegon C e n t e n n i a l a n d L u m b e r j a c k Fest ival , m a m m o t h 8100.-000 civic celebrat ion, o n S a t u r d a y , J u l y 17th. a n d 15 days of revelry will follow.

F o r w h a t Muskegon, Mich igan , t e r m 3 h e r 100th b i r t hday pa r ty . 130 civic o r -g a n i z a t i o n s have combined wi th t h e ai-J of Fede ra l . S t a t e . Coun ty a n d C i ty G o v e r n m e n t s t o review in g r a p h i c m a n n e r t h e history, r o m a n c e a n d g e n -e r a ' deve lopment of a colorfu l cen tu ry .

A s tockade-enclosed "Tont.-nnial City, cover ing 54 acres, h a s been e rec tcd on Muskegon ' s w a t e r f r o n t , wi th log e x -pos i t ion buildings, o l d - t i m e l u m b e r c a m p , saw mill in ope ra t i on , cook s h a n t i e s , bunk houses, f i r e tower , t r o u t s t r e a m , wa te r fa l l a n d blockhouses. T h e U. S. Nat iona l Fo re s t exhib i t . U. S. D e p a r t m e n t of Agr icu l ture a n d 106 o t h -e r m a j o r showings r ep re sen t ing I n d u s -try, educa t ion , his tory, a r t . t r a n s p o r t a -t i on . commuTiication a n d var ious o t h e r p h a s e s of anc ien t a n d m o d e r n l i fe a re be ing placed. T h e M a r t Expos i t ion bu i ld ing and Hf.cklcy Field S t a d i u m a r e a l so being ut l l i red.

M o r e t h a n 300 profess ional e n t e r -t a i n e r s will pa r t i c ipa te . A 60-foot o u t -d o o r s t age has been bui l t . A f i ve -day p a g e a n t . " The Pass ing of t h e P i n e " , i n -c ludes a cos tumed cast of 900 c h a r -ac te rs . T h e f a m o u s Alma L u m b e r j a c k s ' B a n d will play, a long wi th 11 e t h e r bands . Percy Gra ingnr . i n t e rna t i ona l l y k n o w n music composer a n d d i rec tor , will personal ly conduct the Na t iona l Music C a m p Band of In t e r lochen . N a -tive O t l a w a s a re moving In to the' I n -d i a n Village. Live oxen, bu f fa lo , bea r s a n d a mode rn Noah 's Ark i i l led wi th live an imals , a monkey c i rcus a n d a n exh ib i t of m a r i n e l i ' e a.-e to be seen . I2u r a c i n g carr ier p igeons will be r e -leased. T h e r e will be old f idd le r ' s a n d f l ap - J ack -ea t i ng contents, a n d 1.000 w a t e r m e l o n s given away.

Provis ions have been m a d e to accom-m o d a t e 500.000 visitors. Hotels , boats , t ou r i s t a n d p r iva te h o m e s will p rovide hous ing .

CAMP LAKE DRAWS NEWSPAPER CRAFTSMEN

M r . a n d Mrs. Bo lande r of Y o u n g s -town . Ohio, who have been s p e n d i n g two weeks a t C a m p Lake a r e r e t u r n -ing to t he i r home. Mr . B o l a n d e r is wi th t h e Youngs town newspape r .

Mr. a n d Mrs. B u r t of G r a n d R a p i d s a r e s p e n d i n g the s u m m e r a t t h e S t a u f -f e r Colony. Mr. Bur t ls assoc ia ted wi th t h e G r a n d R a p i d s Hera ld .

Mr . M c K e n n a , of the G r a n d R a p i d s H e r a l d , a n d his fami ly , a r e loca ted nex t door to t h e Bur ts . a n d down t h e sho re to the west is M r . M o n t g o m e r y of t h e G r a n d R a p i d s Press .

CARD OF TTiANKS We wish to express o u r h e a r t f e l t

t h a n k s a n d apprec ia t ion to o u r n e i g h -bors a n d f r iends , a n d Mr . anrl Mrs. B e t t e s fo r the i r k ind deeds a n d e x p r e s -s ions of s y m p a t h y dur ing o u r r e c e n t be r eavemen t , t he loss of ou r h u s b a n d a n d f a t h e r .

Mrs. E d i t h Helsel a n d fami ly .

Editors To Attend Detroit Conven-

tion Next Week T h e Sen t ine l -Leade r , c o o p e r a t i n g

wi th 270 dai ly a n d weekly n e w s p a p e r s in Michigan, will serve Joint ly a s h o s t nex» week to app rox ima te ly 350 n e w s -pape r ed i to r s Srom all p a r t s of t h e Un i t ed S t a t e s a t a t h r e e - d a y c o n v e n -t ion in De t ro i t a n d a f o u r - d a y s t a t e t ou r .

T h r o u g h t h e med ium of t h e M i c h i -g a n Prass associat ion, n e w s p a p e r s a r e t ak ing the lead in a m o v e m e n t t o p u b • licize indus t r i a l a n d vaca t ion r e sou rces of the s t a t e , award ing a P o n t i a c d e luxe sedan to the o u t s t a t e ed i to r w h o wri tes t h e best publ ished p r e s e n t a t i o n of Michigan.

Speakers at t he Detroi t C o n v e n t i o n . which opens Monday . Ju ly 19. i nc lude Edgar Gues t , poe t ; W. G. C a m e r o n of the Ford I.* ,1 c o m p a n y ; C h a r l e s F . Ke t t e r ing of Gene ra l Moto r s ; W. F . Wylle, C i n c i n n a t i Pos t ; a n d J a m e s G . S l a h l m a n , Nashvi l le B a n n e r , p r e s i d e n t of the Amer ican Newspaper P u b l i s h e r s ' associat ion. Gov. F r a n k M u r p h y a n d Mayor Couzens have also been inv i t ed to speak.

Edi tors will visit Green f i e ld Vil lage a t Dearborn a n d t h e P o n t i a c a u t o m o -bile p lan t . T h e th ree De t ro i t daily-pape r s will be host a t a f o r m a l b a n -que t .

A special a i r -cond i t ioned t r a i n will t a k e the visit ing publ ishers f r o m D e -t ro i t to G r a n d Rap ids T h u r s d a y m o r n -ing. Ju ly 22. where S e n a t o r ' A r t h u r Vandenbe rg h a s been invi ted to apeak at a luncheon a t t he P a n t l i n d ho te l . At Muskegon t h e ed i tors will / is i t t h e L u m b e r j a c k Carn iva l and C e n t e n n i a l Exposit ion, following a d i n n e r a t t h e Elks ' club wi th Archie McCrea . e d i t o r of the Muskegon Chronicle , s e rv ing a s to a.st mas te r .

T a k i n g a p u l l m a n t ra in ou t of M u s -kegon a t midn igh t , t h e p a r t y will a r -r ive ear ly Fr iday (July 23) a t T r a v e r s e Ci ty in t i m e lor b r e a k f a s t a t L e e l a n a u coun ty resorts. T h e n c e they go by t r a i n to Petoskcy fo r an au tomobi l e c a r a v a i over the f a m e d shore dr ive of - cen lc beau ty to Cross Village. I n d i a n M a i d -e n s will se rve r e f r e s h i n g d r i n k s ; a t r ibe will conduc t ceremonia l dances .

At Mack inaw City the p a r t y will be conveyed by s t a t e h ighway d e p a r t m e n t f e r ry ovei to Mack inac I s l a n d a n d t h e n c e by ho r se car r iages to t h e G r a n d Hotel for two days ' s tay. A p u l l m a n t r a i n will return t h e ed i t o r s to D e -t ro i t . Monday . Ju ly 26.

T h e s ta te h ighway d e p a r t m e n t a n d t h e four t ou r i s t bu reaus a r e c o o p e r a t -ing with t h e Michigan P r e s s a s soc i a -tion in he lp ing to h a n d l e t h e s t a t e t ou r a n d t o a r r a n g e cons t ruc t ive p u b -licity for t h e s ta te . Ph i l i p T . R i c h . Mid land Daily News, who is c h a i r m a n of t h e press convent ion b u r e a u , te le g r a p h e d a n invi ta t ion to P r e s i d e n t Roosevelt to address the ed i t o r s a t Mack inac I s land . A pe r sona l i n v i t a -t ion was a lso conveyed to t h e W h i t e House by S e n a t o r P r e n t i s s B r o w n .

Claude Riley of O n t o n a g o n ls p r e s i -d e n t of t h e 62-year-old s t a t e p r e s s a s -socia t ion; C h e s t e r M. Howell of C h e s -a n i n g Ls vice-pres ident , a n d L. E. T o w e of Jonesvi l le is t r ea su re r . H. J . K u r t z , ed i tor of t h e S e n t i n e l - L e a d e r Is vice-preaw'dent of t h e 5 th dLstrlct. C e n t r a l o f f i ces a re m a i n t a i n e d a t E a s t L a n s i n g .

Subscr ibe to T h e S e n t i n e l - L e a d e r .

CAPITOL NEWS By G E N E ALLEMAN

M i c h i g a n Press Association

t e a c h e r s a n d pup i l s a re urged to be p resen t .

CARD OF THANKS We wish t o t h a n k t h e f r i e n d s a n d

ne ighbors . S p a r t a bus iness men. S p a r t a B a n d boys, t h e Sootch C a m p Crowd a n d t h e c l a * of -87 fo r the b e a u t i f u l f lora l t r i b u t e s a t t h e d e a t h of our d e a r h u s b a n d , f a t h e r a n d b r o t h e r ; a lso E m -ory Anderson , t he Rev. Stevens, t h e Rev. O d e g a r d . G r e t a a n d George B e t -tes for t h e i r h e l p f u l servces. also thos* who loaned the i r cai-s or assisted *n any way.

Rose G a u t Mrs . C h a r l e s 3 a u r Mrs . George W h i t e Mr*. F r e d Olson

LANSING—Six m o n t h s of h i s tory a t t h e s t a t e capi tol have done m u c h t o ] r evea l t he personal i ty of F r a n k M u r -p h y . governor .

W o r k i n g quietly wi th a p p a r e n t l y no e f f o r t t o assume t h e Rooseve l t ian role of aggressive l eadersh ip . G o v e r n o r M u r p h y ob ta ined resu l t s f r o m t h e leg-i s l a tu re t h a t su rpr i sed h is cri t ics. O n e m o n t h ago prospects fo r a J u l y 1 rec-o rd of ach ievement were d i smal i a -deed. T h e two houses were c a u g h t In a q u a g m i r e over civil service: labor r e -la t ion bills appea red in a bewilder ing succession.

T h e one tendency in legis lat ion wh ich appeared ear ly in t h e session a n d con t inued un t i l t h e hec t ic n i g h t of a d j o u r n m e n t was a n indu lgence to h e l p h o m e dis t r ic ts solve the i r local prob-l ems of gove rnmen t by g r a n t i n g l ibera! s t a t e a id.

M U R P H Y ' S P H I L O S O P H Y D i f f e r i n g f r o m P r e s i d e n t Roosevel t

ln h is phi losophy of g o v e r n m e n t . M u r -p h y t_-iieves in t h e t r ad i t i ona l ba lance of g o v e r n m e n t . He h a s kep t " h a n d s o f f " of t h e legislature even to t h e poin t w h e r e responsible p a r t y leaders c h a r g -ed h i m wi th being "aloof ." He con-s iders t h a t t he Judiciary should retain Its independence . He exa l t s t he f u n c -t ion of t h e execut ive b r a n c h .

Decl in ing to impose a - m u s t " p r o -g r a m o n the legislature. M u r p h y invit-ed l eaders to h e a r his views. He let it be known t h a t legislative peroga t ives would be respected by t h e execut ive off ice .

T h e resul ts were obvious. T h e leg-i s la ture went on a spend ing , a d d i n g a p -p rox ima te ly 25 mil l ions t o t b e p re -viously record h igh budget of t h e s t a t e Only two new i m p o r t a n t sources of in-come were a d d e d : t l» A use t a x de -s igned to obta in revenue f r o m o u t - s t a t e sales, a n d <2> h ighe r l iquor pr ices t h r o u g h a 55 per cent gross p r o f i t in -s tead of 40 per cen t .

Paced with a h u g e def ic i t . M u r p h y ! p leaded with legislators o n t h e f i na l

n i g h t fo r a saving c lause by wh ich he I rou ld pare app rop r i a t i ons 10 pe r oent . J T h i s privilege w a i ex tended , a n d if t h e I b u d g e t Is ba lanced. M u r p h y c a n c la im

persona l ly for doing it .

L IBERAL L E G I S L A T I O N I t is r a t h e r r isky to use t h e word

" l ibera l" these days , fo r t n a t p h r a s e m e a n s o n e t h i n g t o t h e A. F L. a n d a n o t h e r t h i n g to t h e C. I . O.

T h i s is best i l lus t ra ted by t h e l a b o r re la t ions bill which as f ina l ly a d o p t e d was t h e f o u r t h one t o bea r t h e n u m -erical t i t le of "House Bill 571". F i r s t c a m e the o r ig ina l bill sponso red by t h e governor d r a f t e d by his legal adv i so r wi th t h e aid of the a t t o r n e y gene ra l ' s off ice . Labor objected t o a r e q u i r e -m e n t of med ia t i on before t h e r i g h t to s t r ike , so a subs t i tu te bill w a s b r o u g h t ou t of t h e house labor c o m m i t t e e w i t h t h e governor ' s personal e n d o r s e m e n t . T h i s m e a s u r e swung t o t h e o t h e r e x -t reme, in t h e opinion of employers .

T h e s e n a t e sought a c o m p r o m i s e t h r o u g h t h r e e democ ra t s a n d t h r e e r e -publ icans . a n d a s ena t e s u b s t i t u t e bill merged fo r t h e house s u b s t i t u t e bill.

Passed by t h e Sena te , t h e n e w s u b -s t i t u t e bill went to the House w h e r e labor i tes p ro tes ted loudly.

I t was a b o u t 1:30 a. m.. J u n e 26—90 minu tes a f t e r t echnica l a d j o u r n m e n t — t h a t t he f o u r t h bill a r r ived f r o m M u r -phy ' s o f f i cc wi th t h e b less ing of t h e A F. of L. I t was l a te r t h a t m o r n i n g w h e n the new bill was f ina l ly passed by both t h e house and t h e s e n a t e . A th r ea t ened house revolt was a v e r t e d by Speake r Geonre Sch rode r w h o p r o -c la imed t h e measu re to be a s n e a r ideal a s Michigan legislators could m a k e it .

T H E C. I. O. O B J E C T S Whi le t h e American F e d e r a t i o n of

Labor approved the ae tup fo r p e a c e f u l picket ing—real ly the h e a r t of t h e n e w bi l l—the C o m m i t t e e on I n d u s t r i a l O r -gan iza t ion h a s announced v igorous o b -jec t ion . W h a t is l ibera; to t h e A. F of L Ls reactionary to the C. I. O .

All of wh ich merely p roves t h a t l a b o r is in d i s ag reemen t over policies a n d principles.

Murphy h a s refused r epea t ed ly t o use fore* to requ i re compl iance w i t h s t a t e law. as con t r a s t ed wi th t h e d e m o c r a t i c governors of Ohio and I n d i a n a He h a s been consis tent ly f r i end ly w i t h l a -bor ir. Its s t ruggle for new power .

If he s igns t h e new labor r e l a t i o n s • C o n t i n u e d on p a g e 8)

i

Page 2: HOME THE SENTINEL-LEADER PUBLISHED …spartahistory.org/newspaper_splits/The Sentinel Leader/1937/The...our various industries." This statement came from Percy ... tender met with

Thursday, July 15. 1987 THE SENTINEL-LEADER, SPARTA. MICHIGAN

T H E S E N T I N E L - L E A D E R

Published Weekly on Thursday at Sparta, Michigan a t tbe Poctofflce, Sparta, Michigan, ma

H. J. KURTZ, Editor — Publisher

P H O N E 3 M e m b e r M i c h i g a n P r e * Associat ion

E a c h

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ADVERTISING RATES Display A d v e r t i s i n g Ba te s o n app l ica t ion . W a n t C o l n m n : 35c first 20 words, l c e a c h a d d i t i o n a l word.

figure coants a word. C a r d of T h a n k s , Including I n M e m o r l a m a n d Reso lu t ions : l c a O b i l n i r i n a n d d o c I t t . 5c M r line. Spec ia l N o t i c e s : Business r ead ing notices, i nc lud ing socials a n d

e n t e r t a i n m e n t s , w h e r e admiss ion is cha rged , l e a word . M i n i m u m c h a r g e 50c.

Dea th . B i r t h a n d Mar r i age Not ices :

Council Proceedings

Pub l i shed f r e e .

Sent ine l e s t a b l i s h e d 1816—Leader e s t ab l i shed 1895—Combined 1900

C o m m o n Counci l m e t ln r egu l a r ses-sion o n J u l y 6 th . 1937.

M e e t i n g cal led to o rde r by P r e s i d e n t P ro . T e m . C h a r l e s H. W a r r e n .

T r u s t e e s p r e s e n t : R. A. Ander son . C h a r l e s Cu t l e r , J o e Brosao a n d G u y O. S e a m a n . Absen t : P res iden t F . D. Kel logg.

T h e M i n u t e s of t h e las t m e e t i n g were r e a d a n d app roved .

T h e F i n a n c e C o m m i t t e e r e p o r t e d u p -on t h e fol lowing bills: / F i r e D e p t . p rac t i ce $ 9 00 Neo Nlckolal , services C o n s u m e r s Power Co., l i g h t s 6c

T h e K e n t C i t y P re s s a n d t h e C a s n o v i a H e r a l d merged wi th T h e S e n t i n e l - L e a d e r i n 1931 l - L e a d e r i n 1 8 3 1

iiniiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiffi "A few million a day will keep the opposition away" is the

slogan of the average congressman. o

p o w e r M i c h i g a n Bell T e l e p h o n e Co.,

r e n t a l Sc cal ls 8 . R . L o w n . Services a s asses-

so r J u d d Rob inson , S e a v a n g e r

work W e s t e r n Un i on , t e l eg ram R. R E x p r e s s Co.. express T i s c h - H i n e Co.. supp l ies S e n t i n e l Leader , p r i n t i n g . - , J o h n s o n Bros. , suppl ies <5t r e -

p a i r s Actne We l d i ng Co., r epa i r s E. A. M o r m a n Co.. suppl ies J o h n s o n - S m i t h Co., suppl ies _ Dr . T . D e Young , services S p a r t a M o t o r Sales, suppl ies _ W. J . B r a c k , suppl ies

S tpar ta L u m b e r & Fuel Co.. supp l i e s _ _

W m . R o g e r s & Co., suppl ies We believe in making preparations for a rainy day, but we H a z e i t i n e & P s r k i n s Co.. s u p -

also believe fn enjoying today's sunshine. o

If people could have everything they desired, they would soon get restless for something to want.

o Saving the country from its saviors is a little matter that

comes before the public every two and four years.

, UP TO YOU "Why doesn't our Chamber of Commerce do something about

it? What's the matter with the outfi t?" When questions like these are put to us, and who in the

community doesn't hear them at frequent intervals, we are al-ways disposed to answer: "Why don't you?"

Those who so frequently criticise all organized effort to pro-mote the community are usually the last onej to roll up their sleeves when there's a job to be done. They expend their energy in destructive criticism. They rarely feel that the local organiza-tion consists of all of the citizens of the community and its ef-fectiveness is always in direct proportion to the co-operation and assistance extended.

Why eternally wait for someboiy else to do the job or s tar t the movement which you feel demands attention. Undertake the task yourself, and see what happens. A little more readiness to help and less disposition to find fault will make our community a much more interesting place in whi^h to live.

o WHERE THEY LIVE HAPPIER LIVES

Often in recent years our interest has been directed to some article by a writer, an artist or a scientist who has moved from the noise, filth and confusion of a great city to the peace and comfort of the country.

They talk enthusiastically about the beauty of the rural land-p"ape, about the pleasure in remodeling an old home, about the fun there is in gardening, and the pleasure they derive through association with their neighbors.

These few people have discovered something new in life. Accustomed for years to the noise, rush and excitement of a great city they have come upon a rural environment with the enthus-iasm of an explorer who has found Arcadia. They cannot re-sist the impulse to tell others about the pleasure it has brought in happy, contented, stimulated living.

All of which leads us to the conclusion that many of us or-dinary human beings cannot appreciate the advantages we have. Here in Sparta life offers all the richness and pleasure that these artists and authors tell about with great enthusiasm. Yet how many people there are in our community who long for an op-portunity to move to the big city.

If we coulc} only come to realize that we get more comfort and more pleasure out of life here in Sparta than we possibly could in one of the great cities, there might be more of a general disposition to help make our town even better than it is.

o IF THINGS WERE MADE BY HAND

pl ies S p a r t a Pdy . Co., suppl ies . ....... E. C Li t t l e f ie ld . r epa i r s G . R . G r a v e l C o m p a n y , gravel H e n r y D e L a n g e . r epa i r s Holl is C h a p m a n , labor R i c h a r d s Mfg . Co.. suppl ies K . Co. R d . Comm. . suppl ies .... W m . Gi l l e t t , labor R e x P l l i i n s , labor Lon rae K n l p p . labor Ar t . BJork , l abor R o b t . L u n d y , labor P . L. K i n g , labor Theo . DeVoe. labor Wil l Darg ie . l abor R o b t . L u n d y labor F r a n k P u r d y . labor „ C. V a n D e n Hout . s a l a ry Dav id F i lk ins , s a l a ry W i l l a r d Amidon , s a l a ry Orl ie Wil l iams, collecting g a r -

bage C. G . D a h l i n . C le rk T r a v e r s e C i ty l i o n Wks. s u p -

• .00

445.25

14.99

100.00

9.00 .32

4.M 1 2 5

74,62

26.61 3.75 6 J 7

.75 21.00

1.10 4 JO

18.41 15.48

\2.00 50.88

3.69 2.00 3.60

55.60 21-23 70.20 46.40 4920

3.60 1.60 6.00 6.00 5.20 3.60 1.00 3.60

123.00 100.00 100.00

22 50 25.00

p l ies C o n t r a c t o r s M a c h . Co.. equ ip -

men t r e n t a l .... C . 8 . R a y m e r . supp l ies a n d

work on well

333.63

80.00

1,633.85

W. P . A. V e r n e P inckney , t r u c k r e n t a l 9 45.00 J o e Gui les , t r u c k r e n t a l 45.00 P . O . Field, t r u c k r e n t a l 5.62 M i n e r Purdy , t r u c k r e n t a l 36.00 V1L of S p a r t a . G r a d e r r e n t a l 8.25 V1L of S p a r t a , t r u c k r e n t a l — 3.75 V e r n e P inckney , t r u c k r e n t a l . 35.25 J o e Guiles , t ruck r e n t a l 42.75 M i n e r Purdy , t r u c k r e n t a l 36.00 V i l of S p a r t a , g r a d e r r e n t a l 3 00 Vll. of S p a r t a , t r u c k r e n t a l _ 3.75 W m . A. Rogers Se Co., supp l i e s 20.98 P . O . Field, mixer r e n t a l 37JO S p a r t a Lbr . Sc P . Co.. supp l i e s 28.15 8 p a r t a Oil de G a s Co.. G a s &

Oi l 16.98 s e c o n d -a p p r o v -

Mot ion m a d e by S e a m a n a n d ed by Brosao t h a t t h e bills De e d a n d t h e Village Cle rk be i n s t r u c t e d to d r a w checks fo r s a m e .

Y e a s : Anderson . Brozzo. Cu t l e r , R y -a n a n d S e a m a n . C a r r i e d .

P r e s . P ro . T e m . a p p o i n t e d C u t l e r t o c o n t a c t W m . Rogers . S e c y of t h e S p a r t a C h a m b e r of C o m m e r c e r e l a t i ve t o t h e i r le t te r t o u s r e q u e s t i n g t h e Counc i l to prohib i t a n y e x t e n d i n g of t h e p r e s e n t eas t l ine of t h e S p a r t a T o w n s h i p Cemete ry a n d r e p o r t a t t h e n e x t mee t ing .

Mot ion m a d e by R y a n a n d seconded by C u t l e r t h a t a n e w F o r d S td . T u d o r be p u r c h a s e d f r o m J o h n s o n B r o t h e r s . T h e old F o r d t o be t r a d e d in a n d t h e d i f f e r e n c e , $324.00 to be pa id by t h e Vil lage. T h e Utle ot t h e n e w c a r s h a l l r e m a i n in t h e n a m e of t h e Vil lage of 8 p a r t a . One -ha l f of t h e a l lowance o n t h e old Ford T u d o r . $150.00 sha l l be t h e equi ty of C. V a n D e n H o u t a n d t h i s a m o u n t sha l l be r educed $50.00 e a c h y e a r un t i l a t t h e end of t h e t h i r d y e a r C. Van D e n H o u t s h a l l h a v e n o i n t e r e s t in t h e c a r wha t soeve r . If t h r o u g h some un fo re seen r e a s o n C. V a n D e n H o u t sha l l no t be In t h e e m p l o y of t h e Village of S p a r t a fo r t h e f u l l t h r e e yea r period t h e VlUage of S p a r t a s h a l l pay to C. Van D e n Hou t h i s p r o -p o r t i o n a t e s h a r e in t h e F o r d n o w a c -qu i r ed .

Y e a s : Anderson, Brozzo. Cu t l e r , R y -a n a n d S e a m a n . C a r r i e d .

U p o n mot ion m e e t i n g a d j o u r n e d . C. O . D a h l i n .

Village Clerk .

Legal Notices

O R D E R F O R P U B L I C A T I O N — P r o -. . bake of w m

Critics of the machine and mass production methods seldom i S T A T E O P M I C H I G A N — T h e P r o l a t e

O.vDiJR F O R P U B L I C A T I O N — A n n u a l Accoun t .

S T A T E O F M I C H I G A N — T h e P r o b a t e C o u r t f o r t h e C o u n t y of K e n t . A. a sess ion o I sa id court , h e l d a t

t h e p r o b a t e office, in t h e Oity of G r a n d Rap id s , in sa id County , o n t h e 6 t h d a y of J u l y A. D., 1937.

P r e s e n t , H o n . J o h n D a l ton . J u d g e of P r o b a t e .

I n t h e M a t t e r of t b e Es t a t e of E d w a r d O. Stock dale, Men ia l ly I n c o m pe tent-

O r s o n N. B r a d f o r d hav ing f i led in said c o u r t n i s f i n a l accoun t a s specia l g u a r d i a n of s a id es ta te , a n d h i s p e t i -t ion p r a y i n g fo r t h e a l lowance t h e r e o f , a n d f o r h i s d i s cha rge a s s u c h specia l g u a r d i a n .

I t is O r d e r e d , T h a t the 30th d a y of Ju ly . A. D. 1937

a t t e n o 'c lock in t h e fo renoon , a t sa id p r o b a t e of f ice , be a n d ls he reby a p -p o i n t e d f o r e x a m i n i n g a n d a l lowing s a i d a c c o u n t a n d h e a r i n g sa id p e t i t i o n ;

I t l s F u r t h e r Orde red . T h a t pub l ic no t ice t he r eo f be g iven by pub l i ca t ion of a copy of t h i s o rder , f o r t h r e e s u c -cessive w e e k s prev ious t o aa ld d a y of h e a r i n g , i n t h e Sen t ine l -Leade r , a n e w s p a p e r p r i n t e d a n d c i rcu la ted ln sa id c o u n t y .

J O H N DALTON. J u d g e of P r o b a t e .

A t r u e c o p y : P R E D R O T H , Regis te r of P r o b a t e .

O r s o n N. B r a d f o r d , S p a r t a , Mich. , — A d m . 7-22p

consider what the machine has done in making more and better things available to more people.

According to the National Machine Tool Builders' Associa-tion, a large automobile manufacturer recently estimated that a car which today sells for $600 would cost at least as much as $3,600 if made by non-n.ass-production methods.

It isn't hard to see what this would do to automobile pro-duction when we note that in 1935 in the above $3,000 wholesale price range, 2,428 automobiles were sold in the United States and Canada. But of all price ranges somewhere in the neighborhoixi of 4,000,000 cars were sold this same year.

Here arc some other facts about what things would cost if made by other mass production methods:

A leading typewriter manufacturer estimates the cost of a typewriter at $1,000 instead of slightly more than $100.

An alarm clock would sell for at least $25, according to the vice-president of a leading alarm clock firm.

An electric refrigerator manufacturer states that refrig-erators made experimentally cost approximately six times as much as those made on production assembly.—Fremont Times-Indicator.

EVERYMAN'S RIGHT Thirty-five years ago, there was a serious coal strike. Pres-

ident Theodore Roosevelt appointed a special commission to set-tle it. The following extract from that Commission's report is as pertinent now as it was then:

"The right to remain at work where others have ceased to work, or to engage anew in work which others have abandoned, is part of the personal liberty of a citizen that can never be sur-rendered.

"All government implies restraint, and it is not less, but more, necessary in self-governed communities than in others, to compel restraint of the passions of men which make for disorder and lawlessness. Our language is the language of a free people, and fails to furnish any form of speech by which the right of a citizen to work when he pleases, for whom he pleases, and on what terms he pleases, can be successfully denied.

"The common sense of our people, as well as the common law, forbids that this right should be assailed with impunity. Approval of the object of a strike, or persuasion that its purpose is high and noble, cannot sanction an attempt to destroy the right of others to a different opinion in this respect, or to interfere with their conduct in choosing to work upon what terms and at what time and for whom it may please them to do so.

"The right thus to work cannot be made to depend upon the approval or disapproval of the personal character and conduct of those who claim to exercise this right. If this were otherwise, then those who remain at work might, if they were in the major-ity, have both the right and power to prevent the others, who choose to cease to work from so doing.

"This all seems too plain for argument. Common sense and common law alike denounce the conduct of those who interfere with this fundamental right of the citizen. The assertion of the right seems trite and commonplace, but that land is blessed where the maxims of liberty are commonplaces "

C o u r t f o r t h e Coun ty of K e n t . At a sess ion of sa id court , he ld a t

t h e p r o b a t e of f ice , ln t h e Ci ty of G r a n d Rap id s , in sa id county , o n t h e 2nd d a y of J u l y AX)., 1937.

P r e s e n t : H O N . J O H N D A L T O N . J u d g e of P r o b a t e .

I n t h e M a t t e r of t h e E s t a t e of E l m e r W. S m i t h . Deceased.

F o r e s t G . F ie ld h a v i n g f i led in s a id cour t h i s pe t i t i on p r a y i n g t h a t c e r -t a i n i n s t r u m e n t in wri t ing, p u r p o r t i n g t o be t h e l a s t will a n d t e s t a m e n t of •said deceased , now o n f i le i n s a id c o u r t be a d m i t t e d to p roba te , a n d t h a t t h e a d m i n i s t r a t i o n of sa id e s t a t e be g r a n t -ed t o Fo re s t G . Field or some o t h e r su i t ab l e pe r son .

I t is O r d e r e d . T h a t t h e 30th d a y of Ju ly A. D , 1937.

a t ten o 'c lock In t h e fo renoon , a t s a i d

O R D E R O F P U B L I C A T I O N — A n n u a l

S T A T E O P M I C H I G A N — T h e P r o b a t e C o u r t fo r t h e O c m t y of K e n t . A t a session of sa id cou r t , he ld a t

t h e p r o b a t e office, l n t h e C i ty of G r a n d Rapids , In sa id C o u n t y , o n t h e 2 n d d a y of Ju ly A. D 1937.

P r e s e n t : Hon. C L A R K E. H I G B E E . J u d g e of P roba te .

I n t h e M a t t e r of t h e E s t a t e s of M a n l y W. B u r t c h . Deceased.

T h e Mich igan T r u s t C o m p a n y h a v -ing f i led in said cour t i t s s econd a n -n u a l accoun t a s T r u s t e e u n d e r Wil l f o r E d i t h May B u r t c h . e t al. , of s a id e s t a t e , a n d i t s peUt lon p r a y i n g f o r t h e a l l owance the reof ,

I t is G i i e r e d , T h a t t h e 6 t h day of Augus t A. D. 1937,

a t t e n o'clock l n t h e fo r enoon , a t s a id p r o b a t e office, be a n d ls h e r e b y a p -p o i n t e d f o r e x a m i n i n g a n d a l lowing aa ld a c c o u n t a n d h e a r i n g sa id p e t i t i o n ;

I t Is F u r t h e r Orede red , T h a t pub l i c no t i ce thereof be g iven by p u b l i c a t i o n of a copy of t h i s o rde r , f o r t h r e e s u c -cessive weeks previous t o sa id d a y of h e a r i n g , l n t h e S e n t i n e l - L e a d e r a n e w s p a p e r p r i n t e d a n d c i r c u l a t e d i n s a i d county .

CLARK E. H I G B E E . J u d g e of P r o b a t e .

A t r u e copy. F r e d R o t h , Regis te r of P r o b a t e .

T h e Mich . T r u s t Co., G r a n d R a p i d s . — A d m . 7-29

O R D E R F O R

A Checking Here Is

Account

Good Insurance When you handle your financial affa i rs

through a checking account you are following good business principles.

A cancelled check is a receipt for every payment made.

Your check book provides a record £ every business transaction.

When you pay by check you avoid the risk involved in handling large amounts of currency.

Accounts la this bank op to $5,000 are insured in fail under the provisions of the Banking Act of 1932.

Sparta State Bank Member of the Federal Reserve Bank

SAFE . . . BECAUSE ITS SOUND

SPARTA, MICHIGAN

p r o b a t e office, be a n d is h e r e b y a p -p o i n t e d fo r h e a r i n g sa id peUUon;

I t Is Purthfcr Oredered . T h a t pub l ic no t i ce thereof be g i v e n by pub l i ca t ion of a copy of t h i s o rder , f o r t h r e e suc-cessive weeks prev ious t o s a id d a y of h e a r i n g , in t h e S e n t i n e l - L e a d e r a n e w s p a p e r p r in t ed a n d c i r c u l a t e d in s a id county . A t r u e copy:

J O H N D A L T O N . J u d g e of P r o b a t e .

F r e d Roth , Regis te r of P r o b a t e . F o r e s t O . Field, S p a r t a . Mich.—Adm. 7-22

celve, e x a m i n e a n d a d j u s t a l l c l a ims a n d d e m a n d s a g a i n s t s a id d e c e a s e d by a n d be fo re s a id c o u r t :

I t is O r d e r e d . T h a t a l l t h e c r e d i t o r s of aa ld deceased a r e r e q u i r e d t o p r e -s e n t t h e i r n a m e s t o s a i d c o u r t a t P r o b a t e O f f i c e o n or b e f o r e t h e

9 t h day of November A. D. 1937, a t ten o'clock In t h e f o r e n o o n , t i m e a n d p lace be ing h e r e b y a p p o i n t e d f o r t h e e x a m i n a t i o n a n d a d j u s t m e n t of all c l a i m s a n d d e m a n d s a g a i n s t sa id deceased.

I t is F u r t h e r e d O r d e r e d . T h a t publ ic no t ice the reof be g iven by pub l i ca t i on of a copy of t h i s o r d e r f o r t h r e e suc -cessive weeks prev ious t o s a i d d a y of hea r ing , ln t h e S e n t i n e l - L e a d e r , a n e w s p a p e r p r i n t e d a n d c i r c u l a t e d ln said c o u n t y .

J O H N D A L T O N . J u d g e of P r o b a t e .

A t r u e oopy: F R E D R O T H , R e g i s t e r of P r o b a t e .

A. B a r t h Car l son , execu to r . S p a r t a . Mich . 7-29

F u n n i e s t Jokes of Hol lywood's No. 1 • G a g m a n . - Boasbe rg . w h o m a d e m i l -l ions l a u g h a n d d ied telling a Joke. R e a d t h i s in T L e A M E R I C A N W E E K -LY. t h e m a g a z i n e d i s t r ibu ted w i t h N E X T S U N D A Y ' S C H I C A G O H E R -A L D AND E X A M I N E R . — A d v .

C. S. MILLER D E N T I S T

Phone—Off ice 173 Kaa. 124

SPARTA MICH.

CINCINNATI MANAGER

Col. Clarence O. Sherrill, who re-cently accepted appointment 9s city manager of Cincinnati. Colonel Sherrill was formerly president of the American Retail federation. He will succecd C. A. Dykstra, who re-signed to bocomc president of the UnivsrsHy of Wisconsin.

W E A R E V E R Y P R O U D O P O U R work ln pe r sona l s t a t i o n e r y . O u r d e -s igns a r e p leas ing a n d of t h e very la tes t ideas . Your choice of colors. S e n t i n e l - L e a d e r P u b l i s h i n g Co.

DR. C. L. GRIGWARE O P T O M E T R I S T

in M c G o w a n Bid*., S p a r t a , MJcb Off ice wi th Drs . Bul l a n d MUlc/ Off ice H o a r s — W e d n e s d a y , 7 p . m. untU 9 p. m. O t h e r e v e n i n g s by a p p o i n t m e n t . t ' h o n e 173

R E P O R T O F C O N D I T I O N O F

The Sparta State Bank of S p a r t a , l a t h e S t a t e of M i c h i g a n , a m e m b e r of t h e F e d e r a l Reserve

S y s t e m , a t t h e close of bus iness o n J u n e 30. 1937. P u b l i s h e d ln a c c o r d a n c e wi th a ca l l m a d e by t h e F e d e r a l Rese rve b a r k of t h i s d i s t r i c t o n a d a t e fixed by t h e B o a r d of G o v e r n o r s of t h e Federa l Rese rve S y s t e m p u r s u a n t t o t h e provis ions of t h e F e d e r a l Rese rve Act.

A S S E T S 1. L o a n s a n d d i s c o u n t s 2. O v e r d r a f t s 3. U n i t e d S t a t e s G o v e r n m e n t ob l iga t ions , d i r e c t

a n d / o r fu l l y g u a r a n t e e d 4. O t h e r bonds , s tocks , a n d secur i t i e s 6. B a n k i n g h o u s e $

F u r n i t u r e s a n d f i x t u r e s $ 8. Rese rve w i t h F e d e r a l Rese rve b a n k 9. C a s h , b a l a n c e s wi th o t h e r banks , a n d c a s h

i t e m s ln p rocess of col lect ion 10. C a s h i t e m s n o t in process of col lect ion 13. O t h e r a s s e t s

8.000.00 1,518.95

T o t a l L I A B I L I T I E S

14. D e m a n d d e p o s i t s of indiv iduals , p a r t n e r s h i p s , a n d c o r p o r a t i o n s

15. T i m e d e p o s i t s of Individuals , p a r t n e r s h i p s , a n d c o r p o r a t i o n s

16. S t a t e , c o u n t y , a n d munic ipa l depos i t s 18. Depos i t s of o t h e r banks , cer t i f ied a n d

o f f i c e r s ' c h e c k s o u t s t a n d i n g , e t c T o t a l of I t e m s 14 t o 18, I nc lu s ive :

S e c u r e d by t h e p ledge of l oans a n d a n d / o r i n v e s t m e n t s t 10,000.00

Not s e c u r e d by t h e p l edge of l oans a n d / o r I n v e s t m e n t s 548.758.39

Do l l a r s C t s $237,564.52

12.92

102.146.77 157,51699

9.518.95 58,555 39

48.87542 123.10 200.00

$614.51406

$222,411.46

307.657.02 28.369.13

320.78

T o t a l Deposi ts $558,758.39 30. O t h e r l iabi l i t ies 31. C a p i t a l a c c o u n t :

C o m m o n s tock 300 shares , p a r $100.00 p e r s h a r e 1 30,000 00

S u r p l u s 12.00000 Undiv ided prof i t s , n e t 10.555.67 Rese rves f o r con t ingenc ies 3.00C.OO

200.00

T o t a l C a p i t a l Account $ 55,555.67

T o t a l . I n c l u d i n g C a p i t a l A c c o u n t $614,514.06 M E M O R A N D U M : LOANS AND I N V E S T M E N T S PLEDGED TO S E C U R E LIABILITIES 82. U n i t e d S t a t e s G o v e r n m e n t ob l iga t ions , d i r ec t a n d / o r fu l l y

g u a r a n t e e d 10.000.00

T o t a l P l e d g e d (exc luding r ed i scoun t s ) P l e d g e d :

Aga ins t S t a t e , county , a n d m u n i c i p a l depos i t s

$ 10.000.00

3 10.000.00

jT B A L L A R D & ROGERS

F I R * . W I N D S T O R M

A D T t I N S U R A N C E

W m . a Co.

$ li,000 00 1 T o t a l P l e d g e d S t a t e ot M i c h i g a n , c o u n t y of K e n t .

.° f t h e a b o v e - n a m e d bank , d o so l emn ly swea r t h a t t h e a b o v e s t a t e m e n t i s -.rue t o t h e bes t of m y knowledge a n d

A. B a r t h Car l son . C o r r e c t . — A t t e s t :

C h a r l e s A J o h n s o n , A. A. J o h n s o n .

P . D. P e a s e Di rec to rs .

Sworn t o a n d subscr ibed before m e th i s 12th d a y of Ju ly , 1937.

. , , Lou A. Kel ler , N o t a r y Publ ic . My c o m m i s s i o n e x p i r e s F e b r u a r y 10, 1940.

m t

YOU'LL GET K OUT OFTH

A P P O I N T I N G T I M E H E A R I N G C L A I M S

S T A T E O F M I C H I G A N — T h e P r o b a t e C o u r t f o r t h e C o u n t y of K e n t . A t a session of s a id c o u r t , he ld a t t h e

p r o b a t e office, ln t h e c i ty of G r a n d Rap id s , in said c o u n t y o n t h e 8 t h d a y of J u l y A. D 1937.

P r e s e n t . Hon. J o h n D a l ton , J u d g e of P r o b a t e .

I n t h e M a t t e r of t h e E s t a t e of D u r i n d a K n e w l t o o , Deceased

I t a p p e a r i n g t o t h e c o u r t t h a t t h e t i m e f o r p r e s e n t a t i o n of c l a i m s a g a i n s t s a id e s t a t e should be l imi ted , a n d t h a t a t i m e a n d place be a p p o i n t e d t o r e -

D |0 you get a kick out of a golf ball's click when you really lean into one

on the tee? Does your heart beat faster when the big fish strikes, and your singing reel almost smokes ? Can a brisk breeze and a taut sail make you feel like a kid again, forgetting care in the sheer joy of action? Mister, if you're like that, what a bang you'll get out of this big Buick I You'll go for the way it goes for you. You'll like the quick, eager spurt of its get-away, the buoyant, swayless steadi-ness of its travel. You'll thrill to the businesslike manner in which it settles to the pull, its quiet, dogged competence in long, tough going.

You'll welcome the way it cradles you over the bumps, the neat, compact, hand-ily mobile feel of it. You'll be proudly aware of its beauty, of the picture you make riding in its this-minute style. But don't forget this major thing—it's the buy of the season, price-wise as well as on performance! It's still selling at the lowest price in all Buick history—you can still get a big Buick eight for less than some sixes would cost you.

So don't hold back. Good things, you know, can't last forever. Don't pass up a buy such as Buick is at its low prices now.

LOWEST BUICK PRICES EVERI A C N S k A l MOTOCS TSRMS TO SUIT Y O U * U K M O

V O U t M O N FY O O f S F A f T M f t M A M O T O t S C A S

S P A R T A Highway M - 3 7

M O T O R S Sparta