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Permanent Link: http://ufdc.ufl.edu/UF00028415/00474
 Material Information
Title: The Clewiston news
Physical Description: Newspaper
Language: English
Publisher: Louis A. Morgan
Place of Publication: Clewiston Fla
Creation Date: May 11, 1934
Publication Date: 1928-
Frequency: weekly
regular
 Subjects
Subjects / Keywords: Newspapers -- Clewiston (Fla.)   ( lcsh )
Newspapers -- Hendry County (Fla.)   ( lcsh )
Genre: newspaper   ( marcgt )
newspaper   ( sobekcm )
Spatial Coverage: United States -- Florida -- Hendry -- Clewiston
Coordinates: 26.753399 x -80.9336 ( Place of Publication )
 Notes
Additional Physical Form: Also available on microfilm from the University of Florida.
Dates or Sequential Designation: Vol. 2, no. 6 (Feb. 3, 1928)-
General Note: Tom Smith, editor.
 Record Information
Source Institution: University of Florida
Rights Management: All rights reserved by the source institution and holding location.
Resource Identifier: aleph - 000366793
oclc - 33429955
notis - ACA5652
lccn - sn 95047264
System ID: UF00028415:00474
 Related Items
Preceded by: Clewiston progress

Full Text
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Ml a It t'' \ T. HE CLE'l'IST'ON NEW J YlEDOOYRPART i


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CLEWISTON, l'J.JHlDA.l'lUDAY. MAY 11, 19 31. SUliSCRIPTION- $2.0O PER YEAH !i
1 t VOLUME 8, NUMBER 17. I!



FERA OFFICE TO New Movie Is Ready LARGEST DIESEL Bruce Morris Injured In SCHOOL HAS MAYDAY 1 1 i

,:. For Opening SaturdayThe Fall on Latham Job


ENROLL VETERANS ORDER TO ENTER PROGRAM IN i
of the
"Dixie Crystal", Clewlston's Bruce Morris, an employe 1

FOR CCC CAMPS new and attractive theater buildingis MAlt is HEREThe E. injured H. Latham Monday company in a, was fall painfully from a- WHICH ALL JOINMay I II

receiving its finishing touches today high point of the hurricane gate be-

and will be in readiness for the ing constructed here. Morris was I I

opening tomorrow.The largest single l shipment of working up on the forms when he Day was observed by the \:

Mrs. M. W. Blanton, Director of first show will be a matinee, tractors and power units: ever to lost his balance and jumped to the Clewiston Elementary and High J I
Relief for Hendry and Glades Coun- concrete floor of the gate to avoida Schools Friday afternoon. A pro- 1
the film for the opening day is come into the state of Florida was
and
t' ties received the following bulletin fall. gram given in the auditorium and 1 1
"Carolina" a Janet Gaynor-Lionel received a few days ago by the Clew- Bones in both feet were fracturedby I
this week from FERA headquarters i field day events on the play ground ;1
iston Motor Company, which'sold all the severe Impact with the con
: : at Jacksonville in reference to the Barrymorc picture completed the afternoon. i
units to contractors on the federal crete, and Morris was also cut about In the auditorium the following
effects in the new the- !
enlistmentof veterans in C. C. C. The sound !
i navigation and flood control projecton the face numbers were given:
camps. ater are said to be excellent, tho treatment at the local I
Following
Lake Okeechobee.Two Song, "Tis Spring.hue/, :
,i In part the bulletin states, "We modern projjecting and sound producing 100 horsepower "D11000" hospital he was removed to his Scripture. -\

suggest that you check your relief i machines combine with a Caterpillar units were delivered home in Chosen, where he is r'ecup- Prayer. t
-:. lists for veterans, and notify the vet- power
erating. It will probably be several Our Mothers-first grade.t !
skillfully designed building to givea to the E. H. Latham company,
: ; erans on your list to report to inter- weeks before he can,, walk again. Poem: "Pasture," Betty McDuffie.
'.: views and filing of applications. In clear sound.Gravely which has contract for four hurri- Lawr"1ceGuthrie. 11
Song: "Lazybones?
: ,. addition to your relief list there may cane gates on the lake project. These .
-'Ii.; be others in your county. It is im- units, attached to Couch pumps, will !" Mercer Asks
,' Enters Race "Tip Play: "A Day in Fairyland", second ,f,
portant that you collect as' large a be used to keep water from the excavations i 'grade. 'j1

''-_ number of veteran appplicauts as pos- for the hurricane gates, For His Money Back' Play: "Did You Ever", third grade. .
sible as there is no certainty; that the For County AttorneyL. which are constructed on foundationsfar Health song 3{
',
f,' quota will be filled on the present below the lake bottom. I. -- Play: '"The Road to Wellville" A

r enrollment trip, which includes only Two units were for the Atlantic Is possession nine points of the fourth and sixth grades. .;

f. West Florida. Furthermore there will O. Gravely of LaBelle makes Dredging and Construction company, : law? Convict T. O. (Tip) Mercer, Song: by the seventh grade. .,J

r be a large replacement enrollment in formal announcement in this issue west of Clew- now serving time at Raiford oil two Reading: "May Day", Julianna
which is buildinglevee 1
i t' : .1.' July during which there will undoubtedly of his candidacy for the position of i bank robbery convictions bearing life Oglesby.
if iston. One of these is a Caterpillar "
'
,'} be a call for veterans. county attorney. Mr. Gravely was appointed -, sentences, seems to think so. Play: "Baby's Grandmothers", 7th :1
"The following enrollment qualifications to fill the position by the I Diesel 50 tractor. and is being used This week Clerk of Circuit Court grade. '

apply to each veteran: he I board of county commissioners when for grading and finishing the levee. Wm. T. Hull received a letter from The field day events were divided <1

must have an honorable discharge; : the position was created by the 1933 The other is a 65 horsepower D7700 J. P. Newell, Secretary to the Prison I into groups, the teachers directing :1,

'. he must be unemployed; he must power unit for use on a Couch pumpin Board, stating that Mercer had made the lower grades -in games.
be a citizen of the United States; legislature. a manner similar to that of the several complaints of seventy odd Field events for the junior and ;,
and he must be in physical Mr. Gravely, who is a graduate of I
good con- '
Latham company. dollars taken from him at the time senior high school boys were arrang:1: :
dition. will of Florida law college,
Preference be the University
." given to This is the newest and most improved of his arrest for the robbery of the ed in groups, the 7th and 8th grades 't
unemployed who have dependents. admitted to the bar in 1917
was '
divided into
returned.Mr. being
LaBelle
of equipment accordingto Bank of and never groups accordingto
There appears to be no age or mar- that he is the first lawyerto type '
and states Newell added that some time ago weight, and the four high school j
tial E. E. Kelley, owner and managerof
restrictions relative
to veterans.
';' make his home in Hendry coun- he had written Deputy Sheriff classes were divided into similar ;;
; j "Veterans those who the making sales of the .
are saw serv- ty. He served one term as representative company Clyde Helms concerning the alleged groups. Events included broad jump, 1
: _., ice with the armed forces of the units. The engines are the same as
100 dash .j
.: and was author and cosponsorof stolen funds and had been informedthat yard running high jump ,
; United States during the periods- indicated the bill creating the Okeechobee those used on the Diesel Caterpillar the amount was 29.50 in relay race and sack race. ,1

'.. .:, as follows: Flood Control district. tractors Mr. Kelly states that due to nickles, dimes and quarters. Mr. Erwin Morgan won 10 points the \

World War, April 6, 1917-July 2. greatly reduced cost of operation Newell also asked for Clerk Hull's highest number of any individual. j
His status is well-
lawyer
: 1921; Spanish American War, April as a Diesel units, using distillate for fuel, opinion of the matter as "the Gov- with three first places and one third; I

.., 21, 1S9S-July; 5, 1902; Philippine known in the county as he has served are largely replacing the gasoline ernor wants to have the matter set- place. Harold Adams with 8 points ;

" Insurrection, ,August 13, 1898-July as attorney for the school board type of tractor for every purpose tled once and for all' Clerk Hull was second high in the 7th and 8th 1

f. 5, 1902; Moro Expedition, August 13, for four years and as attorney for Mr. Kelley has been in business replied that, since the money was In grades. George Bestor and Hookie ;

:' I.i:, ,. 1898-July 15, 1903; Boxer Rebellion the county comraissioneds and is also here for ten years and says this Is Email change such as had been taken Avant with 9 points each tied for

,.f r June 20, 1900-May 13, 1901. prosecuting attorney for the coun'ty the largest order which fiis company from the Bank, the 29.50 had long first place in the high -chool group. }

' .. [, "Counties south of Polk are not judge's court. When appointedto haas handled during that time. The since been returned to the bank Each won three first placoi. ',I
V to be called upon for veterans to this latter position he immediately which Inturn had turned It over to Seventh grade boys made a total ',;

: complete this period's quota, but notified the county judge that he shipment constituted a solid carload its insurance company. of 21 points, and 8 grade a total 'i

::, f we suggest that steps be taken now would waive the $5 prosecuting fee of 32 points, out of a possible 53 j
to secure veteran applicants. As indicated for events in which the 1
groups were :,
to which he is entitled in case lUST \
every Scout Council Plans .
present efforts wilt bear OF CANDIDATES Boy entered \
brought into court, and has held to '
fruit in July, even though you are II Ninth and tenth grade boys '
not asked to send any veterans this 1 this position continuously 2 Month Summer Trip totalled 11 points and 11th and 12th ':''

month." I Mr. Gravely is a veteran of the QUALIFIED TO DATE graders made 2G out of a possible '.;",
., Mrs. Blanton requests that veter-: Spanish-American War, the Phillli- 36 points. ::

ans in this section 'make application pine Insurrection and the World War. Members of Royal Palm Council Blue ribbons were awarded for

. L ., .s as soon as possible in order to have No other candidate has announcedfor Candidates who, up to four oclock of Boy Spouts, with headquarters in each first place won, and Erwin Mor-

tT r h\, the list ready when the final order this position. this afternoon, had qualified since Fort Myers, are making plans for along gan will be awarded a prize for win-

..u ',, ;::, comes. Not only are all eligible vet- the last issue of the News are as tour again this summer, trav- ner of the greatest number of points.A .

erans asked to enter their names but follows: elling in the same manner as on the feature of the meet was Hookie
there is 'a chance for a number of Mrs. McGeehee, Berner Avant's running high jump of 4 ft. :
For county commissioner, district trip last summer, by bus and trailer. :1
unmarried men between the ages of 1, D. G. Alston, C. E. Miner. The tour this year is expected to ,6 inches. Young John .Poole, who had
18 and 25 to go to one of the C. C. C. and Ward ElectedCarl For county commissioner district been practicing for a sack race was
months. The Scouts
take about two
camps this year as Mrs Blanton I disappointed when it was onlyto
3, J. R. Doty, D. L. McLaughlin and open
states that she expects a call. Thosein I travel in their bus and camp along high school boys and insisted on
-' Clewiston desiring to apply are H. Berner, Mrs. J. A. Mc- Mark Poole. their route, camping provisions and
l For county commissioner district i entering. Mr. Herring consented and
:' asked to see W. C. Owen ,and those Geehee and A. O. Ward were elected 4, Solon Crews. equipment being taken along in the J John walked away about 12 feet

,::;; in LaBelle should go to the F. E. R. trustees for special::; school tax district For county commissioner district trailer. Aside from the value of the I ahead of the high school boys.

A. office, there.Senator number 7 at the election held 5, F. L. Dunaway.For ([ trip, the camping enables the boys Events were .arranged directed byB.

,, \ here Monday. The trustees are to school board member, from i to put into practice many of the les- E. Herring.

r' Serve for the ensuing two years. Clewiston, E. VonMach.For sons of Scouting.

Gomez Spoke : They will succeed Dr. J. W. Ezelle, school board member from t Arrangements have been made to
j
: r- t W. C. Owen and Roy Green, whose Felda and Denaud, Mrs. Margaret purchase another bus and the number LOCAL SCHOOL ON

f, Here Saturday Night month. Reeves, Jim Maddox, T. E. Miller and
terms expire this jto take the trip this year is expected
:, i The ballots of the election carried Earl S. Royer. II to be considerably greater than last ACCREDITED LIST;, :

-:: r. State Senator Arthur Gomez, of the names of Mrs. McGeehee, Mr. For school board member from !I
., { ; LaBelle, L. W. Howard, Drew Hamp- !year.
'<.' Key West, made the first political Ward and A. W.. Lawrence. Carl (on. | The expedition in 1933 included aI The Clewiston High School has

'. t speech of the present campaign in Derner's name was written in by For county attorney, L,. O. 'Gravely I visit in Washington, New York, been placed on the state accreditedlist

, .'T ii:;: Clewiston Saturday night, address- those electing him. Selden L. Stewart. I across the boundary line into Canada, according to dispatches sent

ing a large crowd of listeners in front Due to the fact that only resi- For Democratic executive com- !|stopping at Niagara Falls, and down out from the offices of the State Su- (

I:j i., of Alston's Drug Store. Dave Alston, dent taxpayers in the district are mitteeman, C. Hubert, S. A. Graves, I perintendent of Public Instruction. 1

!H t owner of the store, has generously allowed to vote in the trustees elec- J. F. Haskew, W. A. Jones. I Cen-tury piled The annually state accredited and only list is schools com ,1 i

.::} c offered the use of the amplifying tion, the number of voters was ex- For Republican committeeman, R. J There were 54 Scouts on the trip whose equipment, teaching staff and :!I
E. Burchard, R. V. .
ir/, ; r- system which is installed in, the tremely small. Election officials Hedges.SPORTS last year. length of term measure up to the "

,.,.:k i store, to any and all candidates for ;. were Arch Newsome, clerk; Gratton standard requirements of an accredited -

;...,; their public speeches, and Mr. Gomez George, Mrs. Josephine Wright, Mrs. PAYMENTS school are included. the list. y I
POLL TAX ;
.- took advantage of the opportunity of Roy Greene, inspectors.The COMING IN SLOWLYTax ,

\ having his message carried clearly majority of the voters favored -
,a ten mill levy for the districtfor By AL HACKETT Mrs. Bula Croker For jl
..;, { to those gathered on the streets. Collector F. A. Daugherty :

Senator Gomez is campaigning for the coming two years. states that poll tax collections have 4th Dist. ,11

re-election on the record of his for- I Clewiston and Sinclair Oil of Fort been coming in slowly, and urges all Congress ,

mer term, and discussed some of U. S. ENGINEERS CELEBRATE Mjers divided 'a double game on the prospective voters to pay up as earlyas
WITH DINNER DANCE local diamond last Thursday night, avoid a last minute
and
the issues which have faced the state possible Mrs. Bula Croker, candidate for 1
Fort Myers winning the first
during his tenure of office. He spokeof by a rush.For congress from the Fourth District, :
The U S. Engineers, their wives score of 6-3 and Clewiston taking the convenience of residentsof
the income to the four countiesin has sent an advertisement to the
and guests enjoyed a dinner danceat the ,second by, a count of 6 to 1. Clewiston and vicinity, Tax Col- .
his district from the distributionof Clewiston News announcing her can-
Saturday night. In the first Clewiston tallied appointed.
the Clewiston Inn game lector F. A. Daugherty is not
the gasoline tax. He emphasizedthe The affair was planned as a celebra- I first when B. Nail walked, stole sec- Parker Wilson at Alston's Drug Store didacy. Although Clewiston district it

benefits received under the Kan- tion of the recently restored 15 per ond and went home on a pass ball. and the Clewiston Drug Company as located In Mrs. Croker's of the Palm
miles
ner Bill for which he worked actively cent wage cut, and was largely attended I Fort Myers: evened the count In the deputy collectors to receive poll tax. is within a few line, and therefore

:::,N in the Senate. The Senator told by employees of the Lake I second when Bolick walked, went to The dead line for payment of poll Beach of county its readers will have the

f' of his efforts to kill the proposed tax Okeechobee project. second on a passed ball and scoredon tax is May 19th. many to vote on Mrs. Croker's
i- .io on kerosene and of his work to ex- Music was provided by; the Wallace -I Sansbury's double.. In the fourth oppoprtunity .
Mr. and Mrs. G. O. Wallace Rogers scored on Sansbury's double'after name for congressman.Mrs.
empt from taxation gasoline used in family, Croker has led an interesting -
boats and farm and son of Pahokee, aided by being given a free pass on balls. FER.OFFICES COMBINED born in 1884 in
implements. He life. She was
summed Frank L. Pollard of Fort Pierce, Fort Myers went on a hitting spreein .1 i/ TO EFFECT ECONOMY I before the creationof
other Territory
up measures which Indian
received his The musicians, as well as the guests, the fifth and sealed the game away (. of Oklahoma, and received -
support in the senate, the state
were Engineers. with four runs. Clewiston scored one In"an effort to cut down admini- education at the
and her early
pledged
his continued efforts for -- each in the sixth and seventh. stration expense the FERA offices of' Tahlequah, Okla.
every measure for public good. RAIN HALTS GAME Rogers and Sansbury handled the Glades and Hendry county have been Cherokee School attended in Chicago Univer-

The speech:: was well received bya twirling and receiving end for Fort combined. The records of the Glades She also work In Boston.

large audience. L. 0, Gravely of La- I Rain halted the game between Pa- Myers with Campbell and Avant bear- county office have been moved to La- sity and did further Indians for five years ,

) Belle .accompanied Senator Gomez hokee and Clewiston: last Sunday ing the brunt of the attack for Clew- Belle and there made a part of the She taught the the Tahlequah

:.-J.. ,,I. here. ''I afternoon in the second inning, with iston.In combined office records. and schools.was She principal was an of ardent advocateof f
the locals in a one run lead 21. the second game, Clewiston got The former staff of Hendry coun- Following her '

!:: ,,' TO bliSmiVE :MOTHER'S DAY I This was the first appearance of off to an early start, scoring two ty will continue In the work of .the woman in suffrage.1914 to Richard Crokershe f
Clewiston's recently organized team, runs In the first inning. In the fifth combined offices. C. C. House has marriage home in Flor-

j/' A Special Sunday School lesson and I and judging from the exhibition the I. Clewiston bunched hits to score three been made director of works for made her winter this as her i!
adopted
f -; 'special music will be bids fair to create trouble In in ; ida and in 1922 !
j a given at the steam runs adding one the sixth. both counties. !
: 0 Sunday School hour at the Commun- I the local baseball sphere. Campbell and Avant worked for : legal Mrs.residence.Croker has been active in

4- ity Church Sunday in observance ofMother's Clewiston as batteries and Campbell and has t
,
I Mrs.rV.. Wardwell and Mrs. O. B. Simmons and Tom Johnstoneof civic and political-affairs
,
l; > Day. Duo to I
o: the absence of and Bollck for Sinclair Oil time and moneyfor
v 1 of Pahokee Miami were busitv'i\ '! r in given liberally ot her
G. Wallace Wed-
the pastor, who is away on vacation O. spent Avant collected two home runs

....._ there will be no preaching service, nesday in Clewiston during the evening. Clewiston Tuesday., philanthropic: causes.
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H H it /THE);! CLEWISTON NEWS FRIDAY ;& i
!
MAY 11, 1934of "- ";'Yd ... ..s

.. :.' ., .. i (': r.-'-'. ,.' ,- ', .. .
SKWQP'r ; ,
/ > .
I LL -
c ; ?-
'the collective farms:must be, prepared l '.. '#. "" f r.:I ,,_ ,'" ;t"c'
/ it 4r I SPARE THEM ';'I.f !...
News Review Curie } ,for everything. It is not sufficient that. '
'- >
HoweVbbut Rens-
theyknow-- how to .use gas masks. It : The; late Mrs.Schuyler van

won't be enough that they be able to selaer of New York once was asked

_. Events the World OverProfessor manage a gun. They must have a good by a "society girl" whether she
of the should "go in" for, settlement work "
:r knowledge, physical geography; ,
:":i!,.', "::: I of their regions and be well versed In More Holidays among the. city poor,- which ;she1 ,admitted ilV

all 'forms of knowledge regarding the' Taxes she disliked. "Inheaven's

.' repelling of attacks, on the. civilian name, don't!1" Mrs. Van Rensselaer re
,
I V j; '! Tu veIl's' :Defense; of- the New- DeaIrroublcsF population.' Particularly' ,,they'' 'must;; Bad Habits : '; ,", :plied., "People who live in the tenements '

know how to resist raids from the i eo Bell Syndicate,-VVNU Servlca.: : have:enough td bear without

President( air." ., w ,'. .' i. !
t F :
.
'
'
: : '
oI' ";: ; : By ED HOWEWHAT ton qlo e.; 1 1
: : Plan to Help Silver. negotiations under
pVlSARMAMDNT ; the people are'reany try-

,i i H ;: Lt : 1 : .:______ '. *- present conditions are futile, in i, to achieve is for every',day
the official : of .the French
_dJ : -; 1 :tBy '. : opinion government ; Ito be, the Fourth of July, Christmas, Mercoiized'Wax
I ,
EDWARD W. PICKARD ,:and It will have 'nothing more Labor
day, Washington's birthday
|
to do with them,,. returning instead to
Sunday, Mother's day. New Year's day
of, the American Society from him no, encouragement for silver its old plan for national security i'
MEMBERS
.holldajs merging into each other
;
-
Editors assembled legislation though no conclusion was! founded<. 6n :armaments and allies. II

in Washington heard a warm and elaborate reached. The possibility of silver pur- This is the gist of a note delivered to every morning's sun to light up a new
:day when will have do 4. ra 4'y
to
we
nothing
defense of the New Deal deliv chases was discussed and the President' the _British government which is held ,

ered by Prof. Rexford G. ,Tugwell, as- indicated a disposition to give'' this to be a ,death. blow, 'to any accord on j i ,but get In our cars and attend a picnic

sistant, secretary' of' agriculture, who matter'consideration, but 'on the whole armaments. The blame for, failure of ,liberty rally or show, Of course, ,a

is in part responsible for most of the there was 'no indication the government negotiations: Is h'id' by the, French on ,few must work to operate filling stations l

recovery measures: adopted' by' the! will embark on such a policy. Chancellor Hitler 'arid his Nazi government ; hot, dog stands and the like. vLL/

present administrati6n. Denying that The President Indicated a" desire to ,of Germany.. That can be attended to by making

those who are advising the President have 'further talks, with the'sllver sen- The note 'desCribed 'the inciaased ,slaves of the rich we capture and putting Keeps Skin Young

seek to bring/ about radical changesIn ators and there' will be other conferences German military budget as a "''men.ace' them to work. Absorb blemishes and discolorations using

the life and economic policies of the according'to Senator William II. and declared the German 1 'government S., Mercohzcd Wax daily as directed. Invisible

King, Democrat, of Utah, chairman of results The excuse for public extravagancein particles of aged skin are freed and all
American. people, Professor Tugwell ; without awaiting the defects such as blackheads,tan, freckles and
described himself as a "thorough ,conservative. the silver committee and other sena- of negotiations In'progress, has shown the United States Is that only the large pores disappear. Skin is then beautifully

." tors who, attended the conference. It its determination to' continue'all'formsof :well-to-do pay taxes, and that taxation clear, velvety Mercolizcd and so soft Wax-brings face looks out

"We have a saving irreverence .of was quite'-evident} Mr. Roosevelt 'was rearmament in violation\ of the is the :quick and proper punish- years your hidden younger beauty.At all leading druggists.

authority," said Professor Tug shell in not in, favor of any mandatory legislation treaty of Versailles. | ment for scoundrels. .. If ,the i Powdered Saxolite i
at least,-at this time + reader 'will. call I show him I Reduces wrinkles and other age-signs. Sim-
on me
speaking of the characteristics of the "The German government the note : will I ply dissolve one ounce Saiohte m naif-pint II

: people, ."which gets us out of Later it was reliably stated that the charged, "intends to increase immediately the poorest man I hve- er known. witch hazel and usa daily aa taco, lotson. |

1'oles. These basic traits determine President' i ,was, maturing a plan for international on a formidable scale not only .He ,lost, his 'home lately, through a tax

and of stabilization of currencies the but also its :sale 'after' paying JS3G in taxes it
the structure of our laws our '(and, that silver prominently in strength of its army on Where the Kick Comes In ...
government No one, with the slightest ] figures naval and air forces.. during. a long'and struggling owner .
it Mr.' Roosevelt it revealed favors "Doc, what I need is something to t.\
was ; :
.
sense of history, would try to fit "Whatever ,explanation may be ad- ship. He had eight, lots: They were "
the inclusion.of silver In the, met stir me up-something to put me la {
sach a''' people into a regimented vanced, facts of such exceptional assessed at' $100 each 'although he'
al base of currency issues to the ex- first-class fighting trIm; Have you
scheme, would try' to think for them gravity can lead to only one observation : originally 'paid only $60 ''for all of
tent of 30 cent the 70 like that in this
per remaining put anything pre-
instead of: getting them to' think for and conclusion. They prove the them ; at no time during his owner-' .
per cent ,to be gold. This change can scription?"
h em selves. German government has made 'Impossible ship were the lots worth half the ..
be safely made however the President find
'in 'times "No. Tou'll that in my bill.
"Time will tell which these
.further negotiations"British amount at which they were assessed
points out only international
by -
is the best American-those who believe agreement government officials were year:after year.
whereby all the signatory nations
that the racketeering, the financial would still hopeful of results from the disarmament *: SHES
t admit silver to their reserves WHEN HE
juggling, the exploitation of workers against which is issued., conference, but the chancesof 1 do not know how' much'' longer I UPSETConstipation SUFFERS
paper money
'
'and consumers must be ended its still further minImized I shall be .
success were here. I have a shorter expectation ,, iit \
sire for and that of industry :! j. )
.
continuity
: all
,
r 'Jt.V. ;
when Fulvio Suvich Italian z
,
than
others
DILLINGER, the notorious many :!,' being old-
must be definitely assured ..bywlude'f JOHN for affairs hada I : I
means and several members of'his undersecretary foreign er, but I am determined while hereto .N' ,
r'orderly' political can \ :
talk with French Premier Gaston'. pursue the course best calculated to ,Jj ':.""" :
kc gang fought their way out of a trap ..L MiJfJffi f ...?
found those who believe it more .
important; or that, few ,insiders, laid by federal agents and possementen Doumergue in Paris. The latter reiterated produce most comfortI .f' ....... : ." {"" ..

some that France would refuse to .. ''t .
should be allowed to manipulate ma- miles east of am !still able to keep my hands out q"

forces social Manitowish, in north- "legalize" rearmament of Germany or of the fire and prevent unnecessary! _, .............,...m'(" .
terials, natural! .and Insti-
,
t : Wisconsin. In undertake to reduce her own military and painful burns I am still able to ,
tTitiona for;, their own ,good at. the expense ern ; Drove
under such conditions.
strength The
of'all the rest. three desperate gun avoid shooting those, of my ;neighbors made her fed cross,head-
premier made Jt plain that France with Heir Wild ,half-ahve.Now she
achy
"Democracy has" been .l living a precarious battles three men were whom I disagree, or breaking in-
would not discuss Mussolini's has a lovable disposition. new pep and vitality.
; ,life among our business institations killed and eight arms to their houses! Such actions would Heed Nature's warning:Sluttish bowels invariablyresultinpoisonouswastesravagingyouzsps-

wounded, and the limitation scheme or any other plan land me in. jail where accommodationsare -
its enemies In thia country
; except at Geneva with Germany tem often the direct cause of headaches, dizziness -
were i. a fair way to have it strangled bandits escaped into, rep- poor; I can, better afford to practice ,colds,complexion troubles. NATURE'S

and 'laid quietly ,aside until the New the woods. Three women resented. honesty and remain at home'with safely REMEDY stimulates-the the mild tnlirt, all-vegetable eliminative laxative tract

Deal eame 'along. 'For they'' did not who had ,been with all Its natural discomforts. I hop... to strengthens, regulates the,bowel for normal:
L. WILSON director of natural .
the division function-
,
realize that real democracy cannotbe the Dilllnger 'gang M of subsistence continue to the end to avoid other bad mz.Get a 2Sc box a .
homesteadsof
were arrested. Two habits which d'o not today at your I' 'J-h ,.y..i r.. '
destroyed without provoking a revolt -. pay; gormandiz ..
.. \y (:, '
L on the part of its practitioners. r others were believedllinger' lag, swearing. drunkenness, cheating,
< John issued a warning to the public to beware relief for and indigestion -
II
7'- to have fled with the Quick
"Farmers were' 'being starved off Idleness. lOc.o .
? "TUM ,be.artb1.1J11y
of
speculative land settlement ;)
their land;' workers; were: denied access desperadoes. Thesetwo I' do not much fear punishment after -

to idle factories. A kind of apeaiou9 came from Minneapolis and were promotions the "masquerading projectsof I am dead, but have lively apprecI-

thought to hare warned Dillinger of government's subsistence homesteads ation of the punishment threatening
and purely formal: political proc- He
::::1 essnac'being used as,a stalking horsefee'prjjilege the impending raid on the camp program.have to the says many promotions ,during the remaining day of my jonr-
' : where he had been for several days. come attention of '.,'\.,
; threatening oligarchy. his division, continuing: ney.If ,f' ,
Some hours after the battles in Wis- .
. 1 am extremely practical It is t'
L ,have never' lent myself to this supreme "Through suggestive advertisementsor .
: .
consin three members of the ,.
; gang were what life has taught I have
'.' ',chicanery ,and I I ,am not likely by means of strongly colored sales me; en-

,- to do so as:lonj as ,I keep any realistic seen by three deputy sheriffs in ''a talks, promoters, have reported that countered nothing cause me to
suburb of St.; Paul, Minn. A runninggun greatly
all. respect visionary things.
t sense at
<. they have the backing of the federal .
.- "The is fight ensued and one of the gangsters .
New Deal not something government through the subsistence MAKE THEM HAPPYOne
which establish itself in the mind apparently was wounded, but the In
can homesteads program where their the old days, when there was a
trio escaped and stole an automobilein bottle of 'DEAD SHOT' Dr.
of a dictator or a small governing claims are entirely false. 'disaster at sea, the women and children -
which, they headed for the bridge Peery's Vermifuge will save,
you
That the fatal of
was theory
SToup. "These promoters are preying upon were first given seats In the lifeboats

the system' from which we are turning across the Mississippi river. families ho'' desire to leave the city (it has never made much dif- money, time, anxiety, and restore

away. Its base has to be as broad as Federal and local officials throughout for rural or semirural living and they ference what happens to, men). Mod- the health,of your children in case ",
all that region were on the of Worms or Tapeworm.Dr.Peery's .
the economy which' has to be brought lookout serve to impede the progress of thedivision's erns are forgetting that gallantry. In

c under control and as deep as the minds for the Dillinger gang with the tacit program. Even a cursory Iowa' mobs of armed farmers blockedthe DEAD SHOTVermifnge50c

and the hearts of the people whom it understanding that the desperadoeswould examination of the representations of roads and would not let milk'
be shot on sight
I affects. : these promoters indicates they are utterly wagons pass on the way to town with

'-' i-" J lacking in good faith." 'necessary supplies for the women and
OnnIODS times for the railroads A LREADT suffering severely from
are children. There were plenty of food
; [
drought: large parts of tfie Middle A
at hand. They face the possibility in the automobile industry supplies in the country, town people
Northwest were afflicted by a destruc- PEACE 50c s bottle at druggists or
of a general strike, and the President ,tive dust storm, said to be the worst again when the work were willing to pay for them, and Wright's Pill Co., 100 Gold fat., N.Y. City.

: has warned them that if they do not in 20 years. The Dakotas, Min ers in the Fisher Body plants In farmers needed the money but the

reorganize their debtsat nesota, Nebraska, Kansas and Iowa Cleveland and St, Louis and the farmers were mad and determined to

rr the expense of their got the worst of it, the dry soil being Chevrolet plant in the latter city' wenton starve women and children to show

stockholders and stabilize strike. It followed their indignatio'n.We .
carried by high winds and In some a three months'!

their labor con- places deposited in heaps greater than appeal by the American Federation of are becoming worse than the sEeRE I. VfE. .,

d i t Ion s, government :Labor union for Russians. The Russian !
recognition, according peasants have Money
'4 .: h the snow banks of the winter. Farms, Lore ? A Career '
control or ownershipmay many of them already seeded, were to federation officials. always been willing to sell food sup- SmtationoftheAge.Thf Read the book that is the i

be the result. denuded of fertile top soil. Winter plies to town women and children, If Seer*t of Happiness. 35 '

The wage controversycame wheat was badly damaged. SO FAR, as the Democrats go, the I, paid for; the Russian town men went cnstcd Intimate ana problems profusely die il j

/ ;!vt to a head when Wirt affair, is ended, the, Democratic out Into the country and took things lustrated In new condensed form at new lo w price

the railway labor officials majority of the committee of Investigation before the rebelled.I SUCCESS AWAITS YOU! .
VARIOUS, writers in magazines and peasants Aroyoa dlsaatlsf Ifrd?Discouraged?Read the A-B- :
rejected President deciding to report to the American C'a of true happiness. Become master of Your
farmers
< ;. tell us that the chanceof .: con- believe Destiny-Feel YoungAaatn-Komcmber Lincoln ,, ,

.." Roosevelt's request war in Europe is remote, but almost gress that the Gary should rebel, but in the name of common was Coontrr-Tbcra a failure mo 42 t-tx and a rcuon-Heam at 52 was President to know yourself of his .Jf.j 7..' :

;t"':,, J. B. Eastman that the 10 per daily circumstances come to educator's charges of sense why don't they Jump on the Send for This Book NOW Send your name ,'
address and ago! and our Regular {2.50 Edition
: cent reduction be con- light that contradict this optimisticview. a red plot to over- politicians who: hare robbed them Instead will. b,mailed ID plain wrapper marked penooml Send
tinued, and the |1 00 cab ar.M.O..we pay poetace. (C.O.O.lOo extra)
railway executives said Here are some recent instances: throw the government of Innocent women and children? ADVANCE TRUTH PUBLISHING CO., Dejrt. H

they would not consider, any settlement Orders have been sent out for the are- unfounded.: Mc- God hasn't deserted ns; It Is our 317 Insurance Exchange Bldg., Detroit: 1ich.i .
::; more favorable and
to labor Gugin
than twenty-year-old youths of Germany to Lehlbach senses..

this. Joseph B.. Eastman, coordinator report for duty in military or labor ;E the Republican members s '

of transportation, who had been camps, which would indicate that of the committee, I know little of Sir John Falstaff' i M ake Y Own PURE SHAMPOO '
our EASILY AT HOME
carrying the
on formulated
a
negotiations
immediately minority
Chancellor Hitler's Nazi governments except that he Is acclaimed today as IN 10 MINUTES

withdrew as mediator, saying i quietly but efficiently providing military report expressing their the world's favorite rogue. Sir John For personal use or re-sale at big profit. '
"Wq supply concentrated ingredientsof
there was nothing he could accomplish. training for all these young menthe Y opinion that the In- thought himself one of the few good a Nationally puro Advertised Shampoo. \'
He asserted he should be Ready proportioned. combine.
Simply
believed broad
I the negotiations same as if military conscriptionfor --- "._.,, quiry men of his time, and said : "There Money back If dlssat'fflod-bank references : ,.,
would continue under : ened in scope. MC- Six: months' $1.00 ;
i'; the provisions a full-sized army were permitted live not three good men unhanged In supply postpaid.
Miss Kneeland PUBETEED ( Guaranteed) ; :
of the asserts there Pnrcty
,F'A. railway labor act But by international agreement Young Gugin Is England, and 'one of them is fat and Laboratory, Bloomfleld, N. J., Dept. A

:; F. Whitney president"of the Railway I men employed in factories and shops plenty .of evidence from many sources grows old" (meaning himself). l
c' Labor Executive association I to; prove that certain members of the
-
was must Capt. William another famous
belong to storm Kidd
.: '. groups. Only OLD AGE PENSION INFORJIATION:
; far
less seeking to overthrowhe
hopeful.
: t storm troopers get' Jobs. Labor brain trust are scoundrel, declared on the gallows he Send Stamp. t
camps
"Our only alternative established social order of the Box: : 85 -' - Mernam, Kansas.
;
,/',," for appears to call provide military training for those was a much wronged man. A book I

-I a strike ballot in order to prove who, for some reason or other, did not United[ States. has lately been announced to prove ;

our point in this matter," 'said Whit. become storm troopers. When the Bulwinkle committee that Captain Kidd
Many of these was an eminent rand
ney, "and If this Is done called before it the six who were with
there can be labor camps are virtually military finIshing New Yorker, and a bold and capable
-
but in Virginia IUJBBER S1T Ir FS
one dinner they
have been answer from the men who schools for ,storm troopers. Target Wirt at the astonishing unanimity, de- navigator of high standing among the I .
receiving such a all with
stipend." beggarly :; practice and similar military nied practically everything that Wirt mercantile community In both, Boston otherMarkingDevices
, maneuvers are staged. and New
York
that the
t New
York
;
President Roosevelt appointed Secretary said occurred that evening. Each of > WRITE FOR CATALOG
: Michael Kalinin, president of Soviet legislature voted him $750 for his
of Commerce asserted that the doctor monopolized &
Roper, -Secretary of Russia has-demanded them services DIXIE SEAL STAMP COMPANY ,
the
Labor : "intensivemilitarization" as a patriot; that a ship was '
Perkins and Attorney General the conversation, talking mainly ATLANTA GA.ITCHING.
of all rural Russia given him by popular I II
subscription because
Cummings, a committee of as about gold devaluation, and that It -
three
J ,- to part of general preparations for of his defense I:
study the matter of de- almost impossible to interrupt of liberty, and
stabilizing was
t road labor and financial policies. rant fense against war. He says: "We also him. They verified only one statement that he, was hanged by guilty capital-

. feels the railroads must wipe He must have a strong rear line connected which Wirt had ascribed to Miss Hil- ists In England, because they knew
out the with the front by: that In I
threat of receiverships by thousands of degarde Kneeland, a division head In his own city, where his virtue ,;
scaling threads. The chief task
is to train was known, he would l'
have been
down ac- .
their the
fixed charges and the: home ,economic of Agriculture ... :
must '
and Wherever it whatever
women children and others not fit quitted. occurs and .
settle their disputes This was that
with she
labor : department
finally. ,for military service to carry out the s s the cause, relieve it at once withResinol
to Wirt's proposal that
had objected
work of collective
SENATORS who urge the remonetiz- able-bodied farming when all the goal of the government should bea A man named Norton Is quoted as

silver held a conference persons are mobilized, so restoration of conditions in the saying the only way that has ever
'that normal functions
will
not be
with President Roosevelt but received with. Those who remain Interfered country as they were in 1926. been found to discover what honey

on by Western Newspaper Union. tastes like Is to eat it
4t

k't
k't'
f '

''' ,- -,'- --- .-..-- .-- -- --'''-':'-' -'- -_ --... .,. --- _._, ;
--- --- cf. s. ,.



1;": '." YO"........ T'0'.
A
: ": t: io: ::


f '








THE CLEWISTON NEWS, FRIDAY, MAY 11, 1934 .




niMniniiniiiiiiininiMiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiNiniiiiii iiiiiiiMiiiniiiiiMiiMiiiiiiiniiMiiiiiiiiiinniiiniinMiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiinnit-! ''Starving' Chinch !

-

t Bugs Checks Loss ..9771'9INZYoiEN'LS




0 I Queen Anne's Lace I Diet of Legume Crops Good I II I


Plan to Minimize the I
-


I- By Frances Parkinson Keyes I Threatened Raid.

By W. P. Flint Entomolog1. College of I
Agriculture WNU University Service,of Illinois. A Few Drops Every

What threatens to be 'one of the Night and Morning !
:: Frances Parkinson Keyes WNU Service. ::
most destructive Invasion of chinch I
Will Promote Clean
a
-- = bugs can be headed oft and wide Ii
niiiiiiiiiiiiiimimimmmimiimiiiimiim J niniimiimilllUMIMIimmimillllllllllimil I 'iiimiiiiiimmmiuiimiiimimmmmmi I I I Condition i
spread damage prevented or at least Healthy I

SYNOPSISAt callers departed. As the last one vanished I had had fewer educational opportunities minimized ''if farmers will starve the At All Drug StoresWriteMnrioeCo.Dpt.WChicsgofor i

from sight, and hearing, Anne ; than herself, from the shabby textbooks bugs by limiting them to a "diet" of I

a dance a visitor in 'the community turned on her husband with a rage i : which she had taken away'with legume crops. Free Book :

Neal Conrad young lawyer, is impressed by such as he had seldom seen her dIs- her from the mountain school." Unless the weather during May and !

Anne Chamberlain pretty daughter of a shiftless play. There :were other paragraphs after June is wetter than usual so as to

farmer perceiving her fine character.him and his A "Don't you ever dare speak to me that, describing the rise In the Ham. drown out the bugs, they threaten to Otherwise Up to Date
few later she accompanies
-, hostess days Mrs. Griffin on a picnic. At the end 'that way again !I" she cried. "You I mel fortunes, both political .and flnanclal. cause more damage than they have He--Does your mother have old- j

of the .day' Neal declares his love. At Washington ought to have realized 1 was in some But they did not matter so caused In any year during the past fashioned views? .i

on their honeymoon the Conrads meet difficulty and helped me out instead of much. What mattered was ,that Mrs 50. She--Yes, she has several In the
Clarence Hathaway friend of Neal's, young '
diplomat. The young couple tart housekeeping. making things ten times worse than Hammel had once been a little country'' Farmers that are known to be In the. album.

Anne's health begins to fall Neal, en they were already You ought to have school teacher like Anne herself, had heavily Infested chinch bug area are I

grossed in politics, becomes neglectful of her known that senators' wives have to receive suffered far more In her bridal days :,being warned to include all the legumes -

happiness.eight years Their Neal's son law is practice born. In and the his ensuing position on Thursdays and make hun- and she had married a man who pos I possible In the field crops they End Blackheads i

in politics both mount. A' daughter has dreds and thousands of calls them sessed far fewer advantages of every grow during the coming season. ThisIs f

been born to Anne, but her beauty is fading. selves other days dropping little dog kind, than Neal. And she had won one of the most effectite and at the

Clarence Hathaway visits the Conrads. He reproaches eared cards from one end of Washing through. But she must have had to same time one of the least expensive And Sallow Skin :
Neal for allowing Anne to "stag-
nate," and suggests Neal and Anne take a ton to the other Tomorrow I'm goingto learn too ; and perhaps, perhaps, she methods that farmers can use in fight-

holiday with him in France. In Paris Anna get all this straightened out by remembered how bitterly hard that Ing the bugs.I Weeks QuickerIt

is "rejuvenated." physically and sartorially. some one who does know and will tell learning was. chinch bugs could be 'confined

Hathaway win 'her long from secretly Neal without enamored success., endeavorsto The me all about It. I'll find out what The telephone rang. Miss Butters !:, only to legumes during the coming is so easy now to clear away blackheadsfrecMescoarsenesstohavesmpoth- ;

governor of his state offers Neal the appoint I've got to do and do it well." was speaking again, her voice even :. season they would not live any'longer !

' /, -J' ment of senator in the United State senate. "Why. Anne" said Neal gently, "I'm smoother and more purring than be than a meat-eating animal would live white flawless new beauty. Just begin tonight -
( ,.> At Washington a junior senator's wife Anne I didn't think ,1' with famous Nadi-
t',1 awfully sorry. fore. on this same diet. Chinch bugs will
finds her troubles begin with the selection of nola Bleaching Cream,
a home. His own annoyance had vanished, Into "Oh Mrs. Conrad I gave Mrs. not feed on any of the legumes Including ?' tested and trusted for overa

thin air at''' the sight of her distress Hammel your message and she will be alfalfa, soy beans, cowpeas, generation. The minute

which he did not minimize. He spoke pleased to see you at eleven. Sheis field peas, red clover sweet ,clover, .SA A S you smooth it on, Nad-

CHAPTER .IX-Continued with unaccustomed and unexpected of course very much pressed very vetch or lespedeza. Neither will they inola begins to clear,

tenderness. "Darling, It's all rIght. much occupied so I am sure you will feed on such other common field cropsas whiten and smooth your

-21- You'll the hang of all this In no buckwheat flax sunflowers ,;1skin. Tan and freckles,
Another caller the get understand and make your call brief rape, or
was coming
up muddy, sallow color vanish
time. Anne--don't stock beets:
and Anne with relief that cry. At eleven then- \c1 You
steps, saw, quickly. see day-
the new visitor was of a different, type S o S a a "It was Miss Butters." Anne sail! to The crops' that are "meat" for snfp by-day improvement un
,, YIA.
-was indeed herself timid and 111 at At nine'' o'clock the next morning, herself as she buttoned on her little chinch bugs and the only ones on t4, ;, til your skin is all you long

ease, In spite of her, pretty clothes and Anne called up the Vice President's blue tallleur and Jammed her small which they feed are the, gras'ses, and for'creamy-white' satin- I

air of unmistakable good breeding.But house, and asked for Mrs. Hammel. perky blue hat down over her curls these grasses must be-, green with the smooth, lovely. Get a No large box of :
NADINOLA 50c.
only disappointments -
this relief was short-lived. Madame A smooth purring voice that sounded'' "who made up the last part of that sap flowing In them, as the chinch ,
;no long waiting for results.Money-
EstavI, the wife of the third secretaryof somehow in spite of Its smoothness, message. Mrs. Hammel never said It bug Is'a sucking Insect and takes its back: guarantee. !

the Peruvian embassy' ,,was herself a as If It might, upon occasion grow at all. If she hadn't ,meant to be food not by biting off and chewing upa

newcomer embarking on her first dreadfully hard answered. "Miss But kind, she wouldn't have said 9 le'd bit of the leaf surface, but by in- I

round of calls. She accepted the place ters speaking." see me" "- serting its beak in the grass plants l\IEN. .'WOMEN! :

by the fire so recently vacated and "This Is Mrs. Neal Conrad, Senator Anne was 'right. Mrs. Hammel 'did and sucking out the (sap. They feedon

sat holding herself very erect with Conrad's wife. I asked for Mrs. Ham- mean to be kind. She looked to the bewildered all the small grains, Including bar Bring Back That Satisfied '

painful pauses which Anne did not mel) newcomer like a comfortable, ley spring wheat, winter wheat, oats, SMILE OF YOUTH' S

I know how to fill In, between her civil '''Oh-but you see Mrs. Hammel middle-aged angel her wings concealedby rye, emmer and spelt. They will also

stilted little sentences. In 'the midstof never goes 'to the telephone, Mr-s. Con her perfect Worth gown of gray feed on sorghum, broom corn field e

one of these pauses a fearful shriek rad. Couldn't you give me the mes- crepe de chine but her halo almost corn, sweet corn, sudan grass and millet -

her know.I distinguishable above the smooth ripples Tired? No pep? Listless after
rent the air; and an Instant later. sage? I am secretary, you Feel
the work day? yourself
., Nancy, with Junior In hot pursuit, tore take all her messages. Every one who of her permanent wave. There If corn and soy beans are planted to- slipping losing your attraction J i

wildly Into the room, tripped over the wishes to get In touch with Mrs. was something very homey about her, gether and a good growth of soy beans to the other sex? Then-.

rug. and fell sprawling on the floor Hammel does so through me." In spite of the fact that she might Is. obtained so that the beans shade try MAREVETA. '-

j between the two ladies Again reproved again convicted of have served as the personification of the lower parts of the cornstalks, such The unique of "ElCobo"
potency
'ignorance Anne felt herself flushing, "What the Well-Dressed Woman (with shaded stalks will have fewer bugs ,
The astonished caller !
the
rose, looking great Bahama Conch
alone in the little dark entry where unlimited means) Will Wear" ; she almost than corn without soy beans. A heavy !
very much startled. has been known to natives of
"I'm dreadfully ," Anne said her telephone hung. But she grittedher patted Anne's hand as she shookIt stand of sudan grass and soy beans the South Seas and the West) J i

sorry teeth. ; and an uncanny degree of Intelligence will suffer only slightly from chinch Indies for centuries. Now, for
". don't often I
wretchedly. "Really, they
1\-(. "1 wonder If she would let me come shone from the beams of her bug damage whereas sudan grass the first time, Science has concentrated -'. J
S act like this. Junior go upstairs and kindly alone would the powerful virtuesof i
and see her? Today? eyes. 'be killed.
-fl r- wash that-that-whatever it Is-off
"Today? Really Mrs. Conrad, 1 "So you're the wife of the new this food-tonicand_ gives .it:' ;

your face and hands. And Stay there doubt whether that would be possible. appointee to the senate? Bless me, to you in MAREVETA laden ;
until I send for you. Please. .MadameEstavi" Urge Sanitary Measuresfor with vitamins protein calcium' !
,
Mrs. Hammel would ,be delighted to, how young; you look-I shouldn't won
-But Madame Estavi had see you of course, but she Is very der If you're the senatorial baby. And Control of Garget' phosphorus, iodine, sulpbur'and i
quietly and effectively vanished and other minerals and essences val-
: much engaged. Perhaps next week I pretty as a picture., Your husband's
there were more callers coming up the :No one can estimate the economicloss uable in the conservation of
steps. Before the riotous and untidy could give you an appointment" young, too: Isn't he? Mr. Hammel's 'caused by mastitis, commonly vital forces.

,- "Won't ask her whether she been watching his career with Inter
children could be eliminated, these you known as garget, say Prof. D. H. Udall ORDER YOURS TODAY

I\ callers were upon Anne. would see me? It's really urgent. est-he believes there's a big future and S. D. Johnson of the 'New York 'Send postoffiee money order'for fl for
of And ahead each bottle, with and address
ahead him yet of your name
,The dreadful afternoon wore on. "In that case '. What Is your you State Veterinary! ,college. In some ''on teparate sheet of paper enclosing
? I will too, of course. I'm pleased you wantedto advcrtiJ>eme-nt.
telephone number, Mrs. Conrad dairy cattle herds the loss is slight, this
Anne, nervously keeping her eyes from In and like this.
to call back little later. But run see me Was In others it is
try you a they say, and severe.
the clock was nevertheless that .
aware MAREVETA1ABOIIATOIUES
there something ?
; of course I'' can't promise., Mrs. Ham- special Each herd, however, pays an un-
Neal
would be
her
expecting would be I
mel always gives up her mornings to Anne went straight to the point.. In necessary .toll, and the total loss' I Is; INC.
waiting for her and
she could
yet not I
her correspondence, we try not to let a few brief sentences she had outlined enormous. Because of the hidden nature Miami Florida a
escape and go to him. At last the tele- ,
anything disturb her. There are so her background upbringing, and of the disease It may often go un-. '

phone rang sharply. many demands upon her you see" previous experience. Then, with noticed. j
"Neal, dear," she whispered Into the Tin Cans Make Wonderful Products (no
slightly more detail, she related the 1
Anne hung the receiver already When an owner that a certain .
says
up toy. flowers) J24 to 1200;! weekly Plan Si.
transmitter, "I can't come for you. I'm : events of the afternoon before. Mrs. BUCKEYE SERVICE DcUroy, Ohio. II
regretting her sudden impulse to appeal cow made a high record but was .
sorry. No., I can't speak any louder: to the Vice [President's wife. As Hammel listened attentively. Once or "burned out" by high feeding and 1

there'are, people here they'll hear me. she lay In, bed the evening before, mis- twice the corners of her mouth never produced well again, the usual GOOD OPPORTUNITY to buy Banaaa
No I can't explain. No I'm not sick twitched and when Anne had Plantation In section reputed to be best: ,,
finished
erably wakeful, she had remembereda cause Is mastitis. The disease is In the ,world. Write E. RODRIGUEZ. 1
"
No. the children aren't either. she coughed a little behind fine Pedro Suits, Honduras Central America.,
"feature story" that she had read a .cambric marked by repeated attacks that tend 'l

She returned to the drawing room about Mrs. Hammel in the Inquirerthe handkerchief. to appear when the cow is drying off, 11

certain that she had been overheard. Sunday before. This article was "Well, well." she said, "I don't know or shortly after she freshens, or when We Have Exactly One Thousandfine ,

Well, that was bad enough but at leastit accompanied by a picture of the lady when I've been so much Interested. she Is fed on a high protein diet; or self heating free of Irons charge to be for given advertising away it

meant that these Intruding stran, herself smiling. plump bejeweled and And you thought of coming straight tome when exposed to unusual strain. If purposes.absolutely Instant lighting; automatic cleamIngr. -

'gers would go-would leave her In bewaved. But there was a look of real! --which I'm very glad you did- the disease Is active the milk may literature. Write explaining at once for everything our proposition Protected algid \

peace. But it did not. Sensing that buman kindness In the gentle eyes and on account of that article' In the In- become watery or contain flakes. territory OSIIINB:to County PUODUCTS Asrcnt CO. i

.\ something was amiss, and eager to I soft mouth and there was a paragraphin quirer. Are you on good terms with The best evidence shows that infection GREENV1I..LC - N. C.

J i (l ; know what u was they lingered to the article which had arrested the press yourself occurs during milking, and extra J

!1' \. -; find out Anne's attention especially and which "I'm afraid not. You seeAnne precaution at milking Is urged. Gar- OLD AGE PENSION INFORMATIONSend A

.
Neal let himself In with -hip latch seemed burned on her memory. plunged Into that story, too. This time get spreads less readily In herds JUDGE lEIIMAN -stamp- Humboldt, Kaa. '

key banging the door after him. and "Mrs. Hammel before her marriagewas Mrs. Hammel laughed outright. milked by hand than in herds milked

shouted to her from the hall. "Yes, I've read some of these articles a machine.
a Miss Sarah Gown a schoolteacher by
and of course I realized
didn't they PARitER'S
"Why tell
you me you were in the great western state g
going to have weren't overaccurate, but I didn't know HAIR BALSAM
company? he roared. which her distinguished husband ha Revolutionized'The
Just what lay behind them. Well Farming r ar Removes DaadruffStops Hair J
"
1 waited and waited the map. When my Imparts Color and
on
so rapidly 'put
dear, the first thing for you to do Is revolution in method wrought ltcf Beauty Gray and Faded Hair
Neither of them ever referred they first met he was a cattle herder .
again
GOo and fi CO at Drucsists.FIIecoT
to get a picture taken of yourself that on the farm by the tractor !is not generally Chem.Wks .Patcbogog,N,T.
to the next few minutes. He strode The early days of their marriage were .
",I t does you justice-several of them- realized in urban communities FLORESTON SHAMPOO-Ideal for use inconnectionvithParker'BHairBalflam.Make8tb
: ,. :. Into the little parlor, halted and became spent on a ranch sixty miles from, the
. : 1 \ and then ring up Miss Sharp and ask points out the Montreal Gazette. It
\. 60 cents by mail or at drojrBista. -
,3: dumb. Introductions were mum nearest village. Mrs. Hammel of hair soft and fluffy.
;', '. her to come and have tea and a little has ushered in the era of powerfarming .Hiacox Chemical Works.Patchogue,N.x.
: bled, but afterwards the silence deep. course did all her own work, and, In affording employment to smaller
chat with you. :
f. ened. One by one. disappointed l the the evenings, taught her husband, who (TO BE CONTINUED.) number of persons, but with an In-

of Individual output. The chemIst SORE EYES
Lotion
: '. '. '. '_ _, _,. .-T. '. '. '.-T. '. crease Eye
'" '-.r..r..r ' '- '" -TT ;.TA '
'" .r .r '
'" '" '"'"'""' -- '- - -- '" '" '"-'-' .r .r .r .r .r '--- -'-' .r JT 77-7 77 J
-
'I .rrrrrrr.r.rr r I I r.---r---r-r--.r- I- -r------ with his fertilizers, the biologistby relleros and cures sore and In1lamedoyealn2f.to'IllS
boars Helps tno weak eyed, cures without pain.

> Hums Indians Titicaca pends on a knowledge of meteorology segregating special resistant qual- Ask from your llelormlJispensary druggist or dealer,PO for Box 8AI.TfcIfS.Only 161,Atlanta G*.
Living on Lake ities for particular climates and soils,
which has become an Inherited sense. J JToSTOP
have both contributed their quota to
: Make Their Homes on Floating Islands They can tell almost to the minute
a development as significant In Its way the pain ofHEMORRHOIDS
when a storm lurking on the crest of
t Nearly 13,000 feet high Lake Tltlcaca serving what in most cases Is home as the coming of the railway train and
the Andes will burst over the and
r' not only is famed for Its natural for life. During the entire day the' lake, steamship ( )
they can predict with the same cer-
t
and historical values, but also children are employed In cuttingand
tainty whether a year will be wetor DON'T STRAIN!
:,
because it is
the home of the the totora and
Huros collecting weaving dry. The Best Potato Seed Forcing only aggrartes PILES
a, strange race of Indians living on It In many layers on the founda the condition.To .
:' man-made floating Islands. tlon already existing. With this knowledge they strengthen Seed pieces from the tip or seed end ease pain and discomfort .
., their Island homes against the coming much more promptlyKEEP GARFIELD
The Islands are built of matted They are also taught to build the of potato tubers produce THE BOWELS OPEN-with -
: of the wet years and with the vigorous plants and greater yield than TEA-a. mild pleasant'to-take laxative.
aquatic growths and anchored bamboo familiar elimination
by light totora canoes so to those Makes
'approach of storms they anchor more pieces taken from the basal or stem easier.strainin/t unneces
poles driven Into
the lake Lake Titicaca.
bed who travel on
relieves the
firmly their fragile abode. F. C. Stew- FREE sary. Also
l. end of the same tuber, says
S.,. b The material employed Is rattan grass, The Indians spend their time In annoying sense of fullness -
art, potato specialist at the state experiment SAMPLE experienced by
;;j known to the Indians
as
-r- totora. which hunting and fishing for the lake teems station at Geneva, N. Y. His Write fo sufferers of hemorrhoids
: Is woven Into a dense matting sufficiently with fish of such delicate flavor that even after elimination. '
Reforms and
I I Progress Co.
with spuds strongly sup- TEA
experiments Brooklyn.Tea Get GARFIELD at ;
strong and; buoyant to supportthe they were one of the most highly "lleforms tr.
are essential to progress, port this contention. The experiments: your drug store. '
weight of the Indian huts. prized courses of the Inca's table. I said Hj Ho. the sage of Chinatown, also show, he says, that Infection of

To maintain the Islands In a seaworthy The lives of the Uuros are passedon "They must be attained by learning the seed tubers with leafroll does not

condition the Indian children their floating islands, but the ability
ncO only what Is possible, but what I* alter this relationship.
are trained ID the art of pre. fo keep them floating 'largely de I impossible"


a

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PAGE FOUR TIlE CLEWISTON NEWS FRIDAY, MAY 11, 1931.: ;
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The Clewiston News a small part of the tribute we pay 1 I I statements made by Time. Just at I with Mrs. Newton at the piano. After Rev. and Mrs. W. B. Furgecs left

to our mothers every day in the year, this time, however it may be con- the discussion many familiar Amer- Monday for a three week's vacation

Published every Friday in Clewiston, but it is a beautiful custom that per I strued or applied, it is a most interesting ican songs were sung by the group. which they will spend with relativesin
mits of all walks qf life to Refreshments were served by the
everyone human document.
Florida, by the CLEWISTON NEWS, ; Trenton, N. J, Mr. Furgess expectsto
hostesses of the afternoon, Mrs. E. ,
join in humble homage to the one responsible fill In
his pulpit the first Sunday
Inc.
for life. E. Edwards and Mrs Mary Dreyer. June*

-Keathley Bowden, Editor LaBelleNews
TIME SEES TRAMMELL BASKETBALL SQUAD AWARDED ,

.i LETTERS; TRICOUXTY TROPHYA JiO' \flT: (G O, 'u," ,S I ],;-' -
Entered as second class mail mat- Time, widely circulated news- Items I .._ ., \ ,

ter February 1, 1927, at the Post magazine, frequently upon request 12-inch trophy now graces the Counselor and Attorney at Law
desk of Coach T. R. Jones. This ,
Florida under,
in Clewiston, '
Office
from a group of citizens of any
Hopkins Building
12-inch statue was awarded the La-
the Act of :March 3, 1897. state, prints the "record" as well as GREGORY AND MILLERTO Belle boys basketball team as champ- Weclnesrtajs and Saturdays

the personal and political character- HAVE NEW OFFICER. ions of the Tri-County League. 9:30 to 4:00
Subscription rate, $2.00 per year. istics of members of Congress. These I I|I During the past season six players -

Advertising rates on application. analyses usually are comprehensive, N. Miller, City Tax Collector earned letters: Reason Mampton,

and I candid, politically impartial. of LaBelle still has faith in LaBelle Perry Hall, Ernest Hall, Harry'Ande'rson Watches, Clocks, Jewelry
Devoted to the advancement Back in November, 1929, five citizens to the extent of erecting a new J. P. Crews and Julius Rear or
welfare'of Clewiston and Hendry building on Fort Thompson Avenue.: Moon. .
of Stuart requested Time to
County. One side of the building will be s:I Clewiston Drug. CompanyJewelry
;
give its attention to Senator Park I
occupied by the office of the firm i! Repairing
Trammell. !! Miss Alma Crews visited her sister
----- Time promptly responded of ''. -
Gregory and Miller, Abstractors. W. H. MERRITT
If you've registered the next stepis with a remarkable 'sketch of our jun- The other half of the building will :Mrs. Eugene :Mills: in Clewiston
Sunday afternoon WATCHMAKER: & JEWELER
paying poll tax for the past two ior Senator. be for rent. The building, which is .
:May 19th is the last day on In view of the fact that Senator being constiucted partially from material Reason and J. W. Hampton attended CLEWISTON FLORIDAP.

years.which payment of poll tax can be Trammell is now a candidate for reelection taken from the apartment 'j,:I the dance at Olga Tuesday O.' Box 521

made in order to vote in June. for his fourth term, we think building at Hedges Corner, is to be'' night. "We Are Here'' To Stay"
T Florida voters, especially those who a one storied affair with a stucco ex- J! Wallace Aiken, K. F. Jennings,
terior rendering it fireproof accord- 'Louis, Jennings and Earl Rimes fish-
have become voters since the Senator's -
The Arcadian put out a whale of ing to the cityordinance.. \' edin Lake Trafford Tuesday. A
last will interested
candidacy, be
an edition last week. Ten pages of I splendid catch was reported.-by another H H VV V "

regular paper, four of the delinquent in a reprint of that informative El'WORTH LEAGUE PRESENTS 1 group of fishermen. := =i iA =
Used
article: This is what Time printed New and
tax list and sixteen pages con- WELL KXOWX ENTERTAINERS Thomas "Uncle Tom" Howard of ;
taining the laws passed by the three November 11, 1929 : I i, Ocala returned Monday fo his old '

sessions of the 1933 legislature., Sponsored by the LaBelle Epworth I;'1 I! home in LaBelle for a visit with his :!:. FURNITUREBELLE ::

The record of Senator Park Tram- League, Miss Lucille Elvidge interpreter sons Robert, Frank and Lonnie .

mell, of Florida. : and Paul Hilliard, baritone, Howard. Mr. Howard is a pioneer of
Howling is a poor substitute for both of Fort Myers and i South Florida having spent all of his I L!
Born: In Macon county, Alabama, George Wood \
action. The same breath could be April 9, 1876. pianist of :LaBelle, presented a pro- ;:' 80 years near the Everglades and'the GLADE :
used constructively and constructive of music last 40 years in LaBelle with the ex- '
gram and readings in the :
activities what need rather Start in life: Picking oranges in ception of the past few months when I
are we Grammar School auditorium '
than excessive howling over con- Florida groves, clerking In Tampa evening. Tuesday.1:j he has been making his home with 1: FURNITURE COMPANY l \
"
ditions.-Plant City Courier If you stores Miss Elvidge read Jane Cowl's in- i i his daughter in Ocala. '

catch yourself howling, stop and hunt Career: As a babe-in-arms he was terpretation of "Lilac Time," a scene i' Elbert L. Stewart of Clewistonwas :|: Belle Glade, Florida ::

some worthwhile activity. carried from Alabama to Florida. from "Cyrano de Bergerac" by Ros- in LaBelle Monday reminding v :
Grade schools at Lakeland gave him tard, "When Earth's Last Picture is :;j friends that he is a candidate for the *: Next Door To Theatre :

his education. He kept books. Am- Painted" by Kipling and two humorous !'office of State Representative from, :: :::
Middle has set in when ........... .. .. .. .... ... ...... .......
age you bitious, he went to Cumberland Uni- sketches, "Who's Afraid" and Hendry county. : : : : : :": :": :":": :": : :": : -: : : :": : : :
somewhat resent a twenty-year old "Fell "
In Uh Mud. Mr. Hilliard I
sang
versity, Lebanon, Tenn., studied law
calling you "mister," and feel that 1 for '0 Sole Mio" by Di Capua, "The }Ros
full-
a year, was graduated a
he's a bit fresh when he calls you I ary" by Nevin, "Trees" by Rasbach,
fledged lawyer (1899)) Back in
by first name. ThomastonGa. "Kathleen Mavoureen" by Crouch,
your
Lakeland, he put out his shingle. "Mother: "
( .) Times. Another sure signis Machree, Open the Gates, H
Business was poor. He became asalesman ,"Who Is Silvia" by Schubert,
when you still can hit a' home run I
TeachersYou
traveled four days each "Dutch Warbler" and the old number -
but give out of breath when
you week, practiced law three. At 24 he "Polly Wolly Doodle." George !|
reach second base.-Clermont Press.
was elected Mayor of'Lakelandthus Wood presented two piano solos, I;

first exhibiting the flair for practical' "Melodie" by Massent and "Prelude"by
dollars this
This being the political season, it politics which carried him later to I Rachmaninoff. Mr. Wood also accompanied can earn several hundred

is entirely apropos to blame every- the Senate. Since 1900 he has not I Due to the Mr.short Hilliard.time of planning summer;, and you can secure a better position anda
thing on politics, and Mrs. Helen been out of public office. His
job little publicity had been given the for the Complete information
larger salary coming year. -
Sheldon of Missouri
Independence, is holding record: Mayor of Lakelandtwo
and
program only fifty persons were 'I
doing just that. In a suit for divorce I ( years) State Representativetwo present to enjoy the entertainment. will be mailed on receipt of a three

she maintains that her husband man- ( years), State Senator (four for it
cent Send
I stamp. today.
aged to enter the voting booth next years), State Attorney-General (four .McDAXIEL-DAY

to hers at the last election and years), Governor (four years), Unit- I Rural Schools and City Schools t,,',:,

whispered threats through the cracks ed States Senator (12 ) I Miss Mary Maralean McDaniel of '
years Summer Work and School Year Positions, .i'!
until she became frightened, and In Congress: He has served the Goodno and Carl Day of Ormondwere : ,, :

voted for some GOP candidates.. Senate continuously! since 1917, being married by County Judge H. A. Continenta.l ,<: }:
Rider in his office Sunday afternoon. ,
now in his third term. He voted for

The famous Wakulla Springs pic- tax reduction (1928), flood control COMMUNITY CLU11 OBSERVES '' ,Teacher's Agervcy 'Ii\c. :' "

nic, long a :May Day politician's ((1928)) the Jones (increased prohibition f XATIOXAL MUSIC WEEKA I :"i,!:.:,. ,

gathering, fell flat this year. The penalties) law ((1929)), the I 1850 Downing St., Denver, Colo. .

crowd was very small in comparisonwith cruiser construction bill ((1929) large number of members were !! Coders the ENTIRE United States '

past years: And no wonder, for farm relief (1927-28-28) He voted present at the regular meeting of the

sponsors of the picnic did not includethe against nothing of importance. Woman's Community Club Tuesday I "Thanks for sending me so many good positions to apply fo'r, ;>i

free fish fry in this year's at- No active prohibitionist, he votes to enjoy a program of music in observance -I over 30 during the first five days I was enrolled."-An Illinois '
of National Music Week.
traction. At Bouita Springs, candi- dry, says he does not take drinks. Mrs. E. E. Edwards announcedthe I teacher.

dates played to a large and wel -filled Legislative hobby: High tariff for topic of the afternoon, an inter
audience, thousands of pounds of Florida truck and citrus.A esting summary of the developmentof SCHOOL OFFICIALS-We can put you in touch with the

fish having been fried and distributed childless widower, he lives in music with special stress on Amer- very finest teachers. Our service is free to you.Attractive .

free. hotels in Washington and Lakeland.His ican writers. The meeting, opened ,

friends consider him a "ladies' with the club song, "My Florida" I

We thought politicians had sprungall man." He tries to suppress the year -

the tricks, but here's a new one of his birth, reckons himself "too
..... ..
from a Texas aspirant, and is it young" yet to take up golf. Once he -:;>

good? He has announced for representative played a cornet; now, as a Senator .. '
Ii
anonymously.: His news- he touches no musical instrument.His :!':.''i1': I FOR SALE :;: ::;

paper advertisements'designate him diversions, short walks, the the- ,

as "Joe" and his picture is one takenin ater. He wears his hair long and H

the early 90's when he was 4. His, loose, affects horn-rimmed glasses I Clewiston Home Small Cash Payment .H. ;_;

idea is to familarize people with his i on a heavy black ribbon, very attentive :i: :i: .:_ :::

\, platform, which he says is ,the important to his attire. He smokes manyan ..:. .:.. I :i: .i.

thing, his personal welfare expensive cigar, takes a dry chew : .0.
being of little concern. Now isn't that I occasionally, is shocked at the ideaof : : ::: :i:
i:::
:: : .i. .!.
a good one? "
"shooting crap He is not socially .
: :: i
: ::
} ..
inclined, rarely entertains, goes to .:.. .:.. .:.. ..:.
An Indiana superintendent of the Baptist church.A ; :: :: ::
schools is :: ;
credited with the state- large full-chested man with a
ment that if the state had spent $25 ponderous walk, he offers a striking .:. :i. ::: :i:
:i: .:: I .:. .:.
on '
Dillinger in his
boyhood it would resemblance in appearance and cast y!
-, not be .. x
spending thousands now try- of mind to another Alabamian- .. 0
:
ing to curb his lawlessness. As a Senator James Thomas ('Tom-Tom') I

'? matter of fact Dillinger graduated Heflin. Like Heflin, he mortally ... : 4g : b .tt. ,

from High School in the town in hates and fears the Roman Pope, but ..i... :::: r I ..;.. :::: i'.

which he was born, was a baseball unlike Heflin, he does not boldly talk .

star on, the school team and pro fic'f about it. Heflin greatly surpasses :: ::
t
:' ient in his studies. If the $25 had Trammell in a gift for words, in dramatic .0.: .... ..0. .:.

; been spent for his funeral that emphasis, in "darkey" storytelling x: ?I

,:!.';. .' would have helped some.MOTHER'S if not in mental ability. xx +
About Trammell there is a certain

: DAY dull, pomposity, unrelieved by humor t

He is a politician, not a statesman -
yy .
", Sunday is the one day of the with a remarkable memory for y yy ,
year .. .. y
: I .. ..
which
for we, as a nation have set aside names and faces, a cultivated appeal vy v:

honoring our mothers. In reSponse to the msses. He never offends Big : y .
y i.knwP v
,
f, : to a proclamation by President' Business. He claims (in Florida) that *

d Roosevelt May 13th is desig- he originated and led the whole y xi
?
nated y
as Mother's Day. For twenty movement to reduce taxes after the AL$v '
#;: years it txxx
has been the war-a claim
custom of the justly disputed by the
president, under authorization of Republican leadership.

Congress to so designate the second Impartial Senate observers rate him + y

Sunday in May. thus No orator : yx.
{ : no specialist in any I
;: So universal has been its observance field of national legislation, no sponsor .yy. .:. I ... .y.

';\, that it seems the custom must of famed laws, he is onlan average -:. .y. .:. ..
be of rather ancient origin. -:. ..:. ... ..
In fact legislator, voting regularly with --
'
: ,
.
'.\ it originated was: first in observed Philadelphia in 1910, being other Southern Democrats on everything ,:: :: Pay The Balance Like Rent ::: :i::

,on suggestion except the protective tariff ,
'
'J"- : custom of Miss Anna Jarvis. The (for Florida produce) \\1iat he lacksin :;: :;: WE HAVE HELPED BUILD MANY CLEWISTON HOMES :: :;: i
spread
.recognition was rapidly gained, and by congress national brilliance political acumen he makes and up industrious for in local ':: :_!= YOU CAN OWN YOUR OWN HOME :": :i:

{ ional action in 1914, President wit attendance on the Senate floor. His t'' 2

:r, ''': proclamation son The issuing love and in the that first year.President' term expires March 4; 1935. t: ewiston HomeBuilding Association if'

iW memory of Mother is Friends and opponents of Senator
"f" a sacred thing, and it is fittingly Trammell will, of course, put 'their r+:: :+i: S PHONE 102 :: :::

observed on a sacred day. It is but own differing construction upon the I. ,--- ._-- ,_.. '-..- -DQ--- ...-"""' ..- ,-




I
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-
I -" '
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':. : '. ; ; / : : : '. .. . ; :; \;I' .!. :1:.. '


'I i


.
FRIDAY, MAT 11, 1934. THE CTjlSWTSTOX NEWS PAGE FIVE
-
----

-glad to learn that she recuperating DELANEY JOINS FUND I l Mrs. R. George, Mrs. Gratton

'nicely following a major operation FOR DILLINGER REWARD Hints for HomemakersBy George, Mrs. G. E Etherton, Miss

I Personal Mention I ,which uas performed at the Good Louise Waldron and Miss Roberta
Samaritan hospital inVest Palm Sheriff H. L. Delaney has mailedhis Jane Rogers I IAN George motored to West Palm Beach

check for $25 to Sheriff Hi Lawrence Tuesday.
Beach Friday.
of Palm Beach county to add

Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Tichenor spent to the John Dillinger Reward Fund .
the week end visiting In Miami. Mrs. H. Godin of South Bay ,vas started a week, ago by the East Jw -- -- ------

a visitor in Clewiston Monday. Coast official. It is intended that all IN TWELFTH TIlE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
JUDICIAL
t" CIRCUIT OFFLORIDA
D. C. Duncan of Tampa is spend- sheriffs and peace officers contributeto IN AND FOR HENDRY, -

ing a few days here on business. Roy D. Stubbs of Fort Myers, candidate -, the nation-wide fund to be givento .COUNTY C. Byrd.; IN CHANCERY.W. .

for state's attorney for this the person effecting the captureof Complainant.ETHEL .

ti; Major and Mrs. R. H. Collins spent circuit, was a visitor in Cyewiston the Dtllinger "dead or alive." ,"s. ,-

t. I several days of this week In Miami. first of the week. __ Defendant.BYRD I
GLORIA HENDRY GIVEN PARTY BILL FOR DIVORCEIt I

------- appearing by affidavit appended to
I Mrs. Antionette Lamb spent Monday Mrs. F. L. Williamson will leave the bill of complaint In the above entitled -
f. afternoon in West Palm Beach tomorrow to return to her home in Mrs. Charles Hendry entertained a cause that the defendant. Ethel
Byrd, Is a non-resident of the State of
of girls at her home yester-
New York after visiting friends here group Florida that her residence post-office
Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Richard of Tampa for two weeks. day afternoon in honor of the tenth t '" nP address! and place of abode Is unknown, I
this week here. birthday of l her daughter, Gloria. I +,Rw y j V NN and It further appearing that there Is
spent several days no person within the State of Florida i
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Allen, Mr. and Guests included Renel McGeehee, the service of summons In chancery i
Gloria Freedlund, Janice Wynn, Jacqueline on whom would bind the said de-
t A. Trainor spent the week end vis- Mrs. E. B. Butler and G. Hines accompanied fenda.nt.
McKenzie, Louise Smith and old sewing machine.can easily It Is thereupon ordered that the defendant I
iting his family in Daytona Beach.E. ,: a group of Junior ballplayers -
Evelyn Miller.Refreshments. I be converted into a smart Ethel Byrd be and appear to
to Belle Glade Sunday the bill of complaint filed In said
jl I of ice cream, cake dressing table. Saw a piece of
cause on or before Monday, June 4.
and Norman Lath- .
H. Latham
after pressed wood, obtainable from a A.
and limeade were served an D. 1934; otherwise the allegations of
I am were week end visitors in Palm l\ ..rs. J. P. Percy has as her guests hour of games. lumber dealer, to. the right size. the said bill will be taken as confessed

p Beach. hers parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Nail it to a.. frame made of %-inch- 1 by It her.Is further ordered that this noticebe
square wood, and cover the entire week for four .
Artisani and her two sisters Misses published once a (4)
;
CANDIDATES OFFEREDAMPLIFIER top with a colorful' chintz or other consecutive weeks In the Clewiston
Mr. and 11rs.Edgar, Roylance of Billie and Louise Artasani, all of I
heavy material, taking care to tackit News a newspaper published In said
Fort Pierce arrived here Wednesdayto Boston.Mr. County and State.
I. tightly around the edges. Then
Done and ordered at LaBelle, Florida,
reside.T. i give it a coat of shellac and you this second day of May, A. D.. 1934.
and Mrs. J. P. Percy and I Alston's Drug Store has offered have a serviceable table top. A (CLERK'S SEAL)

C. Covan was called to Geor- daughter, Eleanor, have moved to I the use of its amplifying system asa ruffled skirt should be made.'of the WILLIAM T. HULL, 1
Clerk of Circuit Court.
gana, Ala., Friday by the "death of Williamson house .on East Arcade service to the public and invites same material and tacked to the Louis 'O. Gravely !

his stepmother.Mr. Avenue and Mr. and Mrs. M. E.yon every candidate to make use of it frame. If you wish to use the Solicitor for Complainant. ...
Mach and family have taken the whenever they wish. Dave Alston, skirt.machine, simply lift off the top and No. C24 May 4, 11, 18. 25; June 1. j

and Mrs. F. J. Nebiker and house on the Ridge vacated by the proprietor and manager of the store,

] son, Bobby, were Sunday visitors in Percys. stated to the News that the store is Serving a fruit garnish or compote NOTICE '.1

West Palm Beach not backing any candidate, and that with the meat course adds a

Mrs. M. H. Gibson or Palm Beach, all were invited to use the amplifierfor pleasing touch to the dinner. It is Notice is hereby given that an

(-' Mrs. O. French and two children accompanied by her mother, Mrs. De- their speeches. The use of the not only delicious in itself but provides election will be held at the usual '1

\1.Y have returned from a two week visit vine and brother, Robert, of Pitts- amplifying, system is a privilegethat to heavier a piquant dishes.contrasting Another all-im flavor voting place in Special School .Tax

with relatives in Tampa. burg and, her sister, Countess Bon can be enjoyed in few tons of portant point for the busy housewife District Number seven Hendry 'j.

I I Konoren of Stockholm, Sweden, were this size, and Mr. Alston' emphasizesthat Is that such garnishes and County Florida, on Tuesday the
A. D. 1934 for the
of
nth day May
Mr. and Mrs. M. P. Peterson are guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. Y. Patterson his is free to candidates. :::ompotes are easily and quickly .1
three Special
purpose of electing
spending the week visiting friends Friday. Mrs. Gibson is a former prepared. School Tax Trustees and for the :

and relatives in Jacksonville. Clewiston resident.Mr. ENGINEERS 6, FORT MYERS 7 purpose of determining the amountof :1

-- millage to be assessed in said .

Mr. and Mrs.. F. R. Maxwell vis- and Mrs. J. H Gardner of 6 I P.-T. A. PLANS FATHERS NIGHT Special Tax district for the next two ,q
7
The U. S. Engineers met a to "
ited in Fort Myers Monday as the Miami spent the week end visiting Sunday after- I I years.
defeat in Fort Myers :
guests of Dr. and 1\Irs 'Baird. Mt: and Mrs. C. F. Goodman. Mrs. noon at the hands of the Caloosas, Father's Night will be observed by DREW HAMPTON, .'

Gardner and Mrs Goodman are sis- whose hard hitting by the heavy end the Parent-Teachers Association witha Chairman Board of Public

D. C. Cole of Belle Glade, a for- ters. Mr. and Mrs. Gardner returnedto of the batting order was responsiblefor special program at the next meet- Instruction Hendry County -

mer resident of Clewiston, spent the Miami Monday and were accompanied their victory. ing, May 18th, in the High School Florida.' '

week end here. to West Palm Beach by Mr. Pop Walker pitched for the En- auditorium. Mrs. W. C. Prewitt, ATTEST
president of the Association E. L. STALLINGS,
and Mrs. Goodman. gineers, with William Hooks reliev- requestsa '
innings. good attendance of fathers and Public Instruction.
three
Jim Carey and Robert Hodges of ing him in the last Supt. 1.i.1
Neal Williamson caught. other members. No. 21-Apr. 13, 20, 27, May 4, 11. <
Pahokee were visitors here Satur- Among the out of town business
Melvin Pape led the Engineers in
day evening. visitors here this week for several
hitting with four hits. out of five :_

days C. R.were Phillipps S. D. Macready of West, J. Evans Palm, times The at Engineers bat. have a good ball ........................................................................................................................-........................................................... ....

F. B. Puryear: left Tuesday for Sar- Beach, L. G. Levert of Jacksonville '' '
club and have been playing jamb' up .
1 1Ir
.
I asota and will spend several days L. E. Spencer, O. B. Simmons, baseball this season, this being only .i.1 I I oo j jj

i there transacting business Thomas Johnston, Mr. and Mrs. A. their second'defeat. :: I If. .

\I. Balfe of Miami, F. G. Gibson ofSt. Don Bolick pitched a splendid

Harry Cornell and Allen Altvaterof Louis, J. H. 'Jones of Ft. Myers, game for Fort Myers. j '

Sebring spent a few days this week and J F. Horsey of Plant City. Ir CLEWISTON GOLFto .

in Clewiston on business. IMPROVEMENT AT ALSTON'S .

Mr. and Mrs. R. Patterson' were IRS. MAXWELL GIVES '
BRIDGE LUNCHEON TO CLUB Alston's Drug Store is being im-
visitors in West Palm Beach Wednesday t ;
proved this week by the addition of COURSE ,

Mrs. F. R. Maxwell entertainedthe a shelter over the sidewalk in frontof

{ members of her bridge club Tuesday the building. The large neon .?'. .Z.:- '",
fr 11 Miss Margaret Page of Fort Myers afternoon at the Watanabe yy
\ sign has been raised several inchesto f ,
)\ is visiting Mr. and Mrs. JR. C. Nowl- House with a bridge luncheon.I I X
erection of the roof
,
permit the
( ing for a few days. Guests Mesdames Al- .;.
were D. G. :!: ..
which! will protect the interior of .
ston, B. Thomas, I. M. Pafford, G. I. :.
the store from a portion of the glareof s..i
Mr. and Mrs J. H. Peden of Still- C. Poole, H. R. Hall, C. W. Mac- I XI
Donald, J. W. Ezelle. the summer sun and from blow- 't'
water, Okla., were business, visitors High score I
here Saturday: was awarded to Mrs. Alston and cut ing rain. I
prize to Mrs. Poole.ENTERTAIN. The work is being done by J. F.



L.Palm Mrs.Hemenway Beach F. Deane Tuesday were Duff visitors and'. in Mrs.I West N. --WITH TEA Tippey NOTICE and is completed.OF ADOPTION Ii ... Open the Pubic I Iy


Mrs. E. L.. Stewart and Mrs. F. M.

Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Wilson spent Wright were hostesses at a delightful y s
Notice is hereby given that Mr. and 5)
I Sunday visiting Mr. Wilson's father tea Thursday afternoon honoring y 1 .S.Sii
Mrs. Russell of Clewiston
Clyde Flor-
Y
in Fort Myers.' Mrs. F. L. Williamson of New York, .
ida will the 4th 'of Y
on day June,
who is
visiting here. Mrs. Williamson Y I
-- I .
1934, make application by petition to ,
is a former resident of Clewis- ___ .:.
Lester Blount of Fort Myers arrived ton. the Honorable George W. White- -, .,.. '.. ..
The tea
was given at the' homeof ;
here Wednesday and will make Mrs. Stewart on Arcade avenue. hurst, Judge of the Circuit Court in ii -

his home at the Watanabe House. and for Hendry County, Fla., for the hY
Mrs. F. I. Hill, Mrs. F. D. Duff,
adoption by them of male child born
a
h
Mrs. M. W. Biggs and Mrs. W. C. Y

Monday S. L. after Nail visiting returned friends to Clewiston and relatives Owen Guests presided who at called the tea between table. three April duly file 30, 1934 petition, and therefore will, on said and date will, :;: I Moderate<<;>> Green Fees :*i:


in High' Spring::; and Lakelandfor and six were Mesdames C. L. Downs, thereafter in due course, request appointment :: Exceptional Fairways *
of a guardian ad literal and j
W. M. Redelsheimer I ,
the past month. W. C. Prewitt, j
R. H. Collins, C. H. Berner, Fred I will, thereafter set down the, said petition :::: interesting Greens !:i::
for
MacKenzie hearing and at such hear- ,
Arthur MacKenzie Alex
Mrs. J. V. Lofton, Mrs. Alta Lewis I ing will seek an order authorizingthe ..
MacKenzie, Eugene MacKenzie H. J. tl.L
:
..
and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Clark of .
adoption by them of said child I
I
B. Scharnberg, J. "p. Percy, F. Deane ..' .:.
Miami were week end visitors in and of all matters proper and incident 'j
Duff, Keathley Bowden, F. R. Max-

Clewiston. well, H. A. Bestor, R. Y. Patterson, Mayll-18-25-June to such proceedings. j. :MM-.,:MMMMMH_: :.:.MMMMM: .: :..:..:.: : :..: : : : : : : : : :.: J
1 1.
"r' -- --- I
I.. J. A. McGeehee, B. A. Bourne M. ]

[\ W. Bigg, E. J. Rogero_ G. Small,
--
H. B. Money of Peoria I -=
-
representative ------
R. C. Nowling, J. W. Ezelle, T. B. -- ...
of the Caterpillar Tractor com- Shelley William Artisani, V., South-

pany, spent several days this week' ard, Harry Turner, W. C. Owen, M.. For

here on business. E. Yenawine, B. G. Thomas, F. I.
'
Hill, C. W'. MacDonald H. R. Hall,
Mrs. E. L. Stewart Mrs. F. L. C. R. Byrd, George Royal, G. C. f'n telligen Faithful

Williamson ,and Mrs. F. M. Wright Poole, O. F. Schiffli, A. L. Rack- !
'
spent Monday shopping West Palm straw, 0.. French, N. L. Hemenway, '

Beach. R. Selee, Ivan Van Horn, W. C. CourageousREPRESENTATION

er, Roy Alston, I. M. Pafford, Hook-I'
" : Lewis. L. C. ,
Peter McNabc, J. II. Douglas, J. E.V'in n. .
E. VonMach E. C. 'l\lills. A. A. Mun-
ya.k :
,;
Chas.
Ross and B. M. Wilson of hr. y
roe, Harry Vaughn, C. E. Nail, Gayle
:Miami spent a few of this
days weekin
MacFadden, F. Vaughn, Ted Effting, I ;
Clewiston on business.J. B. E. Herring, J. P. Tippey, Z. G. C1G2 You Must ElectCROKER

Meredith, O. A. Jones Jess Oglesby,
.
W.. Mooro and Coburn I
son, ,
H.. Mitchell, W. Lockhart, J. E.I
left Tuesday for Thomasvillc, Ga., Beardsley, Tom Barrett, G. E. Eth-I

where they were called on accountof erton, Violla Bennett;' Misses Louise

the death of Mr. Moore's brother Artisan, Billie Artisani, Mae Drew I

Elizabeth West, Vilma Rhodes, Dorothy : 3 y.. 1 ... IJ
Mr. and Mrs Fred J. Case and Lockhart, Eva' Mae Green and = J

Mrs. D. E. Stull of Chicago, who ,are Gertrude Balasok. '

visiting their sister, Mrs Mary: Haye:! The spring motif was carried out for
in the refreshments and the house ; .. :
Davis, of LaBelle; were -visitors in
Clewiston Tuesday. was / attractively decorated with I

spring ,flowers.
CONGRESS it itY

Fred L. Dunaway of Felda, chair-
STA NLE Y--C OD WIX
man of the Hendry county board of I

; :e h commissioners, and L. O. Gravely of I
Herman Stanley and Miss
Ruby
LaBelle were business visitors i In Fourth District of Florida
Louise Godwin were married In La-
- Clewiston :
Tuesday
(Paid Political Advertising)
Belle Saturday night by County
---- \
-
Judge H. A. Rider. They returnedto

Friends of Mrs: C. E. Miner are Clewiston and will reside here. >J ._ __
,




"
,; '

\e. .. ,t >'" 7...... ',' '.' >," ; ,- :.L:<:;1.. tl:: :;I, :, ; ,. --. "" ,+ i



>' + ,,- ," .-'" .-... -'- '. .', '
,. _. ; w
. 0 _. ." "'7" .' 'r ,. 0 ,-








THE CLEWISTON NEWS, FRIDAY, MAY 11, 1934
-

.
GIVING EFFECT OF .
'.
r CAP SLIMNESS WOMAN OF TO WEIGHT THE '


OUR COMIC SECTION .

AND Complete, Diagrammed Included. Sew Chart: '


PATTERN 9929 :


: D I.T Events in the Lives of Little MenTHE ]I D I3ELLS\\ 1 ','



1;

/ HUMORING AN ASPIRATION

J I "Crimson Gulch manages to be a
AVJ KE
pretty orderly community," said the rriiy.
,. I OKT THE UIXLE travellng salesman. !

f. L B A( I I Ii / '"We've got a new system," an-
HODU MA NS hH UfLE swered Cactus Joe. "When"we' see a

SPoT TNATS young feller with racketeer symptomswe
? T1E
rEhE
ENE /1 7 buy him a ticket to Chicago and
( I ONE 1AK. tell him to write his old friends
I SIX. SAID 1 1Icoulr Dii about how he made good In the big

l I HAVE / town..' ,.1 1: /

MFi
:
Absent Treatment
:
"Where did you learn :your trade
2 asked Will Rogers while undergoing

torture In a barber's chair."I .
/ .
learned my trade at a: well-
I known correspondence school," an-
T Y swered the barber.

"Well, I'm not complaining,"
drawled Will, "but I want it ,clearly f 'l
understood that hereafter you'll shaveme

I Il by correspondence."-Boston : :
::{ti ii1 ( Transcript. <: .


l I II II II Rich Lumberman Appreciative(at the opera-a

By jinks, Mame, that's music, suchas
'I calls musi/1.

City Niece-I hardly thought you
would appreciate it, uncle.

I I Lumberman-Why, by jinks, Mame,
It sounds jest like my three sawmillson
Beaver creek 'all runnln' at once.
: -Brooklyn Eagle.. .


A Setback
.
I:' '"All your fingers bound up! What

..";77'...,. rco rrr+:nt. W. N. c.a . no. ... r .. ...._. __.... ... .... ........ have you done Graceful lines can do more than
: "I bought '
my wife a potato peeler, diet to'make the heavier :woman look
and when she said she couldn't makeIt slim and smart. Every line in this
FEATHERHEADS work I'had to show her how sim- dress has been planned to overcome
1,. Conspicuous ple It was."-Munich 'Fliegende! Blat- the look of heaviness. It's better t.
.
'f::L'. NoW/MR FeATH> RHEAP-0'r ter. make a dress for yourself, when by

r: GOOD Gooa' WHAT WAS THE IDEA doing so you can get this effect you
Nib iT HGN? CONSOLATION want. Here especially a gracefulrever
.
J. OF TfeLUNUSTHOSE.
comfortable sleeves and well
y .. STORIES AND MAKIt-tG-
planned lines do the trick. We suggest -
A
: OF
A SPECTACLE
,
a printed cotton with small fig
1, '{oURSELFiN N11NGlNERAL
ures. (The larger figured designs
2' ? WHO, should be left to slender women). It

--' ME2 will be good of plain material, too.
WY Pattern 9929! may be ordered onlyIn
'
sizes 34, 36, 3S, 40, 42, 44 and 46.
Size 36 requires 3% yards 36-incli

fabric and % yard contrasting. '!f '
;? Send FIFTEEN CENTS in coins or' ;q. \
stamps (coins preferred) for this pat -
tern. Be sure to write plainly your
1 X15 NAME, ADDRESS, the STYLE NUMBER -

G and SIZE. .
.. 1 1I Send your order to Sewing Circle
"What are you crying about
Pattern Department, 232 West Eight-
'My husband is suing me for a di- eenth St., New York; ,
"
/I IA Ir vorce.
______ / "Don't ,cry-you can get, married

ti WHAT'S THE 'IDEA T=AR BE IT RIGHT YouNAEREAMP again." THE HEATHEN! '

OF PICKINGS ON MYSELFTHATS Wife-DId you notice the wonderful
ME ? I. SUPPOS Me' HEPAT BLJT / / WHAT Good Reasons coat the woman had on who was
oN ? { :Motorist-I had the rightofwaywhen
WAS THE l IDEA OF sitting in front of us in church this '
YOU WERErHE PERHAPS '(olJ- AH-{ .this man ran into me, yet you .morning? .1'-.
ONLY WELLNor, THAT 1 WAS MAl
BEHAVE PERSON -THE" OMLV ONE WHO Local. Policeman-You certainlywere. dozing.

Wife-It does a lot of good to take
AT THE PART< THANKED f THE HOSTESS p F 'YOURSELF "Why?" you to church, doesn't it? ,
WHEN WE LEFT ''Because his father is mayor, his .
brother Is chief constable, and I'm
One Thing, Anyway '
engaged to. his sister. -Toronto
Globe. Peppery Parent-you Impudent

.:. \ L- puppy! You want to marry 'my
daughter. And tell me, do you think ;.
Wise Guy '
you could; give her what she's beea
Cholly-You are not like other
used to?

girls! Suitor-Er-yes. I think so, sir.
Bess-I know that!
/o- I've
a violent temper myself.-Lon
Cholly-You are higher, purer, don Mall. ,
sweeter, more benign!II
: M Bess-I know that! .
"
western Newspaper Unlon 1 .cholly (to himself-By jove,they \ C.O.D.
are all,_alike!Brooklyn Eagle. Grocer-I brought over the groceries n
sIr.Jones.How.

I. USUAL PROGRAM Shortage OH, DOCTOR! Just a Set much! do I owe you?
I "Which do you' admire more, brainsor They were. touring the Rhine coun- Grocer-Not a cent. If you don't
cash I'll take
money?" try. "This is the oldest castle here- pay them back again.

..-..'-.:'' ......:;.::.::.'..:......... "They are much alike," said Mr. 0 abouts," said -the guide., '
c9 Dustin Star, "in varying In value, according JTs that a fact?" remarked the And Not Often I 1' I ,

"dI:> : i"c to supply and demand. And Hollywood tourist. "Do you recall TommY-Pa, does money talk'to': JI
)) It's terrible to find yourself short ,of what picture it was built for?" you? ;
i either." Pa-Yes, son; but only broken Eng.. .'11.':
I I'I Didn't Know the Half lisp :
... II I
.Bank Style "Carlyle made a strong book about
"Taggs was one of the best men that Hubby-What became of that unpaid 1 'Heroes and Hero Worship.'' Absence i
ever lived." bill Dunn & Co. sent to us? "Did yo' heah about Gawge Wash'1 "And he knew nothing about "How are you, Mrs. Browne?" J '
how he
Jackson he dieaftah
ton done
"How do you know Wlfie-Oh, that I sent it back movie heroes."-Louisville Courier- "Oh, I've nothing to grumble at. r
"I married his eat two big possums an a whole peck
widow. Journal.
marked "insufficient funds. "Mr. Browne away; then
1i o' sweet potatoes1""Nuh 1"i i

\t Those ConferencesFirst Day of Doom I didn't heah about dat.. What J ,
was de mattah wid him?"
Business Man-Was the conference Flo:-I don't intend to be married
a success What did you de- until I'm thirty.
cide? Rea-I don't Intend to be thirty until Not' Sporty"Is
this the field where the battle
Second Business Man-It was great I'm married!Answers Magazine.
We decided to have another conference was fought In the Tenth century .
nest week.A "No. It's at the top of the hill."
FAST STEPPER
"I wonder why they didn't. fight It
Bright Idea In this field?"

"So you have a new Idea, fort, a "Expect because Its Farmer Gray's
dirigible balloon?" field. He won't even lend it for the

"Yes. Make the equllibrator larger village sports." -.
put a motor Into It and let It pull the 4 '&
balloon. Barely Room for Tenants

Mrs. Broadacre-Are there any rats

Wholly Correct I in your apartment? i
Teacher-Johnny, what Is a fish net? :Mrs. Llttlefat Mercy, no! We havea

Johnny:'-A lot of holes tied together I Miss Wrist Watch-Say, Big Boy, go few mice, but there's no room In our '
with strings! away, you are entirely too fast for me. fiat for rats. I



I

'. .. Y..JIB;j i: .". k:;w 1 to ,,: I j



.1 ......n.' -, .'.-" ',T ......,. '- .<;; .. A,3"f; ,s1_ "1":' ., .
r. ::". :iW'f-TI''l'. ;)- ";"" "" "' 'n} '11'.i'! !} : :: .; f. :.1. ?. .-
r..1r''i''V -IIJf": t" "" "\ qf' ( .
il { : ; ...1''j'k"r, : ; : : : 1P"!. '',,-. ::,";, :,." '-:,':')... .j",oJMM. '," i >' .


j

.
\

: :: >: ..:.i .\.,f. i :.1 t.: __ . .. .' .'_ '_ '., ._. .p' :' 'j. :. : fl 3 .t1J. .! I..'._ ;*!.S1 (_ . ._.__ 1 : J .
.
.. .
''' .... ? __.._ .. __ ,_.. _. .:

I!' I." ... ", i. : THE CLEWISTON''NEWS' FRIDAY, MAY'11,1934-; "''''''' ''':' ''-"-"'"'' .-......- .._ ._-:...-.... ........ ____. _.:_._..,

,
:, ..}'' .
I ;
-i, -.-,.--.--. ._. _..- ..-__............. +.......:.... SOME NEW 'FACTS' : EVERYONE: A .CRIMINAL

Arabian Peninsula GAINS PROMOTION There Is such
Long no tiling as a born
. ..;................'. ". . .- IN THE HISTORYOF criminal.according..to, Judge.Amedee

GOLD MONEYIt Monet, of Montreal "The only dif-

' ( fi Lodestone for ExplorersI ference between the average citizen

; and the, prisoner; in the dock," he ;
4i
I I : _, Is quite a comedown for. gold to says, "is that, the latter has been i
\ ( be used for the basis for :
.., y.. money or caught. Otherwise, everyone is a
< Field for Archeological a few of these have, been studied by currency.It criminal in some way or another." .

.1' ; scientists. Undoubtedly there, are T would require a combination of
'
I I Research. other ruins yet unfound some'of them ; historian, philosopher, banker, politician 7

'I' buried In the sand. One of the highroads and mystic to write the historyof ,
., HOW SitE LOST 14
Washington. "Whether or not of the' Old world, the overland the precious metal, Dr.. FrederickG.

.' French flyers have discovered the trade-route from India and Persia to Howe, consumers' counsel of the
POUNDS
I legendary capital of.the Queen of Egypt and J Syria: and to other coun- Agricultural Adjustment administration OF FAT

Sheba, they have again called attention tries around the ,Mediterranean, began told the Cosmos club the other.

to the vast, forbidding Arabian Jn Hadhramaut, in southeastern night i fOR 85.ENTS.

peninsula, one I of ,the richest areas ,Arabia, and wound through the ,Among the ancient Hindus it was ,

for geographic and archeological" exploration plateau, emerging at various" pointsIn revered as sacerdotal. "He 'who 'tampers "I used, one, jar of Kruschen and re-

now left in the world, says the Near East. Hadhramaut made with it," said the law, '"dies on duced 14 lbs. and just feel fine. Was '

.' a bulletin from,. toe" National Geo- its' own contributions of frankincense, : a dunghill and 'rots In hell to, the bothered. before. with gas pains but after t

graphic :society., myrrh and aloe to this ancient world i w end of time." Only princes could so t 'taking Kruschen they'
for "a k' never bothered me/
"Arabia has been lodestone
'a "
commerce. much as touch it. Mrs. RDeer River
I 11 ,
western exploration recently because "Some writers hold, that in the Gold was first demoted to the pro- :Minn.

back on Its burning plateaus, In the southern quarter of Arabia was that fane status of "money," Doctor Howe Don't stay fat and ,

scorching heat of hidden wadies (dry' Ophir rich in gold whose name, like said, by the Lydians, who put theking's -' unattractive when ,
river beds have been found stranetribesmen' : it's so easy and safe to 1
) : that of Hadhramaut itself, is known a Q stamp upon It and used itjas a get rid of double chins,
in cities of 'set-back sky- 'to us from the Old .Testament. medium of exchange. Interest'Immediately ugly hip-fat and unbe- ,

scrapers,' eight to ten stories high. 'Hazarrnaveth,'' the tenth chapter of arose to 3G per cent, farmers coming plumpness on J :

Obstinate warriors for 'centuries have Genesis calls the latter. The Old lost their land and sold themselvesand upper arms-at :the i
time
same build'up strength and increase
entrenched themselves in these lofty
Testament also mentions .another Arabian their families into slavery. In vitality-feel younger and keep
forts that, at a distance,' resemble land of mystery, Saba'' (Sheba), order to live. free from headaches, indigestion, acidity

modern New York apartment houses, whose 'Queen of the South' traveledto This fatigue and shortness 'of breath. .
00 per cent Doctor Howe
Brig.: Gen. Frank Sherwood Cocheu Just take half 'of Krus-
from their imposing doorways to 'pent or'the a teaspoonful
Jerusalem on, hearing wis- '
houses' and roof gardens. who has been promoted to. the rank 'said, was the first'money interest a'nd chen Salts first I thing every morning ina .l
dom and wealth of King Solomon. The of major'' arose naturally out,of the'former Ly- glass of hot -water. ,If not joyfully '
Traces of Old Caravan Trails. land of Sheba ,is generally placed ,general. dian system: of doing business.. satisfied with results ,of one 85 cent jar "

"Farther inland lie great areas of by modern a authorities in the vague Trade had'been primarily'in cattle. ((lasts 4 weeks) money back from any
desolate desert, with 'singing ,sand border land between the present day drugstore the world over. But make 1],
When cows were sold on credit it Kruschen
the
SAFE
"Dumb ell" sure you get way
.1 such as Marco Polo heard in the Gobi, states of Hadhramaut and Yemen. CorpusclesSign
\, was assumed they would have calves. to reduce.
and traces of ancient caravan trails "The Romans knew all of. these of Failing Health the'pr
So the seller demanded :e'of
that predate the era when Solomon provinces, naming, them 1
I, prosperous Pbi1ad'elphia.-The importance of a calf as additional i payment. !'This
derived gold and frankincense, from
Arabia Felix, Happy Arabia, in 'con-
blood tests, in determining the physical was calculated at about one-third the
Do
Biblical Ophir. Two' notable,crossings trast to ,the: rest :o'f the peninsula, you Back, PEP ? '
value' of :1'cow..
condition of subjects was emphasizedhere .
of the, huge Rub al Khali desert were 'which they called Arabia Deserta and
: by Dr. John ,N. Hatfield, .super- When you pay: interest to the bank Are you all in, tired and run down?
made, recently. by Englishmen! -one by Arabia Petrea, the Desert and Realm '
'i' Bertram Thomas and the other by H. of Stone.." intendent of Pennsylvania hospital. today you ..are'paying, genetically '

St. John B. Philby. 1 Even the kind,, of disease .sometimes ,considered, the price of the calf, of !. I TERSm1ft s .

'"While the Americas 'were being can, be diagnosed from the blood, Doc- the cow you borrowed. J

discovered and explored, while the ,Mickey Mouse; Honorary tor Hatfield said.] Other notes on gold from Doctor 1fONBCViii ,!

Poles were 'being attained" and the Citizen of French Town "Normally a person-has 'about 5,000- Howe's studies :' \ rid'you of
'and, again, '' in each cubic centimeter All the gold on earth Is worth .
I'olar regions visited again 000 red corpuscles' -
Granville Walt :
France.
the Arabian peninsula, lying In the DI'snets.brain, Normandy, child, ,,Mickey' -Mouse, of blood. These,'in health, are,, about $11,000,000,000. It could be fUtJ Ai lL JJJ JPJ 11 A i
stored in of 30 cubic feet
a room
heart of the oldest known civilization round discs. But in disease they maybe
has been made an honorary citizen and build ,
you up. Used for 65 years For Chills
'workers of the 'United
has remained almost unseen by white of: this city.: He was chosen, to greet ,,shaded; like,a balloon, a .dumbell, an [the States Fever. Malaria/ and '
;
could it'all GO I
men. About 300,000 square miles of King Carnival for Mardi Gras, and anvil, a kidney or, a flask., earn by'working daysat A General Tonic,
territory, equal to the combined areas is kind of 'red corpuscle $5 a day. They could earn all the
was accompanied by his charming consort "There only one SOc and $1.00 At All Druggist
of Germany and Italy, is blank or butTig'uely but than dozen kinds of gold In their own,country in 20 days.
Minnie King Carnival ex-: : more a ,
,
The.total.of gold in the United States ,
,
: sketched on modern maps. presed thanks for the welcome thus' white corpuscles, distinct in markings WNU-7 18-34
,has about the; same intrinsic value as
Yet some of the border lands and sur- extended to him by "a citizen of the and shape. The ratios between ,the

rounding seas of this huge ellipse world." In ,France, Mickey Mouse no different; kinds of white corpusclesshow to total of diamonds.-Washington

hum with activity. longer is listed as an American ; he pneumonia, blood tumors, typhoid Star. ; When, Music, Helps

"That Arabia has been able to guardits has been duly naturalized andadoptedas fever,, pernicious anemia and other "My: daughter's music lessons area
; inquisitive ; Force of Habit; -. fortune to me."
the '
mysteries long against '
a French institution. ', diseases., : '
westerner is due partly to ; J JI. Dentist-: Gas? I "How "is that'?" f

the physical features of the countryand Chauffeur-Uh-huh., 'And take a "They enable me 'to buy 'the'neigh- E

partly to the religious fanaticism,, I. Will Seek to Prove'and'of. Mu Existed, look,i at the oil, too. bors' houses'at half price."

.C its _sparse: ,population. Southern \

Arabia, now a desert, was probably ,.c.'f'; .,. ,
fertile and well watered when Europe Scientists Think Islands Part of dition in its efforts to prove Mu's 'onetime J'w >> :I>:$ ..J

and large parts of Asia were still, in being. ,For example: : vertebrate m. (#i. 1: .j
Continent.New Two tr I :
Lost wanted
: :
i.f: the Ice ,age, and .It. may well, have been (skeletal) material will be used In 'order Doings rr : ;ti :> [: : 'j

1( one of the earliest homes; of civilizedman. to demonstrate the correlation' be- ;/ ':f ir. f& : : ::
: 1t'j:
Climatic changes at'a later date York.-Proof that the" "mythical tween the structure and use and be- ".. and it :was all so simple when I found out my ; $%: : ::
.I : :
brought ,extreme' dl'yncs's''and, a 'drift land 'of Mu actually existed 'may, ,very tween the'body form and environment' trouble'. My physician said I-had organic disease, h = :

of,, sands from; ,the north,. ''shortly, be supplied. of the insects inhabiting the Galapagos but I did have what is. so commonly' and truthfully, JI.1: :4..jt.h".. ::
..,
Dotted With Unstudied Ruins. Dr.; Wolfgang von 'Hagen, directorof and those living on the Ecuado-. called a low percentage of hemo-glo-bin in the blood. :: ,..:X :i'KV..: ,

"The Arabian peninsula is:. dotted the' Darwin memorial expedition, rean and surrounding'coast. The reasonableness of one.of the S.S.S. ads caused ,; '':. h:6::gh:::::;:::::Y$':",

with ancient ruins some of which which' ,will erect a monument, to the i Insect; life, according to Doctor von me:to\t.hmk that S.S.S. Tonic.was just what I needed / ,, f :'::: )1ffH't: .; \

have been seen only in passing. Only, memory of Charles Darwin 'on Chatham Hagen, 'undergoes changes in 'structure for my let-down feeling, pimply skin and,low resistJ1JiWh, : ....,.. = ,ii

island, stated that In addition to. very slowly Therefore, if! those ance. I wanted .more. strength.x and a clear skin.. ..">:;,,>;.x:::.;J.".}.::..",:',:., t l; N:. ", -',

1 commemorating Darwin's" visit, to the' specimens found on the islands' com- 'It didn't take, S.S.S. very long to get my blood \)'FitM'xw..tk, {...

islands, '' the pa'rty'will 'seek 'to prove: pare in detail with those on the mainland back up to normal-and as my strength and energyreturned > .

Seat and'L'andsca'p'es' that the Galapagos group, of which, ,. quite conclusive evidence will my skin cleared up." : 11' 1 ti'&11

New Fingernail Fad Chatham Island is one, are the remains- have been found, in Doctor von Ha- If your condition suggests a tonic of this kind, try '.;' : u ::=:t\;:::: mm\'

London.-The latest,craze in fem of 'the fabled "continent.The gen's 'esUnla on. S.S.S. It is not just a so-called tonic but a tonic specially '
islands about 730" designed to stimulate gastric secretions, and
Galapagos ,
in started
inine adornment London .'
miles off!: the coast of Ecuador, are ,of also having the mineral elements so very, very necessary
with the painting of miniature seascapes Villa's' Daughter Finds in rebuilding the oxygen-carrying hemo-glo-bin

on fingernails. It has since particular interest to, scientists' because of the blood. tf ,.x.':,,;,.*.:.. ,;:....
of the :strange and 'abundant Bad Luck Pursues,. Her I found \: .
spread to landscapes and minia- ,SSS.-value has been proven by generations of use, ( t{ t
animal and life to' be: found .
plant.
of all Juarez, Mexico.-Bad luck has
tures descriptions.A as well as by modern scientific appraisal.? Sold by all out'' S hi
young British painter, Stanley' there. dogged ,the, daughter of Mexico's on9 drug stores. .m two convenient sizes. .the larger is mytrouble"' Jltltl<,l t '

A. Burchett, ,who was formerly in Mu, it will be recalled, has enjoyed time rebel terror, Francisco (Pancho) more economical. The S.S.S. Co, WW.. a
the Grenadier Guards, started the much fame in': the legends and' fairy Villa,' 'since she 'was discovered giving ..:: : ; ::'*

new fingernail fashion'by accident. tales purveyed to children." ,Several 'In obscurity in El .Paso, the daughter,

When painting a garden scene re pseudo scientific' books: have been Miss Celia" Villa, eighteen, said re. i
cently, he stopped,his work to satis, written about It, '''however, and there cently. -CUT ME OUT- -

fy a little girl who wanted "a teeny has been much dissension among Deported by United States 'immigration r

picture for herself." scientists as to whether or not Mu officials, who charged >that

Burchett quickly painted it on actually existed. 'Like Atlantis, Mu she ,entered 'the United States illegally I l Jpring.eauty I II 1t

her fingernail.. The child's motherwas was supposed to have been swallowedby three years ago, she has lost her Job \

so attracted by the result that the ocean.Comparison. as"a,, hat, 'check, girl in a. Juarez cab-
.
f c\ she commissipned the painter to dec of insects, such as I I II
aret.While BARGA'NI
.t. ticks, mites, spiders, butterflies, etc., t
i ..... orate her nails. Since then the innovation she remains Jobless in Juarez,
has spread among stage .on the Island, with those on the main- employment aplenty awaits her on, the I

'. and society leaders. land, Doctor von,Hagen explained, will other side of the Rio Grande, she I "I ET'S get acquainted. Here is our anniversary bargain
\ Jbe the method employed by the .exile said. Metro-Goldwyn Mayer corporation JL beauty offer.' .Each spring we, make a drive for
-
new customers and give them this bargain introductory
who filmed "Vivi Villa," a'story I offer at less than factory cost! Pine toiletries since 1873.. I
: 'about her' father, is seeking to 'place Tested, pure and proven. One trial makes a life-long

IU. '. Probers of the Wirt; Charges her on ,contact, she said. I riend.You can have all six full size pac kages for only$1,00. I

FACE POWDER
TUBE ROUGE
'
"
'C., l- : % rlf. .Moscow .Rivers Foundto rirri Equal to finest imported pow- New, smart,''Pure', safe! ,"It's
.' I der. Perfectly: blended into ,different-a J
Y A/ I \ splendid improve
Contain Gold in Sand exquisite shades: egular.ful1. ment," says GLADYS WINTER, I II
a y ; size$1.00 box in this offer stage star. Full 50c size given.CLEANSING .
Moscow.-Gold has been discoveredin

the'sand's of divers in various(\parts I HAND LOTION' I !I

of the province of Moscow-even in "
"Y!> hand lotion is truly good., CREAM '
streams which run through some suburbs I
Does :
I : quicklyno; grease Makes
t> / .t sf '
of the city. -- hands beautifully silky and tm AH a good cream should be.Gets
white..ETAEL'WARNER. every bit of imbedded grit and
1 I
Some' of these rivers were known to U 4 oz.sac size. dirt.Leavesskinsotgreaseless
contain gold centuries ago, but) long I Big 4 O%.TScjar.BEAUTY I ,
%
have been neglected. .Now"the entire LORATONEPurpose

population! particularly hikers, Is being1 SOAP I
A
'' (/- Cream '
I Your skin needs a bland! mild
encouraged to: search for the, gold. I-Ij' Nationally advertised:used by )soap to soften ravages of win-
,Discoverers ,will,be permitted to retain ; millions for 40 years.Skin food ter. Pure,Jong-Iastmg. Rarely:
tissue builder,wrinkle remover. perfumed. I
part, of the find after first submittingit I Regular 55c size included. Extra size 25c bar., .
to the Soviet gold trust
: '
I Recent special 'Investigations ( have I ALL SX; FOR ONLY $1.000 I i

,revealed'gold! small,_ quantities available '
at 02 different points In European This introductory Spring Bargain"Offer expires in
Russia. '' I ACT'OW weeks Only one set to a'customer. Guaranteed 3'I I
satisfy you in every..way. If your dealer can't supply
you fill.out the coupon and send this ad to us., Money back: if not satisfied.
-- -
.rr--rrrrrr-.rrrrr-rr-.rrrrrrrr
Bb_, A Sea-Going Deer r-LORD-&'-AMES, Inc. 36O No. Michigan Ava. CHICAGO, 111. -l|
.
"' ; f>'I./N M .0. b..Wii-9'.i.-0.; ; ...,;.; I1'Ifd'ij' "i'J,,".:. _:, w. v-... ,. _. .. Santa Cruz (Calif.) beach bathers Gentlemen:, / am enclosing $100 In currency, stamps or money order. You :
were surprised to see a deer swimmIng may send me the foray Spring Anniversary Bargain '?ff.-, Alt six For: 100. "+r I
Here are the members of the congressional committee named investigate several hundred yards off shore I .

the charges made by Dr. W., A. Wirt.of;Gary; Ind.,,:that some radical advisors followed by a flock of seagulls. Local NAME__._______..__-___.__________________.._______.__._-.-:-**":-
: of President Roosevelt ,are plotting the overthrowing of the government. They naturalists said deer frequently take
.. Jr.
.TOWN---------------STATE--------
ADDRESS.
l. -------------------
-
are, left to right: John J. O'Conner, William W. Arnold, Alfred Bulwinkle, chair- to salt water to rid themselves ol ear o ,_ i ierh =
man; Harold McGugln and Frederick R. Lehlbach.. ,ticks and fleas.


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PAGE EIGHT THE CLEWISTON NEWS FRIDAY, MAY 11, 1034.

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NOTICE Walt, Walker J. A., Wheeler J. W'., satisfaction of said Board of County
II I Walker J. E., Walker Jane E., War Commissioners.
I i iI ren D.V.., W'oodham C.' S., Walls (SEAL) F." L. DUNAWAY,
In The Glades In compliance with Section 297, j
Castle }c- Marjorie B. Wallace Compiled General Laws of Florida R. 'H., Wilson Leo, Wallace Marjorie Chairman Board of County Commissioners -

notice is hereby given that the Coun- D., Wallace Clacy 0., Waldron Fred, Hendry County, Fla.
I Webb W. H., Wintle Eleanor, Wald- ATTEST: -
'
ty Commissioners of Hendry County,
ron Mrs Thos. M., Webb 111'8.V.. H? William T. Hull Clerk.
Florida, at a meeting held on Tuesday -
The dictionary says that there are wrote to my friend Joe Sears, Con- Warren Lonnie, Yon Geo. A.,
8 1934, for the of
May purpose
two kinds of history-sacred and gressman-at-large from Florida, inviting examining and revising: the registra- Precinct two (2) : Attanasio Lucia, / NOTICE* "*
the celebration is history him to join us in the cele-
profane. Well, tion books of Hendry County, Flor- Daniels Kenneth, Fussell J. J., Guy
and you can add your own bration of the pay restoration for ida, erased therefrom the- names of Annie L., Hodges Jas. W. F., Hodges Notice is hereby given that the
sauce. My observations would lead which he voted, but he couldn't get all such as have died or removed Ernest B., Hodges Susie, HendersonJ. I undersigned as Special ,Master in
me to presume that everybody hada away at this time. I hope you listened from the county, or from one dis- A., Lee W. H., Malokwosky Marie Chancery by virtue of a final de-
glorious time, and judging from to the nice letter he sent in his trict to another in the county, or Ross Joe R., Ross Violet K., Hoyel'Lorena cree heretofore entered in the Cir-
the sleepy heads in the Wallace fam- place, but getting that gang quiet who are otherwise disqualified to K., Royer Carl E., Ross Sa- cuit Court of the twelfth judicial

ily the next day, the glory lasted long enough to listen to anything vote as follows, to-wit: lome R., Wiggins B. A., circuit in the matter of Ruth R.
plenty long enough in spite of the -less than the trump of doom was Precinct Three (3)) : Altman Mrs.H. Beardsley joined by her husband
reluctance of the crowd to go home. about impossible. I i Precinct one (1) : Alford P. G., A., Altman H. A., Boggan Geo. L., James E. BeardaleyVs Theodore
J. R. Alston M. F. Anderson
Alston
-
I wish I dared publish the word- The drummer boy of Shiloh fell Curry Clinton C., Curry Mrs. F. C., Gottlieb and others will on the 4th
G. W., Baker J. K., mate M. Vic-
cartoons of various people at the wounded by the wayside, leaving Cornette E. M., Cornclte Grace, Coch- day of June offer for sale at the
tor, Buxton, J. B., Bailey rV.. T. Bailey -
dance that throng at my fingertips; that famous one vacant chair, which ran Louise, Delaney H. B., Gillis T. Court House in LaBelle, Florida the
but I don't care to be shot at sun- .various folks filled in succession. !i' Maud M., Beardsley James E., T., Hall C. L., Hall Hulbert, Hall Hilda following described property in Hen-
Baker
Beaidsiey Ruth R. Hazel
rise, and besides, this particular pot Well, Christmas comes but once rJ Hall Nona, Heaton C. 0.. Hall J. dry County: Lot 1 Block 159!), lot
Barrett J. A., Belcher Mrs. E. C.,
was by no means completely bright Ray, Heath Florence B., Hall MaryE. : 12 Block: 162, Lots 22 and 3C, Clcw-

and shining. "Still and all," as Kip- year.Thanks a lot for the absence of Elate Browning Herbert Smiley, Bumby, Drowning Evelyn,Corine Bum-, ., Hays Bessie Laney E. E., Lloyd : iston Florida. .
ling says, I never saw more pretty Geo. F., Melvin Messer, Mcbaniel 1 Said Sale being made to satisfy
eggs. by Jack Crouch J. E Crosby R. L.,
women and finer looking men together ? John, McLaughlin L. L., Markett T. : the terms of said decree.H. .
The Gulfport reaching conclu-, Crosby A. D., Crouch, P.. W., Creel G.
and I continueto
in one place, '' A., Malberg O. E., Mills Airie, 0'- A. RIDER,
Okeechobee condi- S. Conner Nolan B. Culbreth
sions concerning Mrs
think that engineers are the Bifen Ronald, O'Bannon Floyd, Pad- Special Master in '
tion, and was putting out a nice Bessie, Creel Mrs. G. S., Crouch Mrs.R. Chancery.
cream of the crop. gett Gus Padgett Mrs.= Gus Richards Louis O. Gravely,
Frank L. pipe-full when we went out this L:, Crouch J. T., DavisS.
The trumpet player was Porter Richards Lillie Roberts D. Solicitor for Complainant.May .
Pollard, out of the Fort Pierce ,of morning. They are using baffle H., Douglas Bunk, Dou- P., Roberts Mrs. D. P.; Rogers E. D., 11-18-25-June 1.
fice-Polly to his pals. and' one fine' plates along the sides of the dump to glas Mertie, Deam Paul Davis ,C. 1\:., Winemiller Carol Stallings Lindsey I
deflect the water and retain the dirt.A Dew Hartford Davis Kizzie, Beam''Kathryn
builder and
He's good a boat Mrs.
guy. as Stallings, Lindsey Gantt Mrs.
rock has been installed Dueweke Ray Davis F. K.
typecutter ,
I,.' designer as he is trumpeter, and Broadus Young Edith, Young Monroe JUNIOR BASEBALL
re-vamped the old Shark which he and the speed of the motor cut Davis Minnie, Deam Elsie, Elmoro Pool Maudie Lee, Crawford .
DeWitt down and after a little more experi- : John Elmore Lorcue Ellis M. C.
and :Mr. Lund and Upthe- Cora, Wilson Thos., Wilson Mrs. Errorless babeball
was played by
grove and my pesky brother brought' menting she will strike her stride. Fletcher Cleo, Fears D.. F., Fears Mae, Albritton J. R., Altman II. A., Ito
the Junior Baseball Club of
Clewiston
down from Fort Pierce Thursday.And Every dredge coming in the lake has S. C., Finch W. A., Finch 11rs.V.. A. Albritton Mrs. Ferice, Attanasio
does she run! Made over 17 some difficulty adjusting herself toa Goff G. E., Heald Alvin, Harris D.I
miles an hour on her trial trip at new and completely different set W., Heinz G. A., Marvel W. S., How- tell, Belle Glade 11-0 Sunday afternoon.
1700 revolutions. of conditions, but the brains and the ell 1"" H., Hancock Rob T., Hooks T.I' The Clewiston boys were out for revenge -

When the dance was planned I experience needed to, meet them are B. Jr.,,HooIes Mrs. T.. B., Hightower' Ballard Precinct Nettie Four (4)Burchard) : Ballard W. L.. having suffered a 5-2 de- r'"
: Evelyn
amply available.Got Mrs. F. A., Howell R. H. Hightower
Hisler Geo. W., Platt W. E., MurrayS. feat from Belle Glado here the Sun- ,
out to see the miniature loco- 1 Fred Jackson Lacy Jones O. W., II. day before. {'r
Smith E. 0., Smith Lucille.
Political AnnouncementsFOR motive. I mean, it is the most interesting I'JKettl Beatrice, Keller A. J., Keller ,;' Precinct Five ((5) : Barns Arthur, A feature' of the game was the
tiling within a hundred 'Mrs. A. J., Moltz Nellie, McFeeters
I Barns Mrs. M. F., Booker Jas. P., fact that seven of the eleven runs
miles, and Bill Lott will be proud i IH. W., Miltier F. E., Mallard Jonie S.
:iBurney Mrs. Flossie, Burncy B. S., were batted in by "Rabbit" Roberts.
REPRESENTATIVE and glad to show it to you. By the ,[ Jr., Mizzen Lcola, Murray Sally, May Byrd Noah E., Collins J., Clark Fred The players were Ed Clark Bob
way, Bill has four grown children i L. E., McDonald J. L., McDonald Mrs.J. !I L. Ethington E. V., Hardin Mrs.
Richard Bcstor Harold Lang,
Hare ,
r To the citizens of Hendry County: I.and six: grandchildren, so he has ac- L., Nowling Jas. T., Norris John, I Jane Thigpen C. C., Urey R. F.,
I hereby announce myself as a complished something even more Overall Miss L. M., Parker C. A., Wheeler L. E., "Wheeler Mrs. L. E. Coburn Moore, Roy Green, Jr., Jill

candidate for representative from I worth while than the locomotive. I[ Parker Mrs C. A., Plenkett J. A., j And that the County Commissioners Beardsley Jr. Juniot Thomas, Jimmy

(', Hendry county in the 1935 Legislature Mr. Conroy is called Jerry insteadof j Perkins Leland, Preston. W., Pace of Hendry County, Florida, will I Hines, Charles Roberts and Bob

t''t= subject to the Democratic Pri- Pat but I am going to keep right Mrs. E. R., Pooley Mrs R. C., Press- ''meet on Friday the 18th day of May Beardsjey.

mary June 5th. on with Pat. You remember the fam- II ley Mrs. C. S., Paul W. R., Pooley 1931, at 10:00 A. M. at the Court I I Ed Butler is manager of the Jun

k\' I believe this county needs a representative ily of steam turbines? Well, the I R. C., Paul L. G., Paul Addie Mae, House in the City of LaBelle, Flor- ior team.
t f' who will be active, progressive baby of them all is to be on the loco-I!I Paul Mary Parker C. A., Parker ida, for the purpose of restoring to I

t', and always on the alert to motive to furnish lights. I Mrs. C. A., Richards P. F., Rich- the said registration books any of the
4: care for all legislative matters affecting One of the amusing things about !:!I mann, F. O., Rush George, Ramsey.foregoing names which have- been I Rev.. W. B. Furgess delivered the

U the county or its people; as this Job is the way we are getting JJ.i R., Richmond Mrs. F. 0., Ramsey wrongfully or erroneously erased or I commencement address at the closing -

r .'' well as one who will work for the "pets" among the dredges-to heara l Mrs. J. H., Rafnr C. V., Richj stricken off, providing such person I of the Felda Elementary School!

t: betterment of the state as ,a whole. group of people arguing pro and j I Frances J., Rich' Hoomes Smith shall make such fact appear to the I tin Felda Friday afternoon..
";". If elected I promise my best energy con concerning the relative meritsof ''
k and ability for all of Hendry county. the Welatka and the Gulfport and t I. ---- M: --

b; Your vote and support will be appre- the smaller boats is to acquire a.

t't' ciated. liberal although possibly none too I..

,. CHARLIE LOVVORN accurate education re suction dred-
: (Paid Political Advertisement) ges. Next week I will give you some .. .
really accurate information about
t\
several U. S. Army Corps dredges MILLIONS '
FOR SHOOL BOARD MEMBERI "
which have been used on this projectso .,\\

," that you may form your prefer- .- "
::1' have announced my candidacyfor ences with statistics and figures, to 'I. ;:,

school board member of Hendry go on. of l ACRES..beg .
'. f :
; county. M. E. VON MACH. The two barrel culvert back of '

t, (Paid Political Advertisement) Bare Beach, with Mr. Stewart in ;:;i L:

I charge and Arthur Steil assisting, has for .
the cofferdam complete and the pit "" I '
A. FOR REPRESENTATIVEI pumped out. The foundation is hardso ': s .I''

I that no piling will likely be need-. '-,\ -
; hereby announce myself as a ed and construction there will soon INDUSTRY / ,',: ,\
candidate for State Representativefrom be under way. l.

Hendry county, subject to the '
Mr. Pafford has two men in the
a, @ t
will of the voters in the June primary ,.
Y
draughting room: J. W. Bruce of "
1934. .
'
Experience is valuable and if I Danville Va., and L. H. Nash sent I Ten million dollars of government ,'. ,
here from Detroit office, but whose
am elected to this important officeI
liome is in Memphis.Pete money is being spent to improve that "
will be able to use to a great ad-
vantage the experience I gained as and Mrs. Pete are spendinga vast and fertile region of South Central

your representative in the 1931 ses- week: in Jacksonville. I do not ,
Florida known the in
as Everglades
sion of the{ Legislature, when the know whether the office is to be con- con S : ,

questions of gasoline/tax division, gratulated or condoled. Anyhow, Peteis struction of the Lake Okeechobee levee r'' ,

race track tax division, and other getting a rest. and deepening of drainage canals to
equally important questions came Germany has been transferred to ....
before the Legislature. dragline inspection on division 3. Ocean and Gulf. At present, only one

r I believe that the next .session They are shaping the landslide of per cent-30,000 of the 3,000,000 acres _:
will be the most important in the the hydraulic levee with draglinesand t,
history of Florida as there is bound the lakeside with the afore- -is under cultivation. Here are 'possi-

to be legislation concerning Fin- mentioned tractor and grader. bilities and resources scarcely dreamed

ance, Taxation, Bond Settlement Jim McClure's second -
culvert 5A
,
and School Relief. I feel t of needing men, machinery and
qualifiedto I is nearing the end of the concrete;
serve you in such matters, and the landside is complete and the industry for their development.What .

will appreciate your vote and influence I lakeside head wall was being poured <..,
is being done TODAY hints at .
throughout the
campaign. 'this Tuesday, leaving only the lake-
ELBERT L. STEWART. side partition walls to go in. Number what can happen TOMORROW!

('Paid Political Advertisement) 5 is a pretty piece of work, all This of'
12,500
year acres sugar cane "'.
done but back fill, riprap, and hang-

i, FOR COUNTY ATTORNEY ing the gates. Jim says that I should are being harvested. Crop value is r'rnut
report that No. 5 is the nicest bit $3,000,000. workers J
Approximately 3,000 .
.... lof concrete on the job but naturally ,;'
I
TO THE
PEOPLE
:: I HENDRY COUNTY OF with Pop's job finished I wouldn'tgo are employed. ; .. ,

.' : that far-I'll give No. 5 second Along ,the south and east shores of "

-, place, though jn the culvert class. .,
: -
11
:'. (hereby announce myself as a Lake Okeechobee 10,0.00 produce '.,
acres
candidate for the position of County I The Sarasota has been moved over

'f:: Attorney of Hendry county to succeed on division 3, where ,she is stationed green beans, tomatoes, corn, lima beans, products factories and five packing .:'
< about a mile and a half from the We- -.
t-:: I was myself appointed attorney for the latka. We didn't have time to stop cauliflower and cabbage. Thirty to sixty plants-100 industrial enterprises employing '
e
County Commissioners of this County I and see her, but greeted her stack carloads are shipped daily to Northern a half million men, in one of the .,

upopn the present board taking from afar, with its plume of lighter- markets during the winter. and industrial -
I office. Later the commissioners ap- I knot smoke.T. greatest agricultural cen- ..

pointed me as Prosecuting Attorney C. Dean and his wife are back Several thousand acres are growing ters of the country. :,'1

'",:J, of the County Judge's Court of in Pahokee from Stuart and the peanuts, shipped North each year for To approach this accomplishment, we
: this County to succeed Mr. Selden Jimmy Boyds are also returned.The .
,' L. Stewart. Immediately upon assum- government Inspector on the roasting, for peanut butter and variousoil must bring more people to Florida. Most

ing the duties of that office I notified GUlfport is L. G. Biggs, in case you products. of Florida's industries have been started
I' the County Judge of this County get out' there and I "promise you a '
'', that I would waive the convictionfee cordial reception from the gentlemen Fiber can be grown in the Everglades, by visitors who came for enjoyment,

L of $5.00 allowed me under the i including if _you hint loudly so tough, experts say. that if used in lire and impressed by the opportunities .
law for' each conviction or plea of j enough, a cup of excellent coffee. '
manufacture it will
,:. guilty and I have therebby saved the By the way, the Gulfport is the only II outlast any car made. they found established themselves ,

: peoplpe and the County several thousand dredge on the lake with a galley Manufacture of rubber from goldenrod. here permanently. We can bring more of

I. dollars. crew made entirely of white men
up
I perfected by the late Thomas Edison them here Florida's
Since my appointment as County and boys; all the others have colored is by advertising attractions -

L. Attorney by the Governor I have represented I I'I men in the kitchen. another possibility. and advantages to all the world. A ..

the County Commissioners :i It now becomes my disagreeable million
Three Everglades
and the School '' acres, fully unified, properly planned state advertis-
Board in a great: duty to speak of the chiselers at
deal of litigation concerning bonds I j the dance. So many people sneaked '5 5 utilized, could supply material for forty ing program will get RESULTS increase
in the Supreme and Circuit Courts in without paying that has
somebody sugar mills, thirty canning factories, ten population and business pour
and so far have won every case. to make up a considerable deficit

In conclusion permit me to say Of course, if your sense of fairness fiber plants, ten tire factories, five pea- untold wealth into Florida! ?. ." .
that I have always been a Democratand should lead you to slip Mis. Down r

have never in' my life bolted my that sis bits you kept In your pocket ,1,'. "S _, &

party. ; Saturday night, no one will be the llRIDA '
,
YOUR VOTE AND INFLUENCEWILL ,, !", .
wiser except your own self-respect: >; ,
BE APPRECIATED. j but it is a question of how mucl1i : :M,, t .:
:. 4* .. LOUIS O. GRAVELY. !
i your self-respect may be worth. '

(Paid Political Advertisement) t Well, so long f'until next week. COMMITTEE.rr" '

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, THE CLE' lISTON NEwsH---



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: '

CLEWISTOX, FLORIDA SUBSCRIPTION ?2.00 PER YEAl



NOTICE NW of NE! . .17E'2 43 28 40 Unknown . . . . 4.15
Notice is hereby given that the following described lands, or so much of NE'A & N'2of '
I'' thereof as will be necessary to pay the amount due for taxes of 1933 herein NE of SE'4 .17 43 28 100 Unknown . . .... 9.82S
I'' set opposite to the same, together with cost of such sale and advertising will 4-5 of SE'. of SE -

! be sold at public auction on Monday, the 4th day of June, A. D. 1934 at the 'A . . . 17 43 28 32 Unknown . . : . 3.22
,I hour of 12 o'clock noon, at the Court House Door, the County of Hendry, in SE'A of SEN'/Zz .

the City of LaBelle, State of Florida. of NE'i . . .18 43 28 120 Unknown . . ,. . 8,14N'1z
I I . .19 43 28 320 Unknown . :. :. . 22.00
oa E'/2 of NE'A ::::: ::21N'2 43 28 80 Lee J. Stebbins . . 11.42

:aDescription'of of NE'A & SE%
N Amount of Taxes of NEB & Eof < .
Land .g 3 3 ti Owner and Costs SW'A of NE'A .28 43 28 140 Unknown .: . ... . 10.28E I

a V of W'/2 of SE'A of .
rn E-4 :: -< NE'A! 29 43 28 10 W. E. Evans . : : . . 2.60 2f'

Gov lot 4' : : : : : : : : :29 43 28 33 Unknown ",' . . . 5.37

SW'. . . . 2 43 28 160 Lee County Investment Gov lot 1 & SE'A of
Company . . .$16.13 NE'A exc 5 acres "tfJ
Washington Gardens sq in SE cor of SE S
S-D of NW',. 2 43 28 ',. of NE'4 . .30' 43 28 64 Unknown . ; . . 20.28
Block 8, Lot 13 E'/2 of SE'A of NW'A .
Washington Gardens of SW'A . . 5' 44 28 5 Kittle Alice McGill . . 1.37 :
.' ," E. D. McCoy . .... '. .... 1.67 SW'A of NE'. of t '

Block 29, Lots 141516 ,,:'.: SW'4 . . 5 44 28 10 Regina Landregan . . .
WashingtonGardens .?:( :. SW'A of NW'4 . 8 44 28 40 Ida A. Wood . . . 1.37\I
..' ".' : Clyde Kempt. . . . 1.67 N'/2 of SW'A . .18 44 28 80 Unknown . . . . cr

Block 32, Lots 18-19 ., SE'A of SW! . .18 44 28 40 Unknown . . . . 2.92 '
Washington Gar- ,':, :,>.-. NW ... . .19 44 28 160 American Legion . . 10.30
dens i t:,':. U. S. G. Dogan. . . 1.67 All . . . 2 45 .28 638 Lee Cypress*Co. . . 25.07 t/J
Block 47, Lot 23 ,....;': ,. '. All . . . 4 45 28 630 Lee Cypress Co. . ... :. 25.07
Washington Gar- .-, All . . . .6 45 28 640 Lee Cypress Co. . . 25.07
dens ',.' ,.' Unknown . . .'. ; 1.67 All ... . . . 8 45 28 640 Lee Cypress Co. . . 25.07 .
Block 49, Lots 35-36- '. .:'.. All . ... . . .10 45 28 640 Lee Cypress Co. ,. . . 25.07 nr
;I ; 37-38, Washington .:.:. All . . . .12 45 28 640 Lee Cypress Co. . . 25.07 "Oc
'q Gardens .. "'. Nora & Green Mills . 1.67 All . . . .14 45 28 640 Lee Cypress Co. . . .-. 25.07
Block 50, Lots 6-7 .' All . :. . .18 45 28 640 Lee Cypress Co. . . 25.07
Washington Gar- -1.. All ... . . .20 45 28 640 Lee Cypress Co. . . 25.07 .
dens : ::. Martha & Charley Mitchell 1.67 All . .. . r .22 45 28 640 Lee Cypress Co. . . 25.07 rrt.n
*
Block 50, Lots 8-9 : .s AU . . . .24 45 28 640 Lee Cypress Co. . . 25.07 =
Washington Gar- : All .'. . .-. .26 45 28 640 Lee Cypress Co. . . 25.07
dens . . . .. '- .. Toast McClinton . . 1.67 All . . . 28 45 28 640 Lee Cypress Co. .. .. . 25.07
Block 50, Lots 20-21 ....: -:': All . . . .30 45 28 640 Lee Cypress Co. . ... . 25.07
Washington Gar- -, :c" AU . . . 32 45 28 640 Lee Cypress Co. . . 25.07 ::r (
dens '../ Mrs. Dock Van . . . ,1.67Katherine : All :. . .-. .34 45 28 640 Lee Cypress Co. . . 25.07 (
I' Block 50, Lot 28 : ; All . . . .36 45 28 640 Lee Cypress Co. . . 25.07 "
i, Washington Gardens <:-' All frae. . . 1 43.29 198 Unknown. . . : . 91.08 Q.
\ ..: '.: Spain: ., . . _1.67 Gov. lots 3 & 4 . 3 43 29 61 Unknown . . . . 19.78
Block 55, Lots ,12-13 'i! .. I Gov. lot 1 . . 6 43 29 31 Unknown ; . . . 15.91Nz .
Gar- of Eli of Gov lot =
Washington : "" R. .. . . 1.67 .
b.
dens "" ",. .:'. 0 : I 3 . . . 6 43 29 10 L. W. Howard . . . 4.61 71 '
Wide Acres Estates / ,'. :'. i Gov. lots 5-6-7 . 6 43 29 114 Unknown . . . . 27.14
of S'/ ofSE'A .', S \ .
No. 1 S-D -- Laura V. Hull's SeD
2 43 28. -.'_ ," -- -.. of Gov lot 11 in S : o
Block 1 changed to J ,''-" ; ... ';)--. sec 6 & Gov lots 2- S .- ,' : <'r-: ,:,- :r

Lot 10 Wide Acres Unknown . .: .:. . .. 1.67 3-.4 in see 7 . 43 29 .. -. .- ,"J. 2-'.< I .
Estates Lot 13 Laura V. (
I
Block K Wide Acres Hull's S-D . B. F. Lewis . '. .'. .'. 2.29
Estates Gov lot 1. . . 7 43 29 43 Unknown .-. : ;. . 12.65
:I
Lots 11-12 Wide r Harriet Furnade . . 1.37 "City of LaBelle" : '. ;:. '

Acres Estates sections 4-5-8-9 43 29 .:.
.
Lot 15 Wide Acres W. H. Sebastian . . 1.37 Goodno's S-D of 5 .'.. ,
Estates A. L. Kinzie ; . . ... 4.15 block 5 . . 4 43 29 -- fi ;';; --1.
-
SW'A of NW'A. 4 43 28 40 Irvin C. Griffith . . 2.92 I I Lots 8-11 Goodno's ") :. SSD -t .

SWJ/4 of SE',4 .. 6 43 28 40 Unknown . . . . : .-. . : Unknown . ; ... ;'; . 4.61 : .
SE'A 7 43 28 ,160 Unknown . . . . 13.38..I Lot 31 Goodno's S-D Unknown . . . 10.50Lots'
Stt! of NE'A 7 43 28 80 38-40 less 50 lJ." :r
6 acres in SW cor of Geo. W. Hisler . . . 1.68 ft on east end. ... .. Unknown . . . . 20.08 :
NW'A 9 43' 28 6 Goodno's :
j SW'A of ,}.-.-5 S-D block ., .
1 Beg at SE cor NW'A 6 West /2 . . 4 43. 29 '
W 40 rods, N 50 Lot 10 & 22/ ft off S ; (
(4'. rods E 40 rods, S W. 'H. Whidden . ... 6.27 south of lots 1-2- 5 ,
50 rods to beg 9 43 28 13 5 3-9 . . . 4 43 29 Unknown : . . 24.12
Beg NE cor SE of Jones & Larabee S-D 1

NW'A S 30 rods, W : .- of Block 7 . 4 43 29' 3
40 rods, S 10 rods, ./'.r Block 10 Jones & :
W 40 rods, N 40 S Larabee S-D . 4 43 29 H. W. Johnson :. . : . 5.39

rods beg .E 80 rods to-9 43 28..17, W. E. Dyess ...' .:.'. .. . 11.18 Block 175x75 12 less ft in a tract SW ., 3.r. ()

Beg SW cor of SE'A ". '. Corner . . 4 43 29 Unknown .. .. . . 4.91 : ) -I
of NE'A E 36 1-5 .. ". :: J--,-:' Block 15-33-34 Stew- .
-
rods, N 195 yds E : ; : . .- .
: art's S-D 4 43 29 :
to Jack's Branch, w Lots 4-5-12-13-26-27 ; (D

Nw'ly along saidBranch ;i't : ; i.2: : % Stewart's S-D . : John D. ,Tompkins . . 4.61
: ;
to a northernbdry pt 350 i S :i'l{; .. Block 29 Stewart's t. ,

ft S of the of ; L'i ': S-D '. .4 '43 29 Unknown . . . 6.93
of SE'A { .,
:
'
NE'A; thence W to : i Block 37 S-D Highlands. .. 4 43 29, -F.5
Heights ,
ofSE'A : :
the western bdry i\\7. j.;gi ;; pt Lots
8-9 F
of NE'Athence :i: ::: ; ;; Highlands
south to:9. ...9 42 28"18'= ,. W.:.E.:"Dyess : .;.. : : 13.28 Block 40 "Questend" -
beg :' S-D . . . 4 43 29
Beg 6 chs & 21 Iks "':" : :.. Lots 30-31-32 "Ques-

E of NE cor of lot S -. tend" ... . S G. T. Tiffany . . . 2.29 t i4.
2 E 12 chs & 96 Iks 5 Block 41 Bush S-D 4 43 29 '
to crk-down crk to 5 Lot 33 Bush S-D Della M. Shackelford . 1.23

riv-down riv to pts Lucile Chapman'S ... . . 9.34 Block 42 Aiken S-D 4 43 29 \
of beg 43 28; 28 : Lot 18 Aiken S-D Thos. K. Tedder . . 1.23 -

SW'.. of SEV4 of W. E. Dyess . . .- 5.67 Block 45 Hedges S-D 9 43 29 .
NW/4 43 28 10 Lot 9 Hedges S-D Unknown . . .. . 1.99
Beg at NW cor of Blocks 50 & 51 Hick- 0o

sec 10 thence run E ". S .. pochee Heights S-D 9 43 29 -
alg the northern' ; Block .A lots 7-8
bdry of sec 10-362 ":. '. .- '_ ., : '., HickpocheeHeights J .. ."

ft to pt of beg of I:2: :: : : < : .. . . .: ., J. T. Bradshaw : ; .. . 1.83 o
<(- land herein con- ... : : .: :.::,:- i'' { .',: Block C lots -;'.<; .

'- veyed-S & parallel ,; .' 'j' .: ;\ :.:;:,; ;.,.: ,-.; 30, Hickpochee"A I !
to W of sec .: :-'. :., nl".1' . ; 5 .
bdry : '. Heights . : Nellie McQuire :. : ; . 1.83
10-783 ft thence'. ? :r Block F lots 21-22 5 S .
east & parallel to ,.':" :3;:ttt" HickpocheeHeights ', 2

northern bdry of ,: I i . . Unknown ; .. :: ; :. . 1.83 S L
'
sec 10 353 ft to ,: r 'ff.'T-, Block 54 Reeves S-D 9 43 29 5 ;' .
center of slough .'. ;'''' -- Lot 10 Reeves S-D. Kurd L. Reeves . . . 1.23
Ne'ly along center S .5 Block 72 . . .9 43 29 Unknown . . . . 5.86
.. of Denaud -- Blocks 77 787980 5
-
slough to a point -'e'l... ::: ., ;. "LaBelle Terrace" 9 43 29
on northern bound- ? ." ,.', S -.- Block Clot 4 "La- i

ary of sec 10; west .;.;. ., ... I '-"''-'-; _., Belle Terrace" Unknown . . . . 1.53
along northern ., Block D lot 15 "La-
boundary sec 10 S Belle Terrace" Mary L. Bowman . :. 1.53
683 ft to of be- t ,
pt :'
Daniels ."'. . .. 7.98: Block G lot 9 "La- I
Robert
. 43 28 9
ginning .10 :.: ; Belle Terrace" Unknown . . . . 1.53
Beg 140 yds E of S ,- .' Block G lot 11 "La- '" S '
r i' !
:' :
NW cor SW'A of . : ;" 1. T" Belle Terrace" Unknown . . . . 1.53 t:1
: .I: : ]
NE'A of NW'A E' :; Block .
J ,: : H lot 1 "La- .
: -r-i
10 yds-S 70 yds ::. "; :' : :.. :V: Belle Terrace" ': F. H. Fetzer . .-. . . 1.53 ,- '
E 70 yds-S 150 : : ; '3 :1::',1a |';, ? : i- Block H lots 15-16 ,."

yds-W 220 yds"i": : : .!J'-: "LaBelle Terrace" Robert Haisch : : . . 1.53 ." .
N 150 yds-E 140 ..;: ,i:. :'.2 I. Block 82 the Haynes :: : .: .. d ,

yds-N 70 yds to ;i',: South Central S-D 9 43 29 .
beg . . .10 43 28 7 Unknown '.0<. . . . 4.08E Sec A lots 22 to 28 Unknown . . . ... 1.97 ,
',2 of W'/2 of SW '. :: Block 99 . . 6". R. H. Magill . . . 6.63 '.1
',4 of NE'A . .14 43 28 10 Madeline Ayer Home . 3.83 Block 103 "Shadow
Beg 1050 ftV of Lawn Court" S-D 4 '43 29 1

SE cor lot 1, W 100 Block B lot 11 "Shadow S :
ft, N 375 ft, E 100 Lawn Court" 5 Ann Elizabeth Hall .; . 1.53 .:,:.'"1' > '. .
ft, S 375 ft to S Block B lot 12 "Shad- '\.fi'-: L' :: .'::".', .. ,

: beginning.15, 43 28 1 'C. Q. Stewart . . . 2.27 ow Lawn Court" j.J), R. Hall . ; .. . 1.53 ,; j
''T of SW' & SW. I "'' 5. -5 5 5 J
W'/a 5
'\ -.i1.1-.i 4 Block B lot 14 "Shadow .
r : 5S" 'AofNWii . .17 43 28 120 Unknown .. . . .. . 9.98 Lawn Court" Della M. Shackleford.. ",'. 1.53 f' .
': SF .1-i : ...... ?
,
.: ". .
V < 'it C

-
R
-
1
11
5-
; ...
.5 5 .
5 '
p .
... ,
..,L:.' '. ": ',' :.'. ___ .:. < :, .. _' ..,." '. -. .- !.. 'f'. .E' r.. ,_ ,_ -.- T



-
<''' : 1-""""": '""*":* '-" 5r'.., _; C' r .
\ \
i .
j "J ;'!1 : f.if": fi < >' : : .

'.' ,
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.


.. .
TIlE CLEWISTON NEWS
,_ ._ _
.
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--
---- -

Block 104 . . 4 43 29 R. H. Magill . . . 12.82 S of NE cor of Nz '
Beg 50 ft W & 380 of S' of SE of '

ft S of NE cor of NE W 137 ft, S '

gOY Jot 3, S 110 ft, 140 ft, E 137 ft, N

'\V 300 ft, N 110 ft, i 140 ft to beg .17 43 29 % B. A. Wiggins . . . .
E 300 ft to beg. 5 43 29 Lucile N. Chapman .. . 9.38 Nlz of SW of SEi! 2.73

Beg 755 ft S & 830 of SW of NE!. .17 43 29 1z Unknown. . . . . 1.53
ft \V of NE cor gOY .' . .; .. ".. : "Luctey's" S-D of '. .
lot 3V 120 ft, N EI,2 of NE!. ofNEa "

to riv, E alg riv to ", .,. . .17 43 29 -. : i
pt N of beg, S to Block 3 lots 12-13 i '

Beg . . . 5 43 29 Unknown '. ; ; . :. 14.32 "Luckey's" S-D Unknown .. .
. . . 153
Beg 755 ft S & 950 .' Block 4 lots 1-3

it W of NE cor gOY "Luckey's" S-D Unknown . . . . 1 1:3::
lot 3, W 128 ft, N Block 4 lots 4-5 .5.
.
to riv, E alg riv to "Luckey's" S-D John Fraser ;. u . 4.61 .
pt N of Beg, S to Block 4 lots 12 .to 18 '

Beg . . . 5 43 29 Geo. M. Hendry . .'. . 14.32 "Luckey's" S-D Mattie Burnett
.
. . 2.29
"Rowards Addition"S EV. of Wi of NE!4

A S-D of 4 acres in of NEV. formerly a S

west part of gOY part of "Pine .
lot 1 . . ; .5 43 29 ::'" ,' Crest" S-D . .17 43 29 .
Block A lots 1-2 r' S Lots 74 to 79 "Pine S .

"Howar Addi- Crest" . . ,
Unknown
. . . : 1.53
tion" . . ", Unknown ': .,. ... .: ; . : 1.83 "Royal Palm Estates S

r "Lynn High Point" ,: ; :..t :..''.".".<..,. ., ,,. i; No. I" a S-D of ; .
S-D beg at a pt 50 -.1. -i Wz of Wof '
itV of a pt 785 it < NEV of NWa exc" .

S of NE cor of see \i.: 2 acres . . .17 43 29 s
5, S 235 ft, W 150 ::4.JL ',/; Lot 10 "Royal Palm : .

S 300 ft, W .. Estates No. 1" ;r John Sun -
1.53
'
N535ft : 29t ,' : 'r.i' : ; : \ Lot 11 "Royal Palm ::. .S:.. .
.
",- . 5 43 A( Estates No. 1" Y ,'-". Jas. N. Nanikas '. ". . 1.53 "
1 lots ,
:
;7, "Royal Palm :Estates .
C. {i"- "Lynn High "Point Unknown : .-. 1.'. ; .-. 13.12 No. 2" a S-D of Si :?..:.- ( 55" '

-t:,' "College View" a S-D :-..' I'i{ ::.{: :'. .'... .of NV of SE of .. : '. '.; ) '," "-.

; of part of Fraser : 'Z'V' : NE'1a . . .17. 43 .29 .>;: -- '. ;, I" :
I' tract . . 5 43 29 ; ..: ,' .', Lots 11-12 "Royal "' ".' : "
'. ? : ,:
Lots 13-14 "College 'J '.:!.' ,' >> Palm Estates" No. \: ,' .
: :; .Unknown .'. . . .;:; 1" .
:" : :. View' )..' ..:: ; 1.53 2. . . . ,:; .Janie Ruff in . : .:... ; ., 1.83
"Court House" S-D -:/;. .' >: :-.,: '.:.. .. Lot 59 "Royal Palm,1'. ; ..- -
.
of tract as follows: .F W f. .. ., ":''/.i.... : Estates No. 2" . ',: : -. T. M., i Badders : :"". ".': . 1.53
.
beg 50 ft \V of SE '. ',,1:; ;'. :.}:.. ':L. :; "Royal Palm Estates >.: ': ,
cor see 5, W 450 ....',,"j<; .:.' ."!!O'.'. -1 No. 5, S-D of Wz ',r'", :r ; : r' : ,. '. .
ft, N 899 ft, E 450 ::;f",": .:- ;'' '' a .: ," of \V of SWV of '<',:",, .". : ..;,;

: = ft, S 899 ft . 5 43 292'. :' ;(. SElf, . . 18 43 29 .,;'._. ..- -. :. '.\ .. .,: A,.. ,. .,
:;; .
.'.
.
.
Block 2
Block 1 Court lot 8 "Roy-
: ';: ; "
.. r" : :; {If
House" S-D . .. ,: Unknown . 10.80 al Palm Estates ; ':.:..,....<.:, ..: '.
'
FzJ .
'... Block 2 "Court- '. :F'I S L' No. 5" .. . . J :.: :.: '. W. H. Cassells . .' .I.: .'g';..:> 1.83
House" S-D . .: .' -;...;;.' Unknown ;. :: . : '6.16 "Royal Palm Estates .'., "- .\\. .L' .:,.S:.tw. ,
Block 3 "Court ';" 7' :.:;:... I .' No. 6" S-D of Ezof '''4 .. <. : \.. j
O..U 2ao .
House" S-D . .;:":';:.. Unknown .. ; . . 4.61 SWofSE :. c.. : '
Block 4' "Court .'J.. : :'.: . . .18 43 29-. : ;" > _

House" S-D . "5 ; :. :. :. Unknown ... '. ; . . 10.80 Block 1 lots 1-2-3-4 .<. .J.\;.: : : ._ ..
Block 5 N! lots 1-2- i :.".< I ;..:..V "Royal Palm Es- .. :> .' :.. :'_ '. "
t ; ,
:
3-4 "Court House" : .1 :;..:; tates No.6. . ,.,;..'"Jj>-' c.:' Unknown . . . 1.83R.
S-D . . . .:\0 7' Unknown .'. .c.. . .. 2.59 Block 1 lots 6-7 ', ..Y': ., .- ,
M Block 5 Sz lots 1-2- >p '.. .. '. '. Royal Palm Es- ,'":':' '" .,.. '; .

= 3-4 "Court House" ,:.', ,:' tates No. 6" . :,:!i A.. Thagard .' .<.. ..": .., '1.83Madie '

S-D . . . ; ,' Unknown .'. : . . 7.23 "Royal Palm Estates ". :;:',t : S .' .: "'C". :!' : .:
et1ad Block' 5 lot 5 "Court No. 7" a S-D of .':-r -- :. .. ,. '!:) ;' ,: .

:: House" S-D . .-: ',: Unknown . . . . 1.53 W',20fEofSW!; .' .'..,,: .', '-
J Block 6 "Court .:' I' of !', . .18 43' 29 : : : :
: '
: : :
;
= House" S-D . .- Unknown . .'. . 2.29 Block lot 1 "Royal ,:," : < ',,
; Court View S-D.; A :, '; : .. :. Palm Estates No. L- . ;', :. .
.
S-D of part of'gov :.:.: ;: I . . . ..' i',:.',' .: : Lowery ... ; .. ? 1.83
;: lot 3, see 5, beg at :...,..1.. ,.. Block 3 lots 13-14 '. :" ;. t..r;;:.: ..' ;:.
'00 SE cor, W 638 ft to ,. "Royal Palm Es- ; :<:; to.f::.,' .r. .

0o beg, N 525 ft, W .. .) :" :: :. ': tates No. 7" . 0 ;," Unknown . . ;. ; : . 1.83
420 ft, S 525 ft, E r::;' ..:'. .,: ", ..v'> Block 4 lots 13-14 :', ;; .,' '
0 .
420 ft to pt of beg 5 43. 29 ? .' ._ t.:'.\, "Royal Palm Es- ., .-:- ; ..: -:
Lots 3 to 3 Court 'J. '.' ..' :. ,'. tates No. 7" . '.. i'': .!>' Zac Tally Estate '. .-. . 1.83

View .. . . {..... Unknown . ; . . 3.07 "Evelyn Terrace" a J. '. .. ,
Lot 18 Court View -::' '/:.:.:':,..' 'Unknown ... : : . .. 1.23. S-D of SE of : '-i.-i.SW r ';. -
.
'.c. ." . . .18 43 29 ::' < -
Lots 28 29 30 31 -".. ... 4
Court View . ....1 ,.. Unknown . :, . . 2.29 Lots 23-24 "Evelyn ./'..'. ... '.' S

"LaBelle Park" A '-' Terrace" Y..Y. ,. Geo. A. Osborn . ; . .1.53
= S-D beg at pt 1347 -'; : '/. ::. :: : Lots 35-3 "Evelyn .. .r(: :'" -. S

ft S & 1748 ft W ,. :';:j. ". .:, .:: S Terrace . . .' J. M. Simpson .'. . . 1.53
,"- ::' .', ," Lot 229 "Evelyn :';"" 4. .. ,.'. .:
0 of NE cor see 5, ;f"- .: ,, :: ..-" .
,
\V 892ftS1301ft ;" ," ,, ,. ., )' : Ten'ace" . . : Louise P. Abbott . ... .'. : 1.53
-, : ,,' < : SW'a of SWof '
-
E 1552 ft, N 892 ., + .. +
ft, 'W 660 ft, N 660 : :1 : SE& SV of .-.1NW

ft topt of beg. 5 43 29 _.,.., : : .' : : <' of SWV4 of ; ,:..,
Block 6 lots 6-7' "La- %; ".': "- 'J \ .F .:' SE% . . .17 45 29 15 James L. Taylor . . 2.9Q
.0 Belle Park" u. S Sarah Hughes .. ;. : . 1.53 Nz of' N\V of ',. ;
Andrews Addition to '. c : NEV & SE'4 of 5

LaBelle Park . 5 43 .29.;'. '" ,: ;;.- NWof NEV .20 '45 29 30 James. L. Taylor ... . . 3.37
Lots 10-11, blk' ', ,t,. .. S' of SE. & NE!4
Cfl prt 8, Andrews Ad- :- : :: '.- of SE!. & SV of : ,

.. dition ............ ,; Unknown ; . :. : . 1.53 NW of SEV & ,
; 0'1 Lots 12-13, blk .- -'tl--: .,'. ". ;/ : '. Ez of NE 4 of '
z. 8,. Andrews Ad- S' ". NW!4 of SE!. .20 45 29 145V.. W. Holland . .-. ::. . 13.24

((1) 0 dition .._......... .;S'. ,:,..' '. Unknown . :" ./: . 1.53 NWV of SE% of i ..
;. NEVI . . .27 45 29 10 Alice
Block 9 lots : ; <.F'4 ': Bruner. . . . 1.53
16-17 ; .
Andrews Addition [:,:';, .c C. J. KIrk . . .. . . 1.53 N!4 of NEV 4 of NEV 4'

.1 Lot23&Sof24 '. .,' of SEV . . .27 45 29 5 F. L. Dunaway ; . . 1.53
;.. .' t S. A. Luckey ;. . . 4.61 1Vz of W'I'2 of NW!. s'
Andrews .
"Avalon Place"Addition S-D ..... ,':, .. :: of NE . :27 45 29 10 Unknown . ... . . 1.53

of lot 1 of Ez of '. -- '- NW of NWa . .27 45 29 40 Stanley Grainger : . . 3.55

ciS 0) NEV 4 . . 8 43 29'' Sz of SE of NE'4
l S Lot 4 "Avalon Place" J D ea. Shackleford . 1.99) of SEa! . . .28 45 29 5 Unknown . . . . 1.53

iSt & "Palm dale" a S-D of Sof SE . .28 45 29 80 J. N. Hall . . .Y. . 6.63
SE of NWV & Nz
t lot 12 of Ez of NE S
f H !4 . . . 8 43 29 ofSW 4ofNW .33 45 29 60 Unknown . . . .5.39
Lot 8 "Palm dale" B F Jilek . ... . . 1.23 S'\V!+ of NE. &
S'z SEV 4 of NW .34 45 29 80 Unknown :. . .'. Y .' 6.93
f "Belmont" S-D of W
N\V of NE%
of NE!I . i. 8 43 29 Beg cor 5
of SWV 4 E 520 5
: run '
5
.
Block 2 lot 22 "Bel-
Unknown . . ft S to S line of .
mont" . . :. . 4.61 ..
: NE!. W 520 ft N : .
Block 11 lot 12 "Bel- .
I mont" . . ,} Sophia, C. Moss . . . 1.53 to beg . . .34 45 29 16' Frank L. Franz . . 3.19
SW of NEIL & NV 2
Block 14 lot 1 "Bel- '.: .
mont" . : . Unknown . . . . 1.53 of SEIi ................35 45 29 60 Unknown . . . . 6.16
Block 14 lots 2-3 SW',4 of SE of
S.: 1.53 NE! . . .35 45 29 10 J. L. Taylor . . . 1.53
Block 16 lots 10-11 COY lots 3-4 . 6 43 30 84 Florida Industrial Company 8.18 ? -

,,,," "Belmont" . ... C. A. HIres . . . 1.53 SE . . . .22 47 31 160 Fla. Timber Lands Corp. 7.22 .
\ ... J :. .. : "Adairs Addition" to All . . . .23 47 31 640 Fla. Timber Lands Corp. 27.51
k
Belmont . . 8 43 .. 29'. All . . . .26 47 31 640 Fla. Timber Lands Corp. 27.51
..' Lots 5 to 12 "Adairs ;' E% . . . .27 47 31 320 Fla. Timber Lands Corp. 13.98

r Addition . :.:f" ,:,",>' .'. Unknown . . .. . 2.29 NW'. . . .23 43 32 160 Trustees I. .I. Fund . ... 15.91
r.! "
NI,2 of SV 2 of SWV
"Englewood Terrace" ) ..: '
S-D of Ez of SW!. '; ', of NW 4 of SW!.. .29 43 32 2 ?z Arthur Fishman ; . 1.53

... & NV of SEV 4 . ?'' NW 1 of NE!. . 6 44 32 40 T.: H. Neil . . . . 6.63
.
Sec. blot 1 "Engle- .J..: WVz! of NW. . 8 44 32 80 J. M. Kentzelman . . 12.04
t wood Terrace" ', '.:' U n I mown . ... . . 1.53 SE!4 of SWa of

Sec. Clot 9 "Engle- SEy . . .28 44 32 10 Unknown . .. . . 1.53
:, : wood "tnknown. . ... . . 1.53 "Providence City" '
;: Terrace"S.. E. Sanchez . . .
17.45 A S-D
Ei of SEV 4 of SW! i.11 43 29 20- of SWa! & '

NW!4 of NE!. & Wz Wof! SE3! . .34 44 32 ,. .. ..:':;' '. .:'. ..
.
of WV of NEof Block U lots 3135'J .. :. ': : .( "i'. '!
Unknown ....................... .., :
.
NEI4! . . .14 43 29 50 7.23W 36 ProvidenCe 5; '.:. : :.- > :..:> .
i !2 df NEi of SEa City" . . :':: James De Sane . :. . 1.83
: of NE. . . .14 43 29 5 .'G'.. D. Lucas . . . 1.5i{ Block 27 lot 8 \..,.:.,:+:-: ."
SE of SE 4 of NE!..14 43 29 10 LucIlle Chapman . . 1.99 "Providence City" '. Frank Moore ': . . . 1.53
W3-4 of Wz of NE' Block 27 lot 10 '.

t. '. of NE! . . .17 43 29 14 Unknown . . . . 3.07 "Providence Ciy" Trustees I. I. Fund .5. ., .. 1.53
S'/2 of NI,2 of NI'2 of Bloch: 52 lots 30-31 5

"' SEV 40fNE%, . .17 43 29 5 Jesse Lewis . . . 1.53 I "Providence City" Will Brown . .. . . 1.53
.,; N'z of S of SES of "Garfield City" A
f. .. .
.
NW', exc 425 ftx S-D of SEa of
': 100 ft in SE cor .17 43 29 9 Unknown . . . . 3.37 NE! l & Ei of

:- NI'2 of NI,2 of SW 4 SEV. . . .34 44 .32
t '. of NW!. . .17 43 29 10 Unknown . . . . 3.fJ7 Block 1 lots 15-16

.' ; :!., NE of NE!. of "Garfield C it y." Carrie Strong. . . . 1.53
: "<;.'tMk. >... SW% . . .17 43 29 10 Paul O'Bannon . . 3.07 Block 1 lot 28 ''Gar-

" ; Ei of NWVof NE'i '" field City" . Unknown . . . . 1:53
'..' of SW!. . . .17 43 29tf5": : Paul O'Bannon . . . 1.53 Block 3 lots 25 to 28

Beg NE cor of N'z! ..k'..0'/i' _;......:.'. "Garfield City" Annie :Mattox ... . . 1.53 ..II1rl.
:
of S'i of SE% of .' y"'
: t Block 4 lot 47 "Gar- ., -
.
NEV. S 147 ftV <:':. field City" . Lavinia Fields Estate . 1.53
330 ft, N 140 ft, Block 9 lots 26-27

E 330 it to beg "Garfield City" ., Trustees I. I. Fund . . 1.53
less road . .17 43 2Q 1. Unknown. . . . . 4.27 Block 10 lots 17 to .' ?
S .
"- Beg 343 ft W & 2 ft 20 "Garfield City" Unknown . ? . ... li53j
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SE'E' of SW..25 45 32 40 Unknown . . . . 3.55 Block 27 Lots 19-20 ,
SW'S of SEV . .25 45 32 40 Unknown . . . . 3.55 Clewiston . Mary G. Dahlberg . . 2.05
Block 36 Lots 18-19-
S'z of S'z of SW '
of NW' . .35 45 32 10 Oscar Luckey . . . 1.53 20 Clewiston . W. J. Ferguson . . . 3.08
NWa of NEV of Block 136 Lot 2 .
N\V. . . .35 45 32 10 Stafford Luckey . .'. 1.53 Clewiston . Walter R. Tweedy. . . 1.79
E'2 of NvVV of Block 138 Lot 15 .
NW< . . .11 44 33 20 E. A. Winslow . . . 6.29 Clewiston . C. E. Shaw . . . . 1.79
% of SEof SE'ti..11 43 33 76 O. T. Russell, U.S.S. Corp ? 18.43 Block 138 Lot 17 .
,SiAE, r: E'z of NE; of NW'/23 44 33 20 Chas. L. Whitcomb . 4.31i Clewiston . ... I : C. D. Fitch . . . . 1.79
NE. of NE'4 of Block 139 Lot 9
i Hannah Y. Slater . . 3.07 Clewiston5- Mrs. R. N. Sanders . . 1.79
: SE'i . . .27 44 33 10
\ "Lincoln S r e BlockLot 1
I Park No. qua I" A Clewiston . Bertha Mehring . . 1.79

S-D of E'z . .35 47 33 Block 146 Lot 15 .
Block 6 lots 1-2 Clewiston . Sadie M. O'Meara . . 1.79
"Lincoln Square Block 152 Lots 1-2-3
Park .No. I" . Hardie Brown . . . 1.83 Clewiston . G. L. Espenlaub . ,. 24.73
:Block 16 lots 41-42 Block 156 Lot 4
"Lincoln Square Clewiston . Trustees I. I. Fund . . 8.74
Park No. I" . Trustees I. I. Fund . . 1.84 Block 156 Lot 7 -
:Block 16 ,lot 43 "Lin- Clewiston . Geo. H. Heinz :. . . 1.79
coIn Park Block 156 Lot 21
No. I"Square. . . Charlie Little . . . 1.84 Clewiston . Sarah Feuchtinger . . 1.79
Block 42 lots 1 to 5 Block 156 Lot 24 .
"Lincoln S qua r e Clewiston . J. W. Scott . . . 16.47
Park No. .1" . Unknown . . .'. . 1.83 Block 161 Lots 6-7 S ,
Block 50 lots 9-10-11 Clewiston . Unknown . . . ., 2.82
"Lincoln S qua r e "lt. ,:' Block 163 Lot 15 -
Park No I" . 'j Ella Griffin . .'. . 1.83 I Clewiston . . E. ;
Block 167 Lot 7
Block 50 lots 383940 '
"Lincoln Square ; Clewiston _, . .
Park No. I" . ; Ella GrIffin . . ... . 1.83 Block 167 Lot 25'
Block 55 lot 43 "Lin- '. k Clewiston . '
coin Square Park ..-J fir' Block 168 Lot 2''
No.1. . . ..; ,' William TWIggS . . 1.83 Clewiston .1 . '"
Block 77 lot 15 "Lin- I.. < : Block 168 Lots 141516 _" ','
coIn Square Park : Clewiston . : ,
:
No. I" . . <,'!<"r William Twiggs ... ... 1.83 Block 170 Lots 8-9 -, .., .
"Lincoln Square Park S ;:: Clewiston . : ,':" ',
No. 2" S-D of WV.35 47 33'- Block 170 Lot 18 .... \ .;
Block 21 lot 18 "Lin- : Clewiston . .,. J.
Block 171 Lot 10' ./
< {
-
coin Square" Park "- '1'. ". -
No. 2" . . Oscar E. McIntire .' . . 1.83 Clewiston . S ,
:< Block 172 Lot 4 "'"" .. ,
Block 26 lots 38'to 42 f: : j.
.r "Lincoln Square ': Clewiston . < J.
:J Park No. 2" . "; .. Unknown . ... . 1.83 Block 172 Lot 6 :', ,
1 BlocK 57 lots 42-43 .' ;: Clewiston . . S.
"Lincoln Square Block 172 Lot 7 ,;'-
Park No. 2" . Lula Thompson . . . 1,83E'z Clewiston . "
: . . . 5 48 33 320 Trustees I. I. Fund . 15.70 Block 172 Lot) 14 -. ',_
'C1arfield Park S-D of Clewiston . 55-
NE . . 9 48 33 Block 172 Lot 15
:Block 4 lot 46 Gar- Clewiston . .
field Park . Dona Chapman . ... 1.53f Block 173 . . 10 43 34>' >
,f Block 7 lots 14-15 Block 173 Lot 2
Garfield Park . Dona Chapman . . . 1.53 Clewiston . 'i
' Block 11 lots 3-4 ., Block. 173 Lot 4
Garfield Park . ..'i" Lola Edwards . . . 1.53 Clewiston . .
'
Block 23 lots 1-2 ',: .J: Block 173 Lot 15 -

Garfield Park . ;..';.;-: Susie Dell . . . . 1.53 Clewiston . ";i,, ; ,' J.
.'
Block 26 lots 25-26 ": Block 173 Lot 21 i\>

Garfield Park . Trustees I. I. Fund . . 1.53 Clewiston . .''; .
Block 26 lot 48 < Block 173 Lot 23 ;"

Garfield Park . Unknown . . . . 1..53 Clewiston . S '. :. :
Block 29 lots 38-39 ,, /- Block 173 Lot 24Clewiston ';+" "
Garfield Park . Annie Lee Kelley ... . 1.53 . : *.< "
:
Block 33 lots 45 to 48 -''.: __ .. Block 175 Lot 6 .,*'_":. Gtift
Garfield Park . : Pearl Thomas . . . 1.53 Clewiston . S "J* : J.
Block 38 lots 21-22 .\ '" Block 175 Lot 8 -i ; '
.
Garfield Park . Fannie McClaine . . 1.53 Clewiston . .':,, J. .
"'
-
"Ford Center" A S-D Block 176 Lot 1 .

of NW . .10 48 33',._. Clewiston . -.: ....
Block 1 lots 17-18-19 Block 176 Lot 28Clewiston t,...
"Ford Center . 1 '. Lewis Sirmons .'. . 1.53 . .. ;...J.17"
Block 8 lots 1 to 5 ..- Block 176 Lot 31 ; ',, :; '
"Ford Center" . ;.:.. _. Trustees I. I. Fund .. . 1.53 Clewiston . :. :;-:..5 ftM.
Block 8 lots 32-33 ," ', ': Block 176 Lot 32 '., '

"Ford Center" . Henry Bank ton, . .-. 1.53 Clewiston . ;.' ,"_-<._ ,
Beg at a pt 610 ft ( ;:,1: : .- Block 176 Lot 36 .
E of SW cor of :?,'.. ;"'- S Clewiston . : .
see 14, N 275 ft, /1;.: ,'... : Block 190 . . 10 43 34 ,-
East 130 ft, N 100 .., :.__ Block 190 Lot 4
'l ft, E 140 ft, S 375 ...,:. I Clewiston . .
: '' ft, West to pt of .- Block 195 Lot 1
beg . . . .14 43 34 i 1'- 2 T. J. Geiger.. : . . 7.42 Clewiston . 9 43 34 -
Beg 610 ft East & ', \', Block 195 Lot 10
275 ft N of SW cor ... I Clewiston . .
see 14, N 100 ft, :. j.,. Block 195 Lots 24-25 .. ,
E 130 ft, S 100 ft, '.r .:- Clewiston . . '
W 130 ft to pt of Block 196 Lot 5 ;i::2
beg . . . .14 43 34 'x L. L. Lowe . .>: . .. 2.86 Clewiston . ,, -- >if.//:: '
SWva of NW'a of Block: 196 Lot 6 :'1 ':
SW', . . .23 43 34 10 J. L. Miller ... . . . 6.47 Clewiston . : N: ;' .
SE'a of NW of Block 196 Lots 18-19 *b;! ::, 1'o
.
SE . . .234334. 10 Unknown . : . . 6.47 Clewiston . S ;::," .' .
N\V of SE's of Block 201 Lot 4 ;,': .:" :,:
SW'/4 . . .23 43 34 10 B. J. Waldo . . . 6.47 Clewiston . -:'*; "' .
WV of E'z of NW Block 201 Lot5 <:.:; '
'
'& W'z of E'z of Clewiston . : : :: S
SE of NW'I .24 43 34 48 F. J. TokiedaClewistonCorp. Block 201 Lot 6 ... :.,., ,' ST.H

.......................... 25.54 Clewiston . "':'..\i-
W'z of NE 4 of NW'35 43 34 20 J. Lee Smith . : . 11.88 Block 201 Lot 9 -. ,t-- S (
EofSW'.ofSE' .13 44 34 20 Unknown . . . .5.99 Clewiston . : "..f :.,, ,:. 1
Eof SW of NW's 5 45 34 20 Chas. A. Camalier . . 4.31 Block 201 Lot '36 '.J".,
SE of NW of Clewiston . '..1
NE 4 . . .13 45 34 10 Chas. A. Camalier . . 3.91 Block 202 Lot 1 -
SW/4 of SEY of Clewiston . 9 43 34 ", j i
NE 4 . . .13 45 34 10 R. F. Lowndes . . . 3.91 Block 202 Lot 10 ,'
W''z of NE 4 of Clewiston . .': "
SE 4 . . .17 45 34 20 Trustees I. I. Fund :. . 4.61 Block 202 Lot 14 : ;".
W'z of SWI,4 of Clewiston . -: :ti "-
SE . . .17 45 34 20 Peter H. Hoener . . 4.61 Block 203 Lot 17 ':",' .
NE'. of NE' of Clewiston . "", ; ftft
NEV . . .25 45 34 10 Ada L. Panton . . . 3.07 Block 203 Lots 23-24 .' % .>::;:
NW+ of NE' of Clewiston . "**" ";;
NE 4 . . .25 45 34 10 Ed & Frank Guarden . 3.07 Block 203 Lot 26 '' .:.'. J
SE of NWT of Clewiston . ..
:, l-j'-.. SW, . . .25 45 34 10 Geo. G. Renneker . . 3.07 Block 204 Lots 1-2 :' -- ftO
:' SW; oOf NEV 4 . .29 45 34 10 Trustees I. I. Fund . . 8.18 Clewiston . 9 43 34
I Ij SE 4 of NW/4 of Block 204 Lot 5 T5 1

SW'a . . 1 46 34 10 Geo L O'Hare . . . 3.07SW Clewiston . :
of SE;: of' Block 204 Lot 11

SW'; . . 1 46 34 10 Trustees I. I. Fund . . 3.07 Clewiston . ,
E,2 of NW 4 . .21 4.6 34 80 E A Winslow . . . 818 Block 204 Lot 13 I
E'z of NW 4 of Clewiston . .
. . 1 47 34 20 E. Beachand . . . 3.07 Block 207 Lots 2-3 i 1
,. "Townsite of Clewiston" beginning at a pt on the south line of sec 9, twp Clewiston . 9 43 34 1
f.t. 43, rg 34, 1752.5 ft west of the SE cor of said sec 9, thence north 235 ft more Block 207 Lot 4
i or less to a pt; thence turn a deflection angle of 7" 33' right to the tangentof Clewiston . S
a 2" 50' 11" curve (radius 2020 ft center ft being 250' east and 30' southof Block 207 Lot 7
the SE cor sec 9) thence, on the curve to the right, 1500 ft more or less to Clewiston . .
a pt; (bearing distance of long cord north 28" 48'/2', east 1465 ft more or Block 207 Lot 20
less) thence 24." 15' west 744 ft more or less, to a pt; thence north 18" 10' Clewiston . .
f east 651 ft more or less to a pt; thence N 63"; west 614 ft more or less to a Block 208 Lots 3-4 5
pt, thence N 24" 15' east 1580 ft more or less to the meander line of Lake Clewiston . 9 43 34 1
( Okeechobee thence, south" 18' east, 1115 ft to pt on line between sec 9 & 10a Block 354 Lot 25 :::
distance of 4,137.5 ft N of SE cor sec 9; thence south 64" 16' east 5858.8 Clewiston . .16 43'-34
t ft to a pt on east line of sec 10, thence south along said line 1610.4 ft toN Block 355 Lot 22 ;
monument being SE cor sec 10, thence, south along east line sec 15, 2,720 ft Clewiston . .
I to a point on N line of Bahama St, thence west alg said line 4348.75: feet to Block 355 Lot 25 i
I east line of Atlantic.Ave, thence south along said line 610 ft to S line of Fla Clewiston . : ; iI iI
Ave., thence west alg said line 1,345 ft to west line of Pacific Ave, thence N Block 355 Lot 27 5
alg said line 610 ft to S line of Bahama St, thence W alg said line 1330 ft, to Clewiston . I
W line of Olympic Street, thence along a line 35' west of an parallel to Block 355 Lot 28 !
FI' Olympic St 2720 ft to pt of beg. Clewiston . .
Block 20 lot 10 Block 356 Lot 44

Clewiston . Trustees I. I. Fund . . 1.79 Clewiston . .
i Block 2 2 Lot 23Clewiston .' Block 358 Lot 3 '.. :
. -'.'; Eugene Feuchtinger .'. 1.79 ClewistonBlock . ; .,"'-,'(-;
S
Block 23 lots 20-21 : 358 Lot 18 ..:; ; ;

.,,$I- Clewiston . "*. C. B.fOr Fitch . . . 2.05 Clewiston .1. . .:'' .. ,:,,' 1 :
Block 23; Lots 303132 Block 358 Lot 23

Clewiston . Trustees I. I. Fund . .. 3.08 Clewiston . ,"-'
,, Block 27 Lots 3-4 Bloc 358 Lots 41-42 ,'. ; ", : i

Clewiston ..:...:. ....: Mary G. Dahlberg 16,73



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frlTE CLEWISTON: NEWS
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Clewiston . Henry J Stevenson -. v . 3.60' BloCK 403 Lot 15
Block 361 Lots 6-7 E. Chenot :. . . 1.79 Uncle Eben
Clewiston . W. H. Bryan . . . 2.05
"When candidate
.. a shakes
Block Clewiston 361 Lot. .16. J. C. O'Neal . . . ;. 1.79. I. I. Fund . . 1.79 an' says 'How Is you?' said yo'Uncle hand

Block Clewiston 361 Lot. .45. E.. Fcuchtinger . . .'. r 1.79:r W. Smith . . . 1.79 Is Eben you, "what c'lnter hesho-nuff vote?"'means Washington Is 'Uow

Block 362 Lots 28-29. . . . .
"Clewiston . .15 43 34 Unknown . . . 2.05 Schuck 2.05 Stnr."t
Block 362 Lot 30 .. . :(..
Clewiston . . N. B. O'Kelley. . ... . 1.79 Meredith 2.31 .:..:..:..:w:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:.
Block 367 Lot 17 . . . '
Clcwiston . :. :M.;' A. Farran. ......... . .' 1.79 : G. Ames_. 1.79 :F. SEA FOOD MARKET :f!:
Block Clewiston 369 Lots. .2-3. J. W. Troeger. . . ". . 16.72Block . . . . 2.05 :i: LUNCHES t..

16 Clewiston 369 Lots .13. .to. Unknown- '. . . . 3.31 M. Harding . . . 1.79 .:'t'$ J. G. MARTIN :$:i:

Block Clewiston 369 Lot. .17. Charlotte E. Dorn ,. . . 1.79 Feuchtinger- . . 1.79 .X. FIRST DOOR NORTH POOLE'S GRO Y':'

Block Clewiston 369 Lot. .24. .' L.I, M. Harding . . . 1.79 Clewiston'W. . :. . . 3.10 .:_!..:..:..:..:..:LABELLE..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:FLORIDA..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..v:.
Block 369 Lot 26 I. I. Fund . . 1.79
Clewiston . ., The Clewiston Company . 1.79
Block Clewiston 370 Lots. 21-22. .15 43 34 Violet J. Reasoner- 2.05 . . . ... 1.79 I
"
Block Clewiston 370 Lot. .38. E. R. Button. . . . 1.79 . . .' . ... 1.79 ESTIMATES REQUEST FURNISHED ON

.) Block 372 Lot. .15Clewiston C. Bodine -. .'. ... :1.... .'. 1.70 . . . . 1.79 I
C. E. STEBEL
Block Clewiston 374 .Lot. .2'. H. F. Conway .. .'. .. .'. 1.79 S. Cook . . . 3.87
t Block .374 Lot 12 . . . . Electrical ContractingPHONE
1.79
Clewiston . Mrs.,H. C. Avant . . 1.79
: Block Clewiston 377 Lots. .13-14. .15 '43./ 34 R. A._ Lily .,. .*. . . 2.05 I .,. . . 3.05 i PAHOKEE, 2121 FLORIDA -

,!t Block Clewiston 378 Lot. .17.. A. Betzer- .-. . . .- 1.79 : W. Fuqua .. . . 1.79 I I for
Agent
Block Clewiston 381 .Lot. .3. E. A. Erickson. . . . 1.79Unknown' I M. Conway .. . . . 1.79 I" GENERAL ELECTRICREFRIGERATORS
Block 381 .Lot. . 4.. M. Conway . . . 1.79
Clewiston : ... . . 1.79 RANGES AND
Block 383 Lots 22-23 I FRANK A. DOUGHERTY, APPLIANCESWWS
i Clewiston . D. B. McEachron . . 2.05 Tax Collector, Hendry County. I
J. 1
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