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ANNOUNCEMENT. Owing to the confusion In the name of two L)K'tor Prazerti on Military St. Dr. It. C. FrazHr, nprci.il iut ou Kye Kar, Nohh and Throat dlneasft3 wishes to announcH hi oilice on the prround tloor of the Yokom lildtr., opposite tli llarrinpton llotnl, 1011 Mililarv ntriHt Port Huron, Mi.l The persistent advertiser is the one who wins. Advertised Letters Yale, Mich., Sept. 27, 1920 Mrs. Josyhim Bedford, Reuben Bradley, Jacob Bell, Mary Lall oeff, President of Episcopal Guild, James C. Marshall, Charles Brady, Mrs. Sarah Alexander, Dave Lamton, John Perry, Hiram Perry , Howard Smith, Mrs. Alice Warren. E. W. Farley, P. M. HERE AND THERE The Caro Advertiser is enter ing upon its 5.1rd year of exist ence, one of the best weekly news papers in Michigan. About fifty bankers of the local district of the Michigan State Bankers' association met on Fri day at Marysville and St. Clair and combined business with pleasure. sore as you are a root Si you will like this Camel Turkish immm and Domestic MMm if f-r'icM vNvjr -0l'jr z&t. & 4,.:L'fe-"V 'V'J isff MW'Wlm R' I' REYNOLDS thl5 ISilftSjiV Wm.ton-S.lem. N.'t 1 jdOLm1 If OU never trot such r o contentment as Camels you. Camels quality and expert Dienaot cnoice Turkish and choice uomestic Tobaccos make goodness possible and make you prefer this Camel blend to either kind of tobacco smoked straight! Camels mellow-mildness is revelation! Smoke them with freedom without tiring your taste I They leave no unpleasant ciga retty aftertaste nor unpleasant cigaretty odor ! . Give Camels every test then compare them puff-for-puff with any cigarette in the world ! v- ..j i - -- .. .ii 1 !i .... j f lias. wsj TURKISH noUESTfCift TWENTY YEARS AGO. INTERESTING ITEMS FROM . THE FILES OF THE EXPOSITOR 11900 On Wednesday evening, Sept. 2Gth, 1900, Miss Dernice Kelley was married to Porter Haris, of the firm of Mclntyre & Harris. Miss Kelley, for four years had been the efficient and pleasant clerk in Yale postoffice. The Yale Milling Co. was run ning nights in an effort to keep up with orders. The resignation of Bernice Kel ley from the -postoffice' brought Mrs. Mary Hennessy back to that position, one that she had held before. The Capac fair was extensively patronized by Yale people. Charley Manley is learning the jewelry business with L. Roy Ful ler. Marshal Chas. Emery was at tending to the repairing of the old board side walk and the placing of new ones vhere nee Jed The weather the latter part of this 20. years ago September must have corresponded with what we are now having, as the Expositor asks, "who can tell us of a last of September when the grass was greener and more plentiful, and all nature was more spring-like?" The new brick harness shop that Wallace Adams was building was nearly completed. A number of Yale citizens do nated a news wheel chair to Mel lon Ferguson. The Shakespeare Club met with Mollie Brown and began the study of "The Taming of the Shrew." At this time Steve and Dick Windsor both lived in Yale. They are twins you. know, and it wa3 mighty hard to tell them apart. It's just as hard after these twen ty years, but Steve moving to Port Huron has made lots of things easier for Dick. North of 56" Is Newest Locale for Settings of Unique , Northerh Story NEIL and"Wapi the kflle in "Back Gods L SH1PMAN lff'': : IWMT Country t .-v it-f 4v . they were to "enact the scenes for "Back to Gods Country." Between them and the Arctic ocean there was not a foot of railroad or a settlement. We burned night and day fires to keep out the intense cold. Ipas sed up an1 down constantly a mong the actors, watching their faces and warning them at the first sign of frozen ear ;ihd nov es. In spite o? this, scarcely a member of tho company got away without a frozen ear, nose or cheek.- One member suffered a frozen foot. Despite the fact that cast mem bers were begged to take proper precautions and minute care -of themsejves, Ronald Byro i, lead ing man, died soon after his ar rival. The tragedy nearly result ed in giving up the venture. Grit and determination on the part of the cast saved the day. 2 mm (By, James Oliver Curwood) When "ack to God's Country" is shown on the screen at Prin cess Theatre next Tuesday and Wednesday, it will represent the accomplishment of a task of in credible magnitude. Aside from the fact that it is a graphic version of "Wapi, the Wal rus," which was published in God Housekeeping Magazine not long ago, it has the distinction of having been made farther north than any other picture in the (history of the screen. All of the snow scenes were taken on the far shore of Lesser Lake, 'north of the I 56th parallel. Frequently the temperature was fifty degrees below zero and it was as cold as sixty degrees be low the freezing mark. In this j frigid temperature it was found . necessary to draw all oil from : the cameras before the' could be operated. A matter of scientific interest is the fact that in this far north ern latitude, over 20,000 feet of film were shot without a single foot of static. This lexnarkable i result was achieved, undoubtedly, because the two cameras in use were constantly left out of dopr3. Probably no group of actors av er had a more interesting evper ience than those who were engag ed in the making of the northern scenes of the picture. I went ahead with David Hartford, the director, to pave the way for the cMMpany, the arrival of which was greeted with a number of dogs and sledges, which conveyed them from the line of rail into the frozen Arctic regions. One of the most remarkable achievements in motion pictures,' I believe, was accomplished when we built a ship, one hundred and eighty feet long, in the ice of Les ser Slave Lake. This played the part of the frozen-in whaler, Fly ing Moon. The masts of heavy timbers were hewri out of the for est, but all lumber and other ma terial had to be brought by dog sledge from the line of rail, many miles away. Upon arrival, r the members of the company 'found themselves in the midst of a howling wilderness On the three sides of them were the frozen forests. North and east were the barren lands on which MS. 'J tramatjA eooa position is c svil eray'JX B, U. graJuatc-srr al cf Ust year's graduates already e. rn'mg , fxioo a year. Opportunities open to work for room and board ivniU attending. Write for Bulktit B. DETROIT BUSINESS UNTYEIiSFTY 61-69 WEST CRAKD UVU AM DETROIT KUlJiab4 1850 ArrWit4 GEORGfi W. ELT'h INSURANCE and RKAL F-STATK We write Fire, Tornado & Auto .nsurance A Share ol Yotir Huklneu Suticl'.rd. YALE. MlCfHCAN ' Or J. D . STEVEN' VETI.K1NAUY SU1KJKON, OH, Du.Wtf of th Ontario Veterinary ( oil P". hWo th Unlvrr!ty Jif 'Iririihto AHchI!; nlwbl day promptly .-titatidfHl. Phone:". Olll'-e t rPwIootHN on Keuintirk "tr-,t. vn.F., Mich D. II. ANDREWS. M. D. , Physician and Surgeon Office: First door south of the . Paisley Hotel Hours: 2 to 4 and 7 to p. m. Sunday by appointment. Phone 128. i Henry Ford says: "The war ii over and it is time Tear prices lucre over. There is no sense or wisdom in trying to maintain an artificial standard of values. For the best inter ests of all it is time a real effort vas made to bring the country back to pre-war standards. " ? s v u 3 ve n s a t car The Ford Motor Company makes this reduction in the face of the fact that they have on hand immediate orders for 146,065 cars and tractors. The Company will suffer temporary loss in using up material bought at high prices, but it willingly does so. Rediictio n P resent of Ford Product i n rices TOURING CAR Regular TOURING CAR With Starter RUNABOUT Regular ; RUNABOUT With Starter $440 $510 $395 $465 SEE CHASSIS COUPE, With Starter and Demountable Rims TRUCK, With Pneumatic , Tires TRACTORS, $360 $745 $545 $790 SEDAN, With Starter and Demountable Rims... .$795 llllllllll!!!l!llllll!llll!IOIi!lltlll! FOR D JAMES P. COGLEY, Proprietor ALES .& SERVICE- ' Cor. Main & Mechanic Sts. . Yale, Michigan-