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OUR MOTTO l*i " A L L THE
N E W S T H A T ' S F I T T O PRINT
•••fc^^i
OUR SUBSCRIPTION R A T S IS
$1.25 P E S YEAR
Pinckney, Livingston County, Michigan Wednesday, September 14 1938
i*o 37
p««•
Results of Tuesdays
Primary Election
Fitzgerald Boat Toy for Governor 2 1'ransue
and Blacknoy
Renominated. Charles Adams Win* for Left lature. Gr.tet for
Prosecutor « o *
Fawcett for Sheriff Light Vote Cast 14 t h a County.
Tr t h e p r i m a r y election tfx-Gov. * l u g e r a l d beat Toy for t i n R e p H e a l n ^ i ^ T L governor 2 to 1 Incomplete r e t u r n s gave
l » U d
jority. He built u p a big lead outstate and more than
nearly 200,000 m a
Wayne county. Where Toy's big anticipated
held his own wit'i Toy in
His crack down on labor policy proved
majority failed to materialize,
t o a man. Industry got alarmed
and
to be a d u J . Labor opposed him
with sufficient financial support, ritzgerald on the
failed t o come across
other hand has a n abundance 6f f i - . _
A
A
^
r
1-MINUTE SAFETY TALKS
By Don Herold
1
• We 11 drive, moderately,
and if we have
an ace id a it,
it will be
1 nicer
Circuit Court Term
To Open on Sept. 26
i
Short Term Indicated. J u r y it Drawn For T e r r a 8 Criminal Cases, 10
Jury Cases, 7 Non-Jury Castas
and 15 Chancery Cases List*
ed. 15 Divorce Cases Filed
The ScpU n b e r term of cuuit op-ems on Monday. September 26. A
short, term <.- looked lor as only 55 cases are listed. The cases are as
follows:
Cri:nina Cases
The People vs Clarence Holmes,
Malicious Mi. chief
T h e P e o p l e vs K I). Lcniiett, for
' B y Ye Editor"
* "
forgery.
And
ihe
war
in
Spain
drags
merThe People y. Joe Danml:-,appeal
r a n c i a l aid and -a smooth w o r k i n * ^ Q U I l t Y
A . A .
The people \s Cus Kanem.],appeal rily on. The press of this country
state 1 vide organization
j ^ v w ****». j
seem to be favoring the fascist bacThe
People v
Mayaard KnickcrIn a split field of six candidates,'
ked insurgents and predict each daj
brocker, ri.-^ault
the ascd Luren Dickinson had little
Franco
The People v.- .Stanley Miller, fur a j'inal drive by General
trouble winning the Repubican nomwliii-h will end the war. Somehov
assault.
ination for Lt. Govemor.He is the
College Campus Last Thursday
thai
d r i ' e always seems to be goir.g
The People \ J(.!,n Do. s, larceny.
president of the Anti-Saoon League.
F a r m Group Psicnked at Mich j t a t e
The People v Lortha Stearns, an in tvveise. According to reports most
Andrew Transue, Democrat and
ft
better
chance
of
being
killed
than
a
0!' the- soldiers engaged in tearing up
If we are'going to have automobile
appeal.
Wm. Blackney, Repubican,were nomfeoberpedestrian—per accident.
accidents, let s have little onus.
Spa:n are outsiders. The loyalists
The second annw.l outing of the
Issue of Fact (Jury Cases)
It is not such a serious matter when f; There has been a lot of loose talk
inated for congres in the 6th district.
Michigan Agricultural Conservation
we dent a fender* What we -ion't about the safety of driving fast. A
Margaret Schngne vs Win. Weak are supposed to be aided by ComIn the t h e r e were around 6000
Jot of rjeople think that it is all ri^ht
muni.-is while the insurgents are sup
want to dent is a skull.
Association was hold on the Michigley, Trespass.
votes c a s t The vote was as follows
How shall we select for ourselves; 10 drive fast If they drive "careful'
Hitler.
an State College campus last ThursFred McCa n vs Sam II eidiT-iirich Purled by Mussiloni and
the smaller or more insignificant or •But the figures show that the rati1 ol
Republican
There would not seem to be much
jdeath per accident which iri.c • '
appeal.
day, Livingston County baing represkin-deep or grade "C" accidents?
Governor - Fitzgerald
3901 sented at the picnic by 17 members.
ehuire bul evidently the person:
I have a book in my lap, compiled exceeding the speed limit is rn •
Fiai.k Vosmicl: vs Clare T
am- who (nr.trol the big papers and perby The Travelers Insurance Company' worse than the average death ram (>.
H a r r y Toy
1331
Among the events on the program
trespass.
on last year's smashes and crafhes. It all accidents due to improper <' \ P
o:!i«',;(U jn-'-fci- Fascism and Nazism
Lt. Gov.Luren Dickinson
2058 was the selection of the
Michigan
James AYalker vs H a r r y ,Frost.
tells us which kind of accidents are practices.
:o
Commiiiiisin.Great Britian seems
Thomas Read
889 AAA Queen for 1938. Miss Gene
.the deadliest. Let's g',t a line on 'em jL Places, too, have a lot to d: •• i
trespass.
and avoid THAT kind.
"Violence of your accideni, 1 In
to de caught between tv\o mill stones
Cor grew,-William Blacjciley
3579 Harper of St. Johns was the unaniArchie Campbe
vs Harry Frost
About the surest way to cinch your " death per accident an I
and don't know which way to jump.
Hubbard
791 mous choice of the throe judges
trespass.
^ death in an automobile accident is to d at rural intersections is i..>
Legislature - Charles Adams ....2744 Contestants were entered from thirty
per cent greater than
'mix in a little alcohol, With an intoxiLuby Walker vss Harry Frost, a
We sec by the Jackson Citizen
cated driver (you or somebody else),
T h u r b e r Cornell
1976 of the county AAA offices. Mr. E.
trespass.
Patriot that the Stockbridge High
at the wheel, your chance of death i* Time plays a part, also.
Prosecutor- Stanley Berriman....2074 F. Krause, Chairman, and Mr A. L
greater than with a sober man at the
te ;v--r accident after <'Christine Campbe 31 »Vo
School
is bauling i s 8th grade pupils
I.'^rry
Joe Gates
2781 K o m , Member of the Ohio Agricul; wheel. I mean if you take 1,000
per cent worse th.-.i da;
t Frost, trespass
and
high school pupils
from the
Mav all your accident
•drunk accidents and 1,000 sober acciState Senator- Paul Eager
2150 tural Conservation Committee and
Alfred Pa- attain v ,• P U I ' L O M i ' r a . n - : ia'iifiehi and Folmer districts to the
d they're more apt <
•dents there'll be mere deaths in the
H a r r y Hittle
:
2028 Mr. Leon L. Bailey, Member of the
Stockbridge -chool. This was bound
J drunk accidents.
cis-, trespass.
1 know abtout t.
Sheriff- Claude Fawcett
2850 Indiana State Committee, were the
adjier spots and *r
Even an intoxicated pedestrian lias
Russell Smith vs I-'rank Starrer, to coire although Stockbridge sccnia
s
judges in the contest. A br.ll g i m e
in ' w e gotten the jump on the ot-"'
as.-ajmpit.
:
between the county committeemen
)^r schools, except the consolidated
l s * u e of F a c t ( N c n - J u r y Casoa
and the State Fieldmcn and State
M^l'hrrsoii
IN).,,j*tal
\ s W;i]li;un one-. In a very short apace of time
Committeemen was won hy the state
" e predict that most of the district
I'arke;-, appeal.
h
eam. Clarence W. Swancbeck and
(iienn Carvood v:: 1'irversa 1 C re- •^•hnol will be closed and their pupils
Rev. James Carolan
transported by bus to the nearby
Vernon N. Spencer from the State
dit ('•.mpany, ; ,' U'"p ,'.
'•Uftses:
8:00
and
10:30
vs
the
high schools.
office won the log sawing contest
('. F. PnUen'i. :<1 Ol: Co. <
'
/ f ^ e v o t i o n to Our Mother of PerpM ich'g.lll t o-ope'-at)\ e
i\>
uarm.-hGuests at the picnic included Mr.
Ar
' * Help, Saturday at 7 :00 P. M.
lf 1 rai'k r'li/gerald wins the gubCounty O. E. S. Chapters To Meet
meat.
Claude R. Wickard, Director of the
at Howell Next Tuesday
f',«ji:ii 011 il -noniiffrttion over Harry
fifessions, % **L0 P. M. Saturday.
v.
North Central Division of the AgricFin,'o
1 re u l l o l i h e r C o .
i'ey, i[, will \ic largely un ticcount ot
t i l l p r \{.
ultural Administration, Washington,
Stanley
,11 n ,
Th/p 28th annual meeting of
i'"..'- pronounced anti-labor stand.
(it;lic-i.
K J h b e r Co., v
D. C , and Mr. Howard Gray, a cotVin:
Livingston County 0 . E
,'il/giralil hat, repeatedly roferred
fFrrti, 1 : !.'
s.li'ips t
ton farmer fpWff1- Alabama
jation will be hc-18 at ITbwe
0 him in his campaign talks, as
Cherles .Moii'i^om
,\.: d,
Mr. Wickard, in a talk to the counDon
Patton,
Supply
Pastor
Tuesday Sept. 20. • The program
ha Shoot cm Down candidate. Toy1
cry,
tre,ty association members, emphasized
Services each Sunday
>a
not repudiated this moniker.
L;>u 1 , '
I,land
Lake
the fact that the value of any farm i as follows:
Morning
Worship
,
10:30
-ec'.iy
al'tei the Flint strikes in
Afternoon Session
program should be judged by the I
11 Mil i: .
Hoi-!,
•'. ' i, ty ol" \U'A7 Harry Toy launchSpecinl and r^parate service for tne
2:00 P. M.
Chfiii rc/-y
contribution it makes to the n a t i o m l .'
'I I,' c .inpaigii with a speech in
Lucile Purdy, W. little folks.
welfare. He then discussed how the i Call to Ordei
: a ' 1 •• (•
( I 0
\
!i..-h
pron:Ise'i to invoke the full
11:45
M., Howell Chapter Escorts Sunday School
II
present Farm Program is set up to j
.' < c (a 1.: n i ] 11'
Lyal ( a 1 e p
c Wi'l
II. Y. P. U
7:00
<>, toe law against the strikers
Association Officers
provide abundant supplies of food |
11
owe
in .n
l
e
I
:
.- -tn.-i'il tins repeatedly thro8:00
: America Evening Worship
ind fibre and at the same time con-1 Opening Ode
n junction
i
g
'
l
i
o
;
.
le1.- campaign. While inarty
serve the soil resources of the Nation I Invocation ... Alrneda Henry,Chaplain T h u r c evening prayer scrvic€-8:00
Kov
Clark
i o r :i \'
ii-aiiist the strikes and blame
Everybody Welcome
Mr. Gray told of the cconomi? Presentation of Flag....Ann Hornung
ic'coiint ing.
1 C M ; lor the business slack they reMarshall.
FRANK
FITZGERALD
renditions that the southern f a r m e r !
I'A •mi Swan v- •\n.< rl anc Lil! i a : i :"u ed to follow Toy along this drasRoll
Call
of
Association
Officers
i\i
ixi-i ut ion,
> 1; 1 t o . 11
Fred Bell
1487 has faced for the past'few years and |
tic course which might ea/1 to blood
Ada Nichols, Secretary, Re101)1. i
ItlUII
how
the
Farm
Program
is
attempting
j
MeKin .-> a l i t h h e < ' ' • " c\ <io !KIt car" to have the
Clerk- John Hagman
3784
ception of Honored Guests & Visitors
,1
Trcas. -Eastman
- 3748.. to relieve those depressing condition?
ame tragedy take place in Michigan
Rev.
J.
M.
McLuca«,
Pastor
Honoring Past Presidents of Assoc» ri
I alt
Register - Frank Bush
3763
did in Washington I). C, durinjr
Morninjr worship
—
10:30
iation.
11
Circuit Court Com. Fletcher.... 834 FORTIETH WEDDING
;nver
enn when he allowed the
riunday School
_ 11.45
ANNIVERSARY Address of Welcome..Loyal Gilchris^
Bidwi
win
Hadsell
590
t
o
>
hoot flown the bonus m.irSupt.
Response ....Pearl Sheridan, Erijrhton Mr. Dan Vj'.aSlambroo^
Munsell
2077
•I: ej"
Reading of Minutes of Last Meet-j The Christian Endeavor Sncietj,
. ri< > i ' v, 1). J.
The farm home of Mr. and Mr*
Drain Com. - Floyd Munsell ....3(81
of
the
Congregational
church,
met
in
ingj
Secn-tary-lVeasurcif.s
Import;
The football season Is now on
Coroners - Harold Borden
13 87 John Martin was the settir.rr of a
Roll
Call
and
Reports
of
Chapters
the
church
parlors
Sunday
evening
Y.i
on
Wli.-Ol
id the boys are busy getting In
Cleve Copeland
1378 dinner served in honor of Mr. and
vs ui>atii Mattby
Worthy
Matrons;
Roll
Call
of
the
and
elected
officers
and
planned
their
1,
June
-ion.
i * i •: 1 y, i:
i.tpe. Tin;es have changed since the
Cuy Grieve
2152 Mrs. J a y Bripham of Grass Lake
Visitors;
Communications
and
Bills;
Full
and
Winter
program.
Sater
et
Peter
al
vs
Carl
Marr,
dd
'lays. Then all that was needed
Henry Wines .
2417 on their fortieth wedding anniverUnfinished Business; New Business;
al, injunction.
o form a team was a football. The
A devotional meeting will be held
Supt. of Poor - Jake Eager
2904 sary Sept. 14. Covers we'e aid for Memorial, Fowlerville Chapter; ReSamuel W. Croivin- vs John II, players wore overalls and were ns*
Chas. Itsel
2793 sixteen. Guests were present from marks by Visitors; Election oT Offi- each Sunday evening at 7:00 p. m.
ually t:nco;ich< d and h*<d few rl'>v<?
F r a n k Wilson
2640 Grass Lake, Jackson and P.'nckney. cers; Music; Adjounred ur..il 7!:30 land a social meeting the last Thurs- '. tvnonie , i i!l t o e t a. ii'<> d e e d .
day evening of each month. All the
They received many useful fjifts.Thc
The li, <i. H. Corp, v.-- Thomas and depending on muscle and, brawn to
Democrat
p. m . ; Banquet at G o'clock, Price
win their games. Now it is all chanyoung people of the community not Ethel Le ! t l " , f o r - ' i ' l o - u r e .
afternoon was spent in visiting and
50 Cents.
Gov F r a n k Murphy
243
L'.i'.i'
<
S< huchi.rd vs Russell Pal- ged. Hundreds of dollars worth of
affiliated with other young peoples
tr.lks of days long gone by. ConPlease make reservations for supL t Gov. Leo Nowicki
101
,1 q u i e t
iequipment are needed to outfit a
title.
societies are invited to any or all
gratulations and wishes for many
per tickets on or before Sept. 18
George Schroeder
164
Maranve Cirwood vs P. J. Thomp- team of nn ordinary high school, A
of these meetings.
rrore years of happy married life
with Hazel Parker.
Congress - Charles Adair
135
coach is hired and sometimes in
-oii,
partition.
closed this event.
The following officers were elected
7:30 P. M.
Andrew Transue 202
the h i r e r -"hools soverd assistants.
Chancery ("Divorce)
Virginia Baughn
Call to Orc?ev ..Pros. Ethel Blackmer President
The other candidates had no opposi- S
All player.-; must pass a doctor?; exA i r e v- Theodore Xelson.
SEPTEMBER
JURY DRAWN
Vice President
Jack Hannett
•Reports of
Committees
tion and got around 300 votes. They
amination and have a passing mark
Margaret
vs
Andrew
Plummcr.
Putnam
Florence AtT.ee Installations of
(ieraldine Vedder
Officers. ...P.orence Secretary
are
in a sufficient number of studies.
May vs Louis Wines.
Hamurg
Wray Hinckley
Treasurer
Bill
Baughn
IWughn,
P.
G.
0.,
Pinckney
State Senator
Row Thompson Unadilla
Long ar.d extensive trair)*itr and
Marjerie vs Karl Krujrer.
Wm. Pypcr i Presentation of Traveling Gavel
Friday
evening
'What-so-ever'
T
lature Charles Runciman Putnam
1
"(jnditioning
is necessary. Tf fact
Calvin
vs
Naow.a
.
4>rdan.
Hubert Lcdwidgc j
Class
Social
meeting
and
weiner
Esther
Campbell,
Pinckney.
utor
Martin Lavan Hamburg
[ football has become a highly specMilda vs John Schmidt,
Nellie R o l i ^ n Retiring of Flag
Ann Hornung, roast at the Swarthout cottage. The
! iaiized P-'U'iness
Ceneva v.- Kugene Corwazier.
- McKinley P a y n l T v r o n e
Mrs
Lec Oordoi(
Marshal.
hostess-Mrs. Herman Vedder. Moni : -* 5 'Register
Robert Gates Frijrhton City
Irene vs (ieo;ye Cireincr.
Elizabeth Lavnn Pictures of Holy Land ..Willis Lyonr; day evening, Sept. 1!) Frunily NightTreasurer
. . , Eleanor Ledwidga Lvjcrhton Twp
The Tov.nsend Oh! Age Penslo)
Charles vs Lu'-y Salisbury.
Clio Case Closing of Association
Presid- pot-Iuck lunch and business meeting
rain Com
Bruce Dankers Cohoctah
irioven('i;t which acquired consider
Alia vs Harry Hu^k
Molvin Brown
ent Ethel Blackmer.
in church parlors at 0:0 p. m. T h e ]
Coroners.. Ho ward Gentry, Br. Singer
able momentum two years ago arie
Clair vs Ih; Thomjesom
Pecrfield
Floyd Leonard
friends and members of the church;
Supts of Poor....Wm. Fear,Wm.Gold•hen slackened up seems to be gaii
Milton v> Muri'd Cook.
Ceona
Charles Hcrbst SHOWS WILL RUN
: r
are
invited.
en and Rudolph Meinke.
u - nov.er again according to indie
Helen vs Kenneth Kruger.
Green Oak
Xina Gage
UNTIL OCTOBER l*t
atmns. We note that Frank Fitzprer
Nora vs Captain Davr»nyc-rt.
In Putnam township a very light Handy
Anna Grovcr
We have been asked by many of
A
CORRECTION
aid -ought the endorsement of thf
Frank
Laker
vs
Mary
Madge
vote was cast, only 234 votes be- Hnrtland
Harold Armstrong the people how long the free motion ^
Tnwn.srrid Club; of Michigan
anc
In our last issue we stated that Hakcr.
ing polled. There being no contest Howell City
Hugh Brayton J picture shows given on the square
go' 1!. TM-> peeved Virgil Fitch, an
to speak of on the Democrat ticket, Howell Twp
George Hudson 1 each Saturday night, and sponsored the Molvin school in Hamburg townother liepublican candidate for govmost of the voters took Republican Iosco
Ernest Wattei*s by the business then will continue ship was closed. This was wrong as WORK STARTS ON
FACTORY BUILDING ernor who is a member of the Ludballots. There w e r r 167 Republican Mlarion
Mary Hatison We understand the last show will be it was opened last week with Miss
V . " rair .-lowed 'in the work
of dingtnn Townsend Cluh iitrte<*d star
ballots and 58 Democrat.
Oceola
S t e a m s Kimberly given about October 1st. The con- Eva Melvin as teacher.
1
bogirn ng tpe ron. 'ruction of the <y-.ws. At a Townsend :.,¾¾¾¾^ hi
Tyrone
Mrs. Lilla Schmuck tract calls for 18 shows. They did
The vote was as follows:
now J'a't' rv buiidirg on Howell St. Detroit Friday night at
Unadilla
Clair B a m u i n not start until May 14 and there
Democrat
T
r E M O C R A T COUNTY
and th" railroad Monday morning ire raid was th« speakt
H a r r y Jolly were several postponements on acGovernor
F r a n k Murphy 50 Brighton City
CONVENTION but after the ra,o -toppr-d the work a\r.<J aticmpted to climb ^ | p cm the
Wm. Adams count of rain, breakdown of- machine
Lt. Governor
Leo Nowicki 22 Brighton Twp
The Democrats
of
Livingston of mea-oring and layintr otit the rlatformf However, he was thrown
Cohoctah
Paul
Wiehwcger and other unavoidable conditions.L t Governor ...George Schroeder 26
County will hold their convention at structure' ' a r t " ! . This building is t off and ejected from the building
Archie Duncan
u
Congress
Charles Adair 15 Conway
the court house in Howel on Wed- e\p<'(Ted to he < c.^fdetefl a^d ready h:- the Townsendites. Fitzicrerald in
Deerfield
Mae
J
o
n
e
s
' The following marriage licenses
State Senator .... Ross Thompson 42
hi- speech endorsed the Townsend
nesday evening. Sept. 21 nt 8:00 p. for oner: m b y X o v . 1 . i n - J f c .
Geona
Mrs.
Inoz
Smith
were
issued
by
the
county
clerk
last
Legislature .... Charles Aunciman 41
The ..viih-ive a:-o . tnrted opening plan 100 percent. This may have just
m. The township delegates electee 1
Green
Oak
Herman
Kevereth
week:
DalLas
Houseman,
30,
PlyProsecutor
Martin Lavan 45
f
been a vote getter but we don't beSam Tomion mouth, Evelyn Smith, 21, Howell; at the primaries will elect delegate iii» f i l e .'-fr;-e( leadiag to the fac or>'
Sheriff
Irvin J . Kennedy 54 H>andy
to the state convoniton. A county which has always been closed. The lieve the ex-governor ia a big enough
Wayne Miner, 22, Fowlerville, Rose
Clerk
McKintey Payn, 88
committee will also be elected
j stumps were removed by dynamite hypocrite to go sled length for th%
F
R
E
E
DANCE,
St.
Joseph's
Hall,
Izoasurer
Eleanor Ledwidge 54
Mary Jaszewski, 22, Howell; Russell
jand the roadbed will be l e v i e d and plan if his sympathies were ftotvitk
Ray Taylor, Sec.
Howell. Friday Sept 16, Jack Dowl-
Assocs. Picnic
c
U R R E N T
O M M EN I
one
How to Have More Trivial Accidents
County O.E. S I Catholic Church
Meet at Howellt
Church.
,(,•
1 ••(
Congregational Church
t
:
ifefifter
™... Robert G*tei, 46
ing*i band.
Htyner, 32, Howell Harriett Cornell
26 0e*oU, ^ ..fr.ktiii-ju**-
1 •: • 0 '
• ••,
IE
;r
Democrat County Committe,o gravtii^d^
><s
. ^»«jl»1
. l \
/'
-' *
i&
,_^#..rw / J ; S Y H * S V , V V S k , ' , V « - . ;
/ -V
^-
1
Hie Pinckney Dispatch, Wednesday, September li9 1938
MP
Bruckmrt's Wa*him§tom Digest
What to Eat and Why
Old-Age Pension Schemes Figure
In Primaries in Several States Ce Houston Goudiss Offers Timely Advice
BUG FUMIGATING
OaaraBteed destruction to mil badbon. roacbes,
etc., inclndtn* their est*. W» bare fosaieaxed
thousands ot buildings tbioartest Michigan, Including homes, public institutions. Government
boats, eie. Write or phone—University 1-10(0.
CYMMf MS Cfc. 14B4 W M T , Defrett,
Lead to Success of Senator Pepper in Florida and Defeat
Of McAdoo in California; Delude Aged and
Infirm Voters; Fallacy of Plans Shown*
REMEDY
By WILLIAM BRUCKART
WNIT Service, National P r e w B U f „ WMhlnfton, D. O.
fie%M£weUIIZ CMTUUlEB SUCCESS
WASHINGTON. — A good many
Easterners had nearly forgotten
about Dr. Francis Townsend and his
$200-a-month pension plan until
lately they were suddenly awakened
by the far South and the far
MISCELLANEOUS
West. Sen. Claude Pepper won a
Democratic nomination to the senI t M M the ley ef U v l i
SVewee) e» 40 Tears ef" T
Aak About TKu Bttttr Wan ate in Florida largely because of
1M1 OriewwM ~
espousal of the Townsend plan and
just recently Sen. William G. McAdoo had his public career abruptly
SCHOOLS
terminated because Sheridan DownWANTED TO HE AS PBOM ALL BOYS ey, his opponent for the Democratic
from 17 to 22 who would be interested in senatorial nomination in California,
attending a Baseball School. Send dime
for details. BOX 813, DUBLIN, GA. proposed and promised some fantastic scheme of paying $30 every
Thursday to persons over SO years
TRADE SCHOOLS
of age.
MitfC MAMsTV • * TOUft MOMS TOWN N M
In addition to these results, there
WUWL P i m t l e j i w T n . - Wladow Cards
and Sums always In demand- Basil/ learned. Mo have been 12 or 15 candidates for
artistic ablUty reqalred. IndiTidusl Instruction
Low tuition Basy paymenu. KBHS Materials the nomination to the house of representatives who have won in priWrit,. W.
Devest, wUea. maries by saying the Townsend
plan or the $30-every-Thursday or
SOILLESS GARDENING some other impossible and illogical
and unsound pension plan would be
Growfreshvegetables, flowers put through congress. I cannot dethis winter in your home by using the new soilless,
chemical process. A maslng results. Formula and scribe them all; they are obviously
chemicalstt.6(1.Konnula alone SI with directions. variations of the Townsend plan,
Cbllril QareMtog U, IMS rtsostcatffldf..Detroit, Ilea.
and none of them will work any
more than the Townsend bubble will
and each has been used to
Easy-to-Make Design work,
delude aged and infirm voters
That Is Exclusive whose ballots were needed to swing
an election.
It is tragic that such things have
happened, and are happening today. The fact cannot be ignored,
however, because the condition is
with us. The one thing to do, then,
I believe, is to attempt to disillusion
those folks who have swallowed the
slick words of those campaigners or
those racketeers who are preying
upon the faith of folks who, through
no fault of their own, do not have
access to information that shows
these schemes to be rainbows. And,
as far as history records, nobody on
earth ever has found the end of the
rainbow where the pot of gold is
reputed to be.
I am not concerned about the public career of Mr. McAdoo who has
been in public service off and on
since 1913. He never impressed me
as being any great shakes of a
statesman. As secretary of the
treasury, he did the job probably
about as well as the average political
appointee. I never have had the
aJXHty^oT^^
pleasure
of meeting Mr. Downey.
Pattern 6118
So I can't comment. Senator PepYou'll never miss the time spent per's, senate record is a great deal
in crocheting this handsome like many another senator's record,
spread for it's made the easy way and probably will continue to be just
—one medallion at a time in your so-so. In other words, here were
leisure moments! See how effec- two average senators—one winning
tively the pinwheels are set off. with the aid of the promises about
Pattern 6118 contains instructions the Townsend plan and the other
for making the medallions; an il- losing because he stayed away
lustration of them and of stitches; from such promises, although he
photograph of medallions; mate- was thrice blessed by the President
rials needed.
of the United States. That situation,
To obtain this pattern, send 15 along with some letters accusing me
cents in stamps or coins (coins of giving the Townsend plan a "sipreferred) to The Sewing Circle, I lent treatment" in these columns,
Household Arts Dept., 259 W. 14th ' seems to warrant a new analysis of
the conditions that now confront the
St., New York City.
country.
It Appears Townsend ism
Is Not Dead After All
As I said there is evidence that
Townsendism is not dead at all. It
has formed the basis of a dozen new
panaceas, of which the $30-everyThursday
is but an example. It
Here's good advice tor a woman durin* her
happened that this scheme was proehansa (usually from 3S to 52), #ho lears
she'U lose her appeal to men, who worries
posed in California which, particuabout hot flashes, loss of pep, diaay spells,
larly in its southern sections, has a
upset nerves and moody speua.
. Get mors fresh air, 8 in. sleep aad if you
vast population of aged people who
need a food general system tonic take Lydia
have gone there to enjoy the famous
E. PiakhanVa Vegetable Compound, made
espeeioU* /or wvme*. It helps Nature bufld
climate
and have the health that it
up physical resistance, thus helps giv* more
gives
them.
Old people are miliTiyaefty to enjoy life and assist ealmhii
jittery nerrea and disturbing symptomethat
tantly behind these schemes. That
often accompany efaanfn of life. WELL
is one of the reasons why Mr. DownWORTH TRYING!
ey was able to boast more than a
million signatures to the petition
Be It Right
that made the question an issue in
Whatsoever thy hand findeth to California. And "Florida, too, with
do, do it with thy might.
a fioe winter climate, is a fertile
field for the racketeers who promote such ridiculous programs. It
is a harsh thing to blame the
strength of these movements, all of
which crop up during depression
times, upon elderly people, it is
nevertheless the cold fact that they
Don't Neglect Them!
Nature waste*!IttaJrfdW to do »
are the type among whom such
mar-vetoes Job. Their task • to keep the
schemes
are promoted, and because
flowtat blood stream free of an ascese of
toxie imparities. The set ef Krtag—-lift
they have votes, the candidate for
ittHf—is constantly prododag waste
office stoops to the level of adding
matter the kidneys must remove from
the Mood if toed health Is to endure.
further to hopes that never can be
When the kidneys iafl to function as
fulfilled in that manner.
Nature intended, there to retention el
waste that may cause body^rUte disTo show how silly the scheme of
tress. One may suffer nsffinc ba«kaeha,
$30-every-Thursday is as a campersistent headache, attacks of diastema,
retting up nights, swetlinf, pomnem
paign issue for Mr. Downey—just
under the eyes-feel tired, narrow* all
as an example—he is a candidate
worn outFrequent, scanty or burnlni
for
the United States senate. The
ttay.be further evidence of
pension dream he has advocated is
bladder disturbance.
. The recognised and proper treatment
te a diuretle medicine to help the kidneys planned as part of the welfare program of the state of California. How
rid of excess poisonous body waste,
K
L > I W s ftils/They have had more
Mr. Downey can'do anything about
than forty years of public approval. Are
it as a member of the United States
endorsed the eottotry over. Inst* ea
lb**'*. Sold at afl drat r —
senate, I can not understand, and I
seriously doubt that Mr. Downey
can explain it.
Nor will the plan work if made
into law without bankrupting the
state of California. I doubt that it
WNV-O
will work anyway, but assuming
that it may work, the state will be
assuming a burden that will cost
it so much money that the California books will be so far in the
red -as to cause them to appear
I always romeajbes that ota splotched with blood* This idea of.
jts ceifflot afford to adver placing "stamps'' on each warrant
an soon soverpe
each week, go that an actual $1.04
people of the
!•
For Liver-Bile tils, Gall Bladder. Gall Stone
Pains, indigestion, Gas Bloating. Headaches.
Try U when all else (alia Users are boosters.
Consult »onr favorite dragtist today or write
SAIL* KUMS, 1410 Iwlli^—i, Devest,
VIAVI
r*
'»
mi
How Women
in Their 40's
Can Attract Men -
£&'.
i~ t
Sentinels
of Health
•^
DOANS PILLS
[Advertised
[BARGAINS
has been affixed by cash payment in
a year will stop the transfer of them
very shortly. Few storekeepers,
for example, will accept them beyond the necessities of their tax
payments to the state of California;
it is certain also that those who continue to accept them would not pay
the face value, and the possessor
would be forced into paying higher
prices for the things that he buys.
That is, the possessor would be buying 50 cents worth of sugar and probably would be handing over a dollar
warrant for it. All of this is the
result of a lack of confidence among
the people in any form of exchange
except the currency that is backed
and guaranteed by the United
States, as has been shown so many
times before.
Downey Plan Would
Make
Trouble for New Dealers
Then, I believe I foresee some
other trouble respecting such warrants as Mr. Downey's scheme proposes; not that I think his plan is
worse than any others but it serves
as an illustration. It is proposed
that (he possessor put a two-cent
state stamp on the warrant for each
week in his possession, or 52 such
stamps in a year. Well, I imagine
that the warrants would be in the
hands of many persons who had no
cash at all—not a cent. Immediately, there would be a cry go up to
have the state supply the stamps
free, and it is quite certain that
there would be some politicians dishonorable enough to campaign for
office on that issue.
Now, assume that Mr. Downey
comes to the senate; assume that
he is elected over his Republican
opponent in November. I seem to
scent some added trouble for President Roosevelt and his New Deal
friends who have been promising
too many things and too much of
them. Of course, many persons believe that Mr. Roosevelt's methods
to date have encouraged all kinds of
quackeries because he has talked
at length of humanitarianism. He
has aroused the minds of elderly
persons who are suffering under
conditions not of their own making.
He has likewise aroused a lot of
flabby brained individuals among
the younger people who live on illusions. It is made to appear that
congressional leaders, seeking to
follow presidential policies, are going to be confronted with frequent
bulges for national pensions of a
kind that no nation can bear.
The number and type of these
panaceas ebbs and flows with the
economic tide. When business is
good r .d there is plenty of work,
when storekeepers are able to sell
and people are able to buy, we hear
little or nothing of the dream-world
children of the Townsends and the
Downeys and the others. When
there are "hard times" and there
are thousands upon thousands without work and food and clothes, those
suffering minds become easy prey
to the silver tongue.
Pursuing the thought a bit further,
it then becomes possible for a movement which demands not $30 every
Thursday for persons over 50, but
one demanding $40 or $50 every Friday or $60 every Saturday. The
amounts can be pushed up and up
and the fervor of the suffering under this illusion grows greater and
greater. And always, such movements provide the breeding ground
for other racketeers who want to
promote dissension and dissatisfaction. Always, too, there will be political champions for the "cause"
whatever it may be, because there
is something, some halo, about public office that will lead men into the
strangest views.
President Cannot Dodge
Some of
Responsibility
Mr. Roosevelt has said with emphasis several times that none of
these things will work. He believes
they should not be propagated and
spread, because he recognizes how
easily miserable humanity can be
lead off at a tangent. It is a type
of hysteria, an emotion. The President, however, must not dodge responsibility for a part of it. As I
said above, his methods have been
conducive to hysteria of several
kinds. These panaceas that threaten again to cause grief for his administration are but an outgrowth of
the numerous plans that have been
given birth by various persons in
official position.. True, they have
been fed by the dregs of hard times,
but they had their encouragement
first from illogical phases of the
New Deal.
Truer words were never spoken
than President Roosevelt uttered at
Pittsburgh, Pa., in his 1932 campaign when he said: "Any government, like any family, can for a
year spend a little more than it
earns, but you and I know that a
continuation of the habit means the
poor house." Adoption of any of the
pension schemes, whatever their
variation from the Townsend plan
may be, means the poor house because there can not be enough taxes
levied or collected to meet the need.
On Avoiding the Menace of
Tooth Decay
By C. HOUSTON GOUDISS
NE of the most serious indictments against our presentday civilization is its failure to preserve the teeth of men,
women and children. Countless examinations in all parts of
the country reveal that practically 100 per cent of the adult
population is afflicted with some form of oral disease. And
O
surveys of the physical condition
of school pupils in different localities and under various circumstances disclose that tooth decay affects between 90 and 97 per
cent of our school children.
Remarkable and widely heralded advances have been made in
our knowledge of
how to control and
prevent many dangerous and debilitating
diseases.
f et we appear to
be eomplaeent in
the faee of the fact
that the majority
of OUT population Is
handicapped by decayed teeth!
Nor does the
mere statement of
the case convey any idea of the
seriousness of the situation. For
it is unfortunate that diseased
teeth and dental infections which
may result from unchecked decay, seldom incapacitate the sufferer. Thus the victim does not
become sufficiently alarmed to
take the steps necessary to arrest
the progress of the diseased condition.
Yet a single decayed tooth
might be compared to a poison
factory, distributing its noxious
products to every part of the body,
and tooth decay may be indirectly
responsible for rheumatic ail'
ments. neuritis, dyspepsia or duodenal ulcers. It may be a contributing cause of heart trouble.
that this vitamin is essential to
the dentine, enamel, cementum
and the bone of the jaw. And
there are on record remarkable
experiments which demonstrate
that dental decay and gum disorders are both prevented and arrested when extra amounts of
foods containing vitamin C are included in a well-balanced diet
Vitamin C is beat obtained from
the citrus fruits, tomatoes and
raw leafy vegetables such as cabbage.
Vitamin O which we get from
the ami, from fish-liver oils sad
concentrates, and from irradiated
foods and these ferttted with vitamin O concentrate, la necessary
for the proper utilization of the
calcium and phosphorus, which
must be generously supplied if the
teeth are to develop properly.
importance of Dental Hygiene
Thus a carefully calculated diet,
beginning before birth and continuing throughout life, is necessary to build teeth that are structurally sound. But even the most
perfect teeth require constant
care to maintain their soundness.
Thorough brushing is necessary
after every meal to remove all
particles of food which remain between the crevices and cling near
the necks of the teeth. If not removed, this debris may ferment,
giving rise to unpleasant odors
and creating acids which may at*
tack the tooth enamel.
It is important, however, that
the brushing be done correctly,
away from the gums and with a
slight rolling stroke, so that the
bristles can penetrate between the
teeth. Never use a horizontal
stroke nor brush toward the gums.
This may irritate the tender tis-
Possibilities of Prevention
Yet there is little or no excuse
for the appalling amount of dental
decay that afflicts the American
people. For in recent years a vast
amount of laboratory and clinical
research has been undertaken in
this field and there is Impressive
evidence that dental caries, or decay, may be completely controlled
by dietary means. Then, too. our
understanding of correct dental
hygiene has advanced tremendously, and scientifically designed
tooth brushes and skillfully compounded dentifrices are available
in every town and hamlet throughout the country.
SwHUt) end NoiiSejiiM
' —A—
Mr. Jones (dictating letter):
"Sir, my typist being a lady,
cannot take down what 1 think
of yon; I, bain* a gentleman,
cannot eves think it, bat you.
being neither, can easily guea.<
my thoughts." '
The igare a mannequin earns
depends npon the figure.
The Tramp—It ain't that I'm
afraid to work, lady, hat there
ain't maeJa dohV to my line . . .
Tm a window-box weeder.
'There ain't say harm la a
loaf onee is awhile," said Uncle Eben. "If dar was, Nature
wouldn't waste so much time
tarnia' eat sunshiny days aad
*»
ftshia'
sues and may also force food par*
tides under the gums at the necks
of the teeth.
A Good Dentifrice Essential
The selection of a dentifrice is
most important because an agree*
able dentifrice encourages thorough brushing—an efficient dentifrice helps to float away minute
bits of food not reached by the
toothbrush.
It is also advisable to use a
paste or powder which helps to
restore luster to teeth which have
been surface-stained by foods and
beverages.
The use of an antiseptic mouthwash, at least once daily, especially before retiring, is commendable as it leaves the mouth
fresh and clean.
It is also important to give the
teeth regular systematic cleansing, and to see your dentist periodically for a careful checkup.
Questions Answered
Mrs. L. B. R.—Yes, lettuce and
corn both contain copper, and so
does beef liver. Copper is a mineral that is needed for the proper
utilization of iron.
Mrs. F. L. S.—Children require,
about one and one-half times as
much phosphorus as is necessary
for a full grown man. That is
why they must eat generously of
whole grain cereals, eggs, dried
legumes, leafy vegetables, milk
and cheese.
e WNU—C. Houston Ooudlas—11
to
HOW S E W •"sSff™
Oiet and Dental Disease
Various investigators have advocated different dietary formulas
for the control of dental decay.
There is a lack of agreement
among them as to which single
element is the most important in
constructing a diet to prevent
caries.
But outstanding authorities hold
that each of the five following dietary factors has a controlling influence: vitamins A, C and D; an
adequate supply, in the correct
proportions, of the minerals, calcium and phosphorus; an excess
of alkaline or base-forming foods
over acid-forming foods; and a
generous allowance of raw foods,
with emphasis on those that leave
an alkaline-ash.
Vitamin A and Tooth Structure
Notable research has demonstrated that vitamin A is a definite
factor in controlling tooth development. The development of the
enamel is governed by a complex
structure which begins to deteriorate as soon as vitamin A is withheld. When experimental animals
are placed on a diet lacking in
this vitamin, their teeth become
brittle, chalky and white. This is
due to the loss of the enamel, with
its orange colored pigment, and
the exposure of the dentine.
An English authority also claims
that vitamin A is necessary to
help prevent diseases of the gums.
Inasmuch as vitamin A likewise
has many other important functions to perform in the body, every hbmemaker should see to it
that her meals contain an abundance of milk and other dairy
products* and the green, leafy and
yellow vegetables which are a
good source of this vitamin.
mail is always stimuO PENING
lating—especially so when one
comes upon a letter like this:
"Dear Mrs. Spears—If you could
step into my house you would see
in every room ideas I have gotten
from your Book 1—SEWING, for
the Home Decorator. Your drawings are so easy to follow that 1
have made slipcovers and even reupholstered a wing chair. I never
knew there were so many good
ideas for curtains and bedspreads.
"All my friends admire those I
have made. I am now planning
to make some new sheets and pillow cases. Can you suggest some
kind of trimming? Sincerely,T.S."
I wonder if "T. S.M has my Sewing Book 2, Embroidery, Gifts
and Novelties? On Page 14 of that
book is a suggestion that just
about fills her requirements, and
for those of you who are keeping
scrap* books of these sewing leasons as they appear in the paper,
here is an idea for contrasting facings for sheets and pillow cases.
The diagram shows each step in
the making of the colored facings.
Baseball li Smart
Baseball in Japan is not only
popular, but very smart. The
speculators are waited upon hand
and foot. Baseball season over
there begins in September and
comes to a close about the first
of the new year Japanese fans
Vitamin C and Tooth Heafth
go
to the games in family groups.
Vitamin C is closely associated
with the health of both teeth and with the dowager lady of the famgums. There is strong evidence ily in the place of honor.
Make your own cardboard pattern
for the scallops by drawing part
way around a small plate or saucer. Use this pattern to mark and
cut the scallops. After the scallops are cut, turn the raw edge
over the cardboard pattern with
a warm iron as shown.
With the help of Mrs. Spears'
Book 1-SEWING, for the Home
Decorator, you can make many of
the things you have been wanting
for the house. Book 2—Embroidery and Gifts is full of ideas for
ways to use your spare time in
making things for yourself or to
sell. Books are 25 cents each. If
you order both books, crazypatch
quilt leaflet illustrating 36 authentic stitches is included free. Address: Mrs. Spears, 210 S. Desplaines St., Chicago, 111.
•Your Town
•Your Store*
uurosnunnniryussraosBnwnaiBnocDea
surrounding the town* The town stores
are there for the acowwmonatkwi aad to
serve the people of our farm boaea. The
merchants who advertise "specials" i
competition la bom Quality and prices.
IRIUM Won Us!" Say Millions
a?*'
^^•iTfy
14&
of Pepsodent Powder Users
?m,
Apsodtftf alont) or* 0*7 tooth powders
contains remarkable /rfam/*
**-**'
&
stirrers donl lie II
I So for the tree facts
bto
effscthraoaws of
the
1
contasstac IfSttflB,
Iriptni
•seimhr/
".._._..
tyowtswtheloMiy...tonight.
ewTfechtoPwpsoaemfowdeMJto
hragtJarly...«twieeaday. Afttt assort
dsn^ajaia •nmiusjma frtyfcjasmje.
IBC* aspect e~leal tsfiptvVwSSwntr»• »WSf
«>peodent l a i ^
_.__,_
' SAPS s ns ewtico ca teethf «•<
isOstt»sUCH,MOOJm?l sfcyisdwt
•
-
#
•
•;^
• Western Newspaper Union.
e.'rf.r.*
?-*&
A•
v'
&
'-*>'..<il'!$ri:RBJ
BsvaasleeBaBaalfl
<::
The Pinckney Pitffrtch Wednesday, September 14 193d
ar=
NOTES cf 25 YEAB3 AGO,
Wrecker Service
We are prepared at alt hours to give towing and
road service. Call us when you have trouble on the
road and your troubles will be ours.
YAbYfe
INDING
We have a valve grinding machine and c*n put your
valves infirstclass shapeJIring in the car and let us
overhaul it
WELDING
Charles Clark
In this issue ia a long letter from
Charels L. Grimes who is supt of J
the schools of Gillette, Wyoming*
Born to Mi. and Mrs. Fred Wylie
on Sept. 13, a son
|
Liam Ledwidge won third money,
at Ithaca with his tors* last week J
S. G. Teeple & Son and George»
Van Horn loaded a car load of fine;
wool rams for shipment to Texas
last week
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Gardner on Sept. 10, a son
George Moross of Detroit is the
new manager of the Pinckney Hotel.
He will serve chicken dinners on
Sunday.
E J. Briggs will move to Flint and
will sell his household goods Sept.
20th. R Clinton, auctioneer.
The school girls met at the home
of Grace ICampbell Saturday and
formed a sewing club.
They are agitating an electric
\ line out Grand River to Lansing via
Brighton Howell and Fowlerville.
NOTES of SO TEAKS AGOi
A, A. A. Service Station
School will commence next Monday,
Dick Baker is doingj carpenter
work in Ann Arbor.
Eugene Campbell returned home
from Kansas last Wednesday.
Dave Bennett is painting Prof.4
•Sprout's house at Anderson.
Gus Smith has returned from Ypsilanti where he has been working
en a blacksmith shop.
Miss Franc Burch is teaching near
Brighton.
There will be a dance at the home
rf William Holloway tonight.
H. Wirt Newkirk is now publisher
jf the Luther Enterprise,
LOCAL
JT / LONG DISrANCK
Last Saturday when Nelt Reason
was
threshing for James Riley the
WEEKLY TRIPS MA'j>E TO DETROP
itraw stack caught fire from sparks
ind burned down.
STOCK—GRMN—CREAM
ODAY, m o d e r n lij:lit t a omlitionin<: a m i the new S r i e n c e o f
At the wrestling match at the skatSeeing d e m a n d the right size lamp in lhe right socket. T h e r e
Pioduce/of All Kinds
ing rink Saturday night, Bobby Reaves of Mt. Pleasant threw Pete O'
is a correct size b u l b and a proper degree of light for every seeing
Jonnor of Grand Rapids.
task. T h a t is why it is important to have a selection of lamps on
The Democrats of Pinckney will
y o u r shelf . . . so that y o u may replace the burned-out b u l b s i n
iave a mass meeting and pole raisyour floor and table lamp* — or in your ceiling f i x t u r e s — w i t h
ing on Sept 18. O. F Barnes of
J
i ontiac, candidate for congress will
another b u l b ot the correct size. (The Detroit Edi-on C o m p a n y
oe the speaker.
e x c h a n g e s smaller bulbs for larger — or viee v e r s a — i n all the
A party was given at the Monitor
standard b o u s e h o l d sizes, without extra charge. W h e n y o u bring
douse last Tuesday evening in honor
k>f Mabel Mann who returns to her4
in y o u r b u r n e d - o u t lamp b u l b s , a^k. to >ce the light conditioning
I
school at Summerville. Messrs Floyd
chart w h i c h specifies correct lamp size.-.)
Jiackson and Ben Isham were the
Joor managers. 25 couple were in
fa* A n I . E . S . reflector-type lamp for a child'* *lud\ <,V-,\ requires
'FIXTURES
x'~\
SUPPLIES
attendance. Music for the dance was
a 1 0 0 - o r 150-watt lamp for proper illumination. A good reading
ELECTRICAL WlRUNtl AND REPAIRING
| .urnished by Wm. Hoff, M. C. Pearlight usually also needs this size bulb. For elo*e visual tasks such
RFASONAB1 E PRICES
son and Ira Cook.
Peter Conway, Lewis Coste and
as sewing, reading fine print, etc., you may require a 200-watt lamp
ESTIMATES CHEERFULLY GIVEN
Jan Wright are serving on the jury.
b u l b or larger. Our H o m e Lighting Advisors will be glad to h e l p
ALL WORK G4AVRANTEED
Pinckkey played Chelsea in a base
y o u choose the right lamp for the right socket in every room of
jail game Thursday. With the score
17 to 18 in favor of Chelsea.a Pinck• v o u r h o u s e . Call your Detroit Kdi-on office.
ley batter hit a home run. Chelsea
Phone 19F12
Electrical Con* actor
Pinckney
jlaimed it was a foul and refused
to go on with the game. A riot fol.owed and Pinckney won a forfeit.
^ XU!1 !'
J U '1 I ^
The Fowlerville Independent wil
Oihco PboftaA.No. 7 Res. Phona No.7 is a Democrat sheet hereafter.
J. T. Earn en is packing and shipping apples at Anderson.
RAY M DUFFY M. D.
S. G. Topping had a valuable
Ptncknsy, Michigan
Buck banding opratiotus arc now
norse gored by a bull belonging to ;n progress in the game sancUi;;n(•-.
Offic* Hoim—
r
OSTEOPATHIC
John Dyer of Plainfield one day Anyone shooting one of these is K - • FOWLERVILLE AMERICAN LEGION POST
2:00 to 4:00 P. M.
last week.
PI f Y9IC.AN AND SURGEON
7r00 to 9:00 P. M*
quested to notify the dept. as thii
utr|
Gar trml Practkr a»e* O V
ci
M E. Kuhn is teaching in Plain- provides important data.
field this year.
0Pf/H.un
V -,
There are 26 deer census now un1 to ft P. Af. and 7 to 9 P. MT
DR. a R. McCLUSKEY
lerway, 14 above the straits and
Mot t4»gi » r Appolnfcn«nf
12
below. 120 CCC boys are countDENTIST
510 f t . Maid S t Piockn.r, Mich
ing the deer. They arc stationed al112¼ N. Michigan
mg runways and the deer driven
s*
*&
Phones
out
of cover and counted as they
Office, 220
Res. 123J
10 down the runways.
I
C. M. TH1BAULT
Evening a by appointment
Howell, Michigan
-• fflP*ni*r
and
Builder
A few of the smaller stale parks
COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS
Pff
Hi-Und
Lake
A-ill close this week. The others wii:
v
Sept. 12, 1938
oe open until Sept. 30.
Council convened with following
AND EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT AT 8:00 P. M.
JAY P. SWEENEY
jPln. ;kaay
^ Mich., R2
Boosted by the large number oi nembers present: Pres. Kennedy,
,
- Attorney at Law
«>il and gas drilling permits issued Trustees, Lavey, G. Dinkel, Stanley
CHOICE OF PRIZES—EVERYBODY WELCOME
in August the seasons total is now Dinkel Van Blaricum and Harris
Howell, Mtchiga*
ION
./itnin 117 of last years all time high Absent, Ed Parker.
«i NORMAN REA$
mark of 1000 permits. The
state
Minutes of last meeting read and
5c A GAME - AT LEGION HALL — 5c A GAME
REAL ESTATE BROKER
shares in the development as it hat approved.
Farm r*9td«ntial jToparty and
leased 56,455 acres of state lands
WEEK AND MONTHLY SPECIAL PRIZES
PERCY ELLIS
Following bills presented:
La** i'VonUw a gpsciaity. 1
AI,O Hnva City Property to
/or drilling.
^ * * & * % * Y . Bert VanBlaricum, cutting brush
AUCTIONEER;
S3.20
A 27 pound muskellunge taken
Farm Sajat a Specialty
out of Lake Charlevioux this s u m - J B l a n c h Martin.finishing tax rclLo.OO
Phone Pinckney 19-Fll
mer is believed to be the record fori p. w Curlett, printing
3.25
n
the season,
- 1 ^ **• ^ ' ^ » Dynamite supplies and
12 forest fire^ in district six, Luce}
labor,
16.17
MARTIN J. LAV AN
Schoolcraft, Mackinac and Chippewa
Motion by VanBlaricum supported
i ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR
counties
burned
433
acres
the
last
by
G. Dinkel to pay bills.
Attorney at Law
week in August.
Motion by Harris supported by
}#}»»*• 19F12 P1acka«y, Mich.
Pnona 13
Brighton
The first wild life regulations we- Lavey to extend tax collecting date
re framed by the West India Co., until Nov. 1st, 1938. Mation carried.
in 1629 for the colonists in the New
Motion by Lavey supported by
GUS R1SSMAN
Harris to oil and repair the road
DON W. VANW1NKLE I Netherlands.
r
To date only 7,000 acres have be- for one block north of the school
PLUMBING and HEATING
Attornay at Law
Will b a l l a d to fit* sstimatat
en burned over by forest fires. This house*
OnlM OVOT
1
W v tW JoUewta* iastaJktiaast
ia about one half of last years total.
Motion carried
First
Stats
Ssttafs Baak
\
Lime stone quarries near Alpena
How.ll, Midbgaa
4L
and Rogers City are full of fossil
Mrs. S. J. Colack of White .Sul*5fttM» ar hot «ir basting
phur Springs, West Virginia . icoral.
*Jba*tri« pomps
*Wftitt lyiutui
Violations of the fishing laws were j spending a couple 61 weeks with Mi
v t t barosrt
reduced considerably this year by I ind Mrs. T J. Latson
LEF. LAVEY
•vat t p f«*rs •»p«rUow
the inland patrol fleet consisting of I Mr. and Mrs. T. J Latson hv
v<»NERAL
INSURANCE
• I I X Graw! R i w . now«U
as week end guests, Mr. and Mrs.
A
25 *mail beats.
FfcoM M»F3
n p M Hpwtll tlO
F. RoeHurting
art i Max
I
muTjinjp and
ana trapping
trapping licenses
nevoid arv
"*•* Robinson
«*w*««vw of
w« Plymouth,
nyuwu
STOCK
POOD
Co-ops. Chop, and larousd Feed for Sale
MT CONDITIONING
Hauling Trucking
UF
T
W# H# MEYER •
Electrical 'Contracting
C. Jack Sh&Jdon
ITHE OE
>
•
)N (. Y"
#
NY
The Pinckney Sanitarium'
Dr. H. GD Porter
KENO-BINGO
PARTIES
Notes
Fail Opening Sat,
Sept. 1 7
I
RE-ELECT
Claude Sheldon
Irvin J.
Kennedy
Sheriff:
If"
Ten*
>v-r
V.
***..
&.
A
»«^i»*
^-Jj^i^
m
w^
^0$&rt
nr^Y^'Ti i w- v • -v ^
^ E f i ! " f f f « KMK>
Hi11!1
^
WI
BF I ' l l 1 * m » l
^ ^ w c g i w r * w w ^ ^ W T M i a « m — i i — ^ - • •
•••'-•
"'
'•••
""•>'••'- • ' • : , .
Pinckney Dispatch Wedn x>. , September 14 1938
sc
Howell Theatre
Hamburg
\
Thursday, F r i d a r , S«pt. 15, 16
THE MILLION VOLT STORY O F AMERICA'S ACE
"RACKFT BUSTERS"
with
HUMPHREY BOGART, GEORGE BRENT, ALLEN J E N K I N S
GLORIA DICKSON, W A L T E R A B E L
Mu*ic*l
Charlie McCarthy Comedy
Novelty
News
Saturday, S e p t 17
2 FEATURES 2
Mat. 2 P. M 10c & 20c
"Gangs of New York""Always Goodbye" j
with
with
witlt
with
CHARLES BICKFORD
ANN DVORAK
ALAN BAXTER
WYN.NE GIBSON
BARBARA STANW1CK
H E R B E R T MARSHALL
IAN HUNTER, CAESAR ROMERO
B1NNIE BARNES, JOHN RUSSELL
Popeye Cartoon v
Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Sop.t 18, 19, 20
Mat. 2 P. M. Con.
BOY, O H ! BOY O H !
"BOY MEETS GIRL"
With
J A M E S CAGNEY, PAT O'BRIEN, MARIE WILSON,
RALPH BELLAMY, FRANK McHUGH, DICK FORAN
News
Cartoon
Musical
Comedy
FAMILY NIGHT
Wednesday, Sept. 21 ONE DAY ONLY
ALL ADULTS 15c
2 FEATURES 2
"Bulldog Drummond
in Africa"
with
JOHN HOWARD, HEATHER ANGEL
H. B. VARNER, REGINALD DENNY
'Danger on the
Air'
with
DONALD WOODS
NAN GREY
J E D PROUTY
Hamburg
hive, No. 392,
Lady
Maccabees met in regular session at
the IOOF Hall Tuesday afternoon,
with the commander, Mrs. Gladys
Lee presiding. A guest was Mrs. M.
Kleine of Lansing, district deputy.
Wednesday, October 12 was set
as the date of the county convention
which will be held a t I O O F Hall in |
Hamburg with a pot-luck dinner at
noon. It was voted to invite Whitmore Lake hive as guests. The Minnie L Adams guards No. 162 of the
Lansing hive will be present and j
stage a drill. Mrs. Harriet William-J
son of Grand Rapids, assistant supreme commander to be invited as the
speaker of the day. The following
committee's were appointed: Entertainment, Mrc. Nellie E. Haight, Mrs
Minnie Buckaleu and Mrs. Mfary A.
Stephanon; decorating, Mrs Nellie
J. Pearson, Mrs. Ida Knapp and
Mrs. Emily Blades; work, Mrs. Jennie 7 e r m a n , Mrs. Mary Moore and
Mrs Jennie Shannon*
Tuesday, September 27, many of
the members plan to motor to Alma
to visit the Maccabee Old
Ladies
Home.
The next meeting will be held at
the homo of Mrs. Mary Downing at
Strawberry Lake Thursday, September 22, instead of the regular date,
Tuesday, September 20. It will be a
birthday meeting honoring
those
members whose birthdays a r e in the
months of July, August and September, with pot-luck dinner at 12:30
. m. Remarks were made by Mrs. U
Cleinc.
'
H
f
^ S i V ^
^•w
Stoves
Let's Look
Ranges
at the
RECORD
You
about
can end all argument
the payment or
payment of
non-
bills simply
)! Get your heating plant ready for water
by
producing your canceled checks
Stove Pipe, Furnace
Pipe, Eibows, Mats,
Zincs, Etc.
Each endorsement is a receipt
your proof of p a y m e n t
This feature of checks alone
can save you much
inconven-
ience, and possibly prevent
a
of your proof of payment .
•7«V 3 •
Sound
financial
manage-
& Everything Pertaining t#'
Stoves
ment calls for a checking account. We invite you to
start
one today.
5
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
i : •* ••
i.X HOWELL
Member
Federal
Deposit
surance Corporat/.on. AH
InDe-
posits Insured up to $5,000 for
each Depositcr.
For good of the order Mrs. Lucilc i _
Hr.ggadoro and Mrs. Jennie F e r m a n j ^
served light refreshments. Officiall^
i-por'i.; were given by Mrs. Emily
I
Kuchar and Mrs. Ferman.
-¾¾^ I M F ^
Mrs. Hannes Musch hacLthe misfortune to fall in the barn, breaking her left arm just above the el. $ mB&Hki.
how and tearing the ligaments in her
The Class is meeting this afterleft shoulder loose
The WMS will meet Wednesdby noon with Mrs. Edith Peck on Main
.Mrs. Carol Lisle and daughter.Miss
St. A large attendance has been hopw)*.~ Mrs. Marion Kinsey.
Carol Ella of Tulsa, Oklahoma, have
The Ladies Guild met last Wed- ed for.
Once more wc arc reminding you bo-.'n spending 10 days as house gunc . iy for supper with Mrs. Mary
[of the Hallelujah Convention of the ests of Mrs. Nellie J. Pearson In
la..»or.
Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Gauss were Michigan* Uaraca-Philathca Union, company with Mrs. Pearson they spdinner guests Sunday of her daugh- The Detroit City Union is your host, | out a day with Mrs. Lisle's aunt, Mrs
ter, Mrs. Dan LunUs and Mr. Lantis and our members here arc urged l o l C c o r g e Conrad at Ypsilanti and visattend. Send your registration (25) 1 Hcd many beauty spots in the state,
of Stock budge.
• Mrs. John
Kramer. KegMr. and Mrs. Emil J. Kuchar had
Mrs.
' Gladstone and Mrs. A now
II
<Tii'"•.•!, 7720 La Due Ave., Det-', * Labor Day guests. Mr. and Mrs.
J. lloln
attended Mrs. Aldrich
O. Hahn and two children, Wm. and
o'.
...hgan.
funeral . i ansing Thursday,
The
pastor • -aunourieed
'Family Miss. Phillis and Mr. and Mrs. C.
Mrs. Henry Lilly white is
under
Night' for next week Monday night, Pepper of Ann Arbor
the doctor's care again
Rev. and Mrs. Ryan motored t o ! September 9. at (5:30 with potluck . Miss Petty Ann Kuchar went to
Ann
Arbor last week to visit Mis
Flint Thursday on business. Mrs. F supper. Members and friends of t h e '
J'hill
is
Hahn.
Dutton accompanied them and was church cordially invited
Mrs. Judson Warner of Bonav,!
For September IX, the lesson suba dinner guest of her mother, Mrs
Mont
Mrs
Milli(; T
^ c k of Brighton
N V a i n w r i g h t . All returned to the ! ject will be J o n a t h a n : Courageous j a m l - >M r s < Marion for the Aid Supper at j Friendship, 1 Samuel 20:4-17.
I
Claude Taylor of Green
V
Oak
spent
Friday as guests of Mrs.
Philatheas
and
others
will
be
inthe Harry Maycocks.
lda K n a
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Jacobs were terested in the announcement over i", . , _ . _P P ' Mrs Puck remaining untd
*™W ™ght.
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Or WIBM that Kev. M. P. Hinkle will
Mrs.
Grace Pierce of Lakeland,
be speaking at the Community Hal
la Jacobs.
Fla
is
Miss Mildred King of Howell and 1 in Pinckney, on Sunday evening, t h e '
- S i t i n g her mother, Mrs L.
L
W,,liams
and
Mr and Mrs. Burr King of Marion j 25th of September.
I '
Mother, Earl K.
,Ihanis
of
Mrs.
Ada
The
Benevolence
treasurer
annj
^
ana
family
were Sunday guests
Mr, and Mrs. John Lawson of
ounces several additions to the MisVanSyckel.
California were guests of Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Richard McKinder sionary fund during the last two Mrs E. Wray Hinckoy Wednesday.
of Royal Oak and Mr. and Mrs. W. weeks, so that four dollars were senr
Schoor. in district No. 3 opened
J. Witty called on Mr. and Mrs. in to the Conference. We must still last week Tuesday with Mrs. Eva
raise over forty two dollars before
Orla Jacobs Sunday.
the end of this year, and we feel Melvin of Hamburg as teacher.
Mr .and Mrs. Carl Topping and
School in the Winans district has
sure that each will do his or her
Mr. and Mrs. E. J Kinsey attended
Mrs.
Don Swarthout of Lakeland as
part as in the past.
a beant: ; T < T.irch wedding a t Highteacher.
Everybody welcome to our Chland i \. Mi.ss Josephine Braley,
Miss Doris Smith entered the 10
urch services at the Pinckney Con-j
daughi>i i.'' !'r. Braley.
ffrade
in
Howe11
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Vogel of gregational Church, and the P h i l a t - '
High School' last
wc
ek
Lansing were Sunday guests of the heas especially invite the women to
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cohcrnus of
A- J. Holmes and Gladstone families our S. S. Class.
Detroit
and Mr. and Mrs. David
Mr and Mrs. Emery Pickell and
Miss Nellie Pickell of Unadilla were George Francisco and wife of Dex- Iter.oski and daughter, Miss Janice ,
after- of Forndale were Sunday guests of '
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. ter were in town Monday
Mrs. Nellie L Haight.
noon.
4-H CLUB LXHIBITS
Gladstone.
Mrs.
Emma
Larrabee
and
two
of
AT THE STATE FAIR
Mr. and Mrs Herbert Schoenhals
Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Lillywhite
hor
grandchildren,
Miss
fliosella
and
I
of
Detroit
called
on
Fred
Lake
ast
and Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Lillywhite
Theron Goeble of Jackson have been
This is the first year that Livingw e r e Sunday guests of Dr. and Mrs. Sunday afternoon.
vi.-iting
Mrs.
Eva
Moon
and
family.
ston
County has not made a county
Stanley Berriman of Howell.Arthur
Claude Stowe of Jackson.
Miss Norma Williams has return- livestock exhibit at the State Fair. 1
Sat Mr and Mrs. Henry Lillywhite Glatley and Mr. Sharman of Iosco '
e d home from a two weeks visit However this year wc did make a
were guests of their daughter
in were in town Monday.
j with her grandparents, Mf. and Mrs. creditable showing in garden, cann- (
Napoleon, &
and Mrs. Russell A.
I Warden Brickley and aunt, Mrs. F . ing, clothing and potatoes. The peofihaw.
\ Benedict and Mr Benedict at Ionia. ple winning a blue ribbon award in
Miss Marie Hammoll has returned the garden group are as follows:
j
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Rose attended
Harry Melnik, Pinckney, Stove AlI*
the Rose reunion at Ella
Sharpe to her home in Howell after spend l a r d
a week with her grandmother, M r s . l
' 1 ' ^ k n c y , Kiehrr.ond Bower,
Bower of
>
Parke, Jiackson Sunday
Ida Knapp and familv.
'Brighton,
Anna Lonczak,
FowlerMrs. L. Owens, Mrs. Henry Clelvillc
Miss Dorothy Ann'Dufresene h a s
' Donald Oarlock, How-ell, J a n e
Mrs. Eugene Kramm and daughment and children spent Sunday in
.
.
.
.
*
Wittwcr,
Pinckney. The red ribbon
ter, Marion, and Miss J u n e Imus Howell.
returned to her home at Dearborn
group
as
follow;-,: J. C. Donald, of
attended the Junior Kings Daughter
fr-im o two weeks visit -with Miss
F
r
a
n
k
Forten
returned
home
SunHowell, Kenneth Lamont, Pinckney,
Rally at the Howell High School on
1'lorence Meyers,
day
a
f
t
e
r
visiting
relatives
in
Chi
son
Saturday afternoon.
Mr." and Mrs. Williams Blades Barbara Kreitler, Fowlerville, J J I ii
Mrs. Conk and Mr. and Mrs. LaLyson, Wcbbcrvillc, Junior Clark, of
Mrs. Harry Lee and Mrs Clyde
verne Conk of Chelsea were Sunday had as Sunday guests, their son-in Howell Ted Drygalski, Webberville,
D u n n i n g attended a county board
law, and daughter, Mr and Mrs. D.
guests of Mr. anr Mrs. M. Conk
Helen Smith, Howell, Geraldine Wilmeeting of the Kings Daughters at
Week end guests of H E. Mynsell Brooks of Ypsilanti.
Fowlerville Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Hooker and des, Fcnton, Edward Yukas, Pinckand family were Mr. and Mrs Wayney, Thomas Perkowski, Pinckney.
Mr. and Mrs. A. J Thory who have
ne Miller and Larry of Lansing.Mr. family of Ann Arbor and Mrs. E. The white ribbon jrroup, as follows:
:
b> on spend ::g the summer in their
and Mrs. Herbert F a r t s u f f and Car- Larrabee and two grandchildren, of Clifton Geer, Brighton, Earl Hill,
Jog cabin
t Strawberry Lake have
Jackson wore also present.
olyn,
r e t u r n e d to their home in Detroit.
Mr. and Mrs. John Wiesmeyer of Brighton, Jack Haines, Pinckney,
are on the sick list.
Edward Bobby, Pinckney, Edward
Miss Viola Pettys, Mrs. Frank
Ardith Wright and Jean Hartley Ann Arbor were guests of Mr. and Drost. Pincknry, Florence Smith, of
P a i n t e r a H Mrs W. J. Van Kleek
Mrs. Hazel Fields of Detroit spent Mrs. E Wray Hincklny Thursday
yyere Howell shoppers Saturday
Miss Mary Howard of West Ham- Howell, Mary Olive Donald, Howell.
Sunday with C. H. McRori- and famThe second year canning exhibit
y Everett Lane of Pittsburgh, Pa., ily.
burg is u impil in the eleventh grade
won an award of a blue ribbon, .the
trpent a few days here this week
Mrs. Marsh is better at this writing in the Pinckney High School this third year canning a white ribbon
jyith his brother James Lane<
year.
*
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Hall of Det- and to Thora Dietrich and Margaret
Mr. and Mrs. Ira Otto of Dexter
Gieni Among
Fkw€ri^~ roit were week end guests of Mrs. Nixon who made individual exhibits
e/ere Pinckney calers Monday even- tHe •aorphophawu*, which pt» Hall's neice, Mrs. Clifford C. Van in fruit and vegetables, white ribbons
Kathryn Beckwith of Milford shing.
nem the itrftit flowtrt la the world Horn and Mr. Van Horn
to
a»
big
that
a
nun
standing
upright
Johfl Martfa and wife spent Wed- can bartl,
Mr. and Mrs. John M y e n of Cof- owed a dress made during the cloth£
m c n tt# t p p flth
ing work and was awarded ft white
heato-evening at the John Meyer
fee Mo., came Friday to visit their
Plainfield
r
ttVWWWWWWW^^Wl^^WW^^^VWWWWflArVWWti
Coming_ - ."Amazing Dr. CHtterhouse"
''The Rage of Paris',
''Holiday"
"Alexanders Ragtime Band''
"Cowboy from Brooklyn"
>4*v
' ^ > . ' X
. TEEPLE HARDWARE
"•»1
BP9WW"
999
Philathea Notes
Gregory
Lakeland
son. **** JfcWI Mfj ft»{J|<_
ribbon*
Clearance Sale of
Tires Tubes
STOCK UP NOW WHILE THEY LAST.
ATLAS and ATLAS JR., SUBJECT TO RO^ja»
HAZARD CiUAKANTEK
j j
\
475X10 ATLAS JR
450X21 ATLAS JR
550X17 ATLAS JR.
550X17 ATLAS JR]
600X16 ATLAS JR
550X17 ATLAS
550X18 ATLAS
600X16 ATLAS
|
$495 TUBE ....$1-»
$5.50
$7.30 TUBE
$1.25
$7.30 TUBE
$1.25
$8.10 TUBE $1.45.,
$9.95 TUBE.
$1.67
i
$10.00
$1.98
$10.90 TUBE.
30X5 TUBE
32X6 TU
PRICES SUBJECT TO 3% SALES
EDWARD PARKER
*
-•^-H*
.s;'.:^:*.-^^••v.
A
^ : , ^ .^.
•
••
• ••
,
••-'.
•„'
<.
^
,]WKv*.* -
'*.u*IAiNirtu'fiM«bi>HMMi«k
itsmmMWI"
WPWii,j»«»
•"
jffwiiiinia-J)W*
^
^••*SS
The Pinckney DispatcK
Wednesday, September 14 193S
CASH SPECIALS!
3*
FBI. SAT.. SEPT.ife, 17 1938
L
Butter F ;a7c
Creamery
lie
Armours Star Lay
11¾.
loe
Oleomargar
Lb.
R i c e Fancy Blue Rose
5c
10 Lb.
48c
Sugar Cloth Bag
K e l l o g g S Corn Flakes a 19c
34
i
Howell Flour
1 Lb.
Fkg.
LGE.
?KG
fL»ft<
/2
23
C o r n e d B e e f Armors
V Can
^
Chase & Sanborn
Uatea
Coffee
^
"
OXVdOl
La
19c
•
*8c Pack a z
P.€f G.White Naptha Soap §
33
23c
BABS
17c
17c
SUN-RAl
a LBS
Crackers
Gold Medal Flour «*79c
Kennedy's Gen. Store
••BsVBsVMBsMBBBiaBBVMHMBflkSk^MBMMkVi^^
Phone 23F3 ALL PRICES SUBJECT TO MICB
SALES TAX We Deliver
The Pinckney Dispatch
fiktercd at the Poctottt »
a * Pinckney, Mich, a s
deeozid Class Matter,
febscriptiou
(1.25 a year
% Advance.
j»AUL CURLETT
PUBLsitEH
"Build Up Resistance"
This is the time of the year to commence bailding
winter colds. We carry in stock the following:
resistance
McKESSON'S EMULSION OF COD LIVER OIL.
M E A D S COD LIVER OIL STANDAR1ZED for VITAMINS A A D.
Lee Lavey and Jack Dilloway took
K E L P E E ' S COD LIVER OIL with MALT EXTRACT
in the state fair last Friday.
Juson Haines is driving a bread \
H. & P. COD LIVER OIL MINT FLAVORED.
truck for a Manchester bakery.
ABBOTT'S HALIVER OIL with VIOSTEROL
June a n d Jack Caldwell, Jeanne
Clark, and Jeanette Humea were in j
UPJOHN'S SUPER D COD LIVER OIL.
Howell Saturday.
'
PARK. DAVIS C O S 1RRAD0L A.
Don Spears, Junior a n d GU.nnU
COCOA COD &. MALTINE with COD LIVER OIL.
Hai:er attended i h e state fair in
Detroit last Thursday.
UPJOHN'S SUPER D PEARLS
. •] . !
Mr:>. Anna Sumboi^ki 1V.1 at her
GQUICB'5 NAVITOL in 10 CC VIALS
farm on the Howell road one daslast week a n d injured a lej? quite
PARK DAVIS oc C O S ABDOL or A. B. D. CAPSULES
severly.
|A
NATOLA ia VIALS or CAPSULES,
Win. Kennedy and Stanley Dinktd \
HALIVER OIL with VIOSTEROL
dynamited t h e stumps a t the north
end of Mill S*. last week where the
HALIVER OIL PLAIN in VIALS or CAPSULES
street is being opened.
VIOSTEROL ia VIALS
Mrs, Maria Dinkel celebrated her
. her 82nd birthday the 8th of Sept* ember with a shower of card.s from
her friend*" and many prifts.
Mrs. Charles Clark underwent a
major operation a t the Rov.v Memorial Hospital, Stockbridtfe, !..-. Friday
.She i.-i now convalescing nicely.
Mr. and Mrs. Murray Kennedy of
llobert Smith and Frank Wriglvt
Howell spent the week end at the M K - I inn io Monks was in lioweil
of Fowlerville were in town Satur*
home of Mr and Mrs. Patsy Kennedy • last Frijduy.
day.
Mr. and Mrs. John Hassciichal are
IIa."io> llainesf? was ho;n from AlMiss Marty Lupo enjoyed a weeks
now residents of Howell. Arthur bion o \ o r the heel; end.
vacation in Detroit and other places
Hasrencl'ial and wife will continue
i\ i v-s J u s t i n e Led w i d ge w:i iome
last week.
'ive at the Rathbone cottage at SilDetroit over the week cad
J
from
Mr. and Mrs. Lorenzo Murphy
ver Lake.
Koy Teeijle ot
Mr:
and children are moving into the
' ii alKl
Week end guests of Mr. and Mrs
ith relat^•jeiit
Saturday
-w
Drighton
Myron Wilcox cottage on t h e PinckM. K. Darrow were Mr and Mrs.
(
f
r
: I
Kennedy sDrugStore
Wm. Gillen of Lansing and Miss ives heree d Mr;. Robert Walker of ney-Dexter Road.
Mr.
Constance Darrow and Dick Loom is
Mr and Mrs. J. C. Dinkel and Mr
guests of Mr.
Detroit, w< : t." Sunday
P)!^ Detroit.
and Mrs. Hue Lamb lmve returned
Coach I.urg of Pinckney
high JLunes Martin.
son, Robert, i from their auto trip to New York
u'hool accompanied by Jack H a n i v t t
.Jari»e^ Maitiir ant
last week ! State.
Keith and Keven Ledwidgo were in sp<>iit a couple of day j V ( 'k
[
John Hagman, cNjnty clerk, was
Lansing Saturday to .see xhe Mich- with relative- a' .Swart z
in town last Friday delivering electMr. and Mrs.•j a m ( -s Curlett. jr
ga;i State football team workout.
to the township clerk,
;
1
supplies
Clyde Darrow of Walled Lake , and : o ' , n\, <,! v;;;yt Detroit we! ion
home of Mr- M r s l l l e a n o r L e d w i d g e .
-p< it the week end with his mother, >!nl!(l'iy guest ;;' t n e
Kubcrt Sekeel tof Three liivers
VIrs. Flora Darrow. l i e is now em- Fdi/.nb.'th C u r M t
.•avivan | who taught in the Pinckney school
ployed on a CWA project which is
about ' ];i,t ymr is not teaching now but is
i < I a \'
•unking an aerial survey of Oakland came U i i ' t H •1:
,]]eerhe..-n'i ring rtudeiils for Cleary HusiMi-. At-aii
/ounty.
IID'MI,
ntroduct il JK^S College, Ypsilatiti.
d
w e i > t : ri ,\] in
The Misses Dotty Jean Isham and bt',t
bvifine*s men. He is
Harry Murphy while carrying mail
Clella Fish, Fred and Frnest Fi.-h h i m s e l f t o th< .,,. , ;• i.utui. Wilson ; recently was bitten by some hornet*
:
were Sunday afternoon callers ;i( a n o l d t i " " :')..•!:
i managed who had taken up their abode in a
he U. of M. Hospital, where Mrs. a n d w ii h h i t " <'••' ' l \ e < l
> written ' mail box. Murphy's arm swelled up
13. G. Isham is recovering frarn a " u r r e n e y p l a n . I I " 11 a. ai-o
! and he had a fever several days.
b o o k s o n tli<
ubji
Major operation
r
miimimiiiiimiiiiiiHium.mnimiimiim
h
j ;8 F°r
R e a s o n & S o n * pfft., |
|6
[ Pure C a n e S u g a r 5 *5<' \
Jack Reason of Detroit .-ment the
NOTICE OP MORTGAGE SALE
i
Mr. and Mrs, Louis Coylc w c r e (
DEFAULT having been made ID the
, l'ir.-a of the week here
terms and conditions oi » certain mon,- j in Ann Arbor Saturday.
Gerald and Raph Clinton of Howgage made by THOMAS S. I.EITH and
ETHEt, M. LEITH, his wife, of the city I
Mia. Jestie Henry and son, Gerald,
ell wcr ein town over the wee!: end.
of Brighton. Michigan, mortgagors, to
were in Howell Monday.
CORDELIA E. PORTE, mortgagee, dated
Finyd Il.aincs visited friends and
August 28th, 11)35, and recorded in the
Mrs. Edna Spears called a t the
office of the Register of Deeds for Livingsj acquaintance;: a t Sheldon Saturday
ton County, Michigan, on August 30th, C. G. Stackablc home Friday.
163», In Liber 139 of Mortgages, Page 316,
I evening,
on which said mortgage there Is claimed
Mr. and
to be due and unpaid at the date of this
rs. Clarence Stackablc J
,xm[ ylVi._ A . L. Smith of
y^
m$
notice for principal and interest the sum
of Pour Thousand Six Hundred aeveiuyand daughters spent Sunday evening J f f ^ V ] a i ! ] o ( i a t t h. c Clarence Stack- e»ks»
eight ($4,678.00) Dollars! and no suit ot
in D e t r o i t
proceedings at law or in equity having
'
' able Monday.
been instituted to recover the debt secured
Dr. and Mr*. C V>. Gardner of LanLoren
Mcabon,
wife
and
son
of
by said mortgage or any part thereof;
Now therefore, by virtue of tho power
Drayton Plains were in town last :-in£ called on Mr. and Mrs. Willis
of sale contained In Mid mortgage and the
statute in such case made and provided,
Caulk Sunday.
'uesday.
,
notice is hereby given that on WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER, 30TH, 193», at 10:00
.vlr.; Kdward Spears, Mrs. Louis
CANS
Harold Tooman n.fcd wife of Yp c i•o'clock In the forenoon, Eastern btandatd
t'.r?.«, said mortgage will be foreclosed by \nti spent Monday eyvening with Mr. j Shchan and family were Detroit visa sale at public vendue, to the highest
itors Thursday
bidder, at the westerly entrance to the and Mrs. Ross Read .
Court House in the City ot Howell, Livings*
«Mn;s Jessie, Green and Mr-'. Wcltha
ton County, Michigan, (that being the
The Misses Delia T*jrren and Hazel
building in which the Circuit Court for
Vail spent last week with relatives
the County of Livingston is held) ot the Potts of Pontiac s p a n t Sunday with
premises described In said mortgage or so
in Hoton, Pama, Albion and JackMrs. F r a n k i e Lr;.-\nd .
much thereof as may be necessary to pay
the amount due on said mortgage as aforeMrs. Louis LitackabVe has returned son
said, with Interest thereon, and all legal
Miss J u n e Lamb who broke her
costs, charges and expenses, including the to Detroit t o resume h e r work as ,
attorney fee allowed by law, and any sum
j pelvic bone last July has • so f.o f a r
teacner in t h e public schools
or sums which may be paid by the undersigned, at or before said sale, tor interDetroit)
recovered as to have the cast reMiss Mary StackableV. of.,
est, taxes or insurance, on said premises,
which premises are described as follows:
spent the week end w i t h her parents, j moved.
"The following described land a n d
.Sunday callers at the home of
premises situated in the City of Brighton, Mr. and Mrs. C G. fStactkable.
County of Livingston, and State of MichiC. G. Stackablc fcttertded a Mich- Mr. and Mrs. Loe Lavey were Mr.
gan, to-wit:
NO. 2
Lot Number Fourteen (14) of Brighten
igan Life I n s u r a n c e
bafnquet and and Mrs. Harry Lavey of Howell
Woods, a part of the northeast quarter
CANS
tV«i of northeast quarter (V41 Section 31, business in Lansing: last Thursday. and Ray Lavey and wife of Gregory.
southeast quarter (¼) of the southeast
;
S i n d a y callers a t t h e Je?«e HenMr. and Mrs. JeK: c Kicvihorst of •>
quarter (U) Section 30 and southwest
quarter (V«) of southwest quarter (V«)
ry home were M r s . Sarah' Lamborn, Owo:-:so, Mr. and Mrs. John Stock of [ s
Lection 39, Town Two North, Range Six
dau::3uer, Beatrice^ Charles
White- Detroit were recent callers a t the ( g
bast, Michigan, according to the recorded
plat thereof."
head
and
wife
of
Gregory.
*
*
home of W H. Clark
Dated; August 25th, 1938.
CORDELIA E. PORTE,
Hiss
Justine
'Lecfrvidse
r
e
t
u
r
n
e
d
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Coylo, Mark
Mortgage*.
KERR, LACEY & SCROOOIE,
to Detroit Sun<:jay after spending- a Molvin, Mary Jane Wittner, Ronnie
rneys for Mortgagee,
o t h e r , ' * ^ Kenneth
'
weeks vacation
with her
her m
mother,'
Lamont and -Edward
Dime Bank Building,
oit, Michigan.
Mrs Eleanor LfcdwV.^e
Yuha.'; spent Sunday with Mrs. EdMj.
and
Jan
aes
Carpenter,
Mr.
a
n
d
|
g t a p i ^ h in Dexter .
jvard
C h a T P Adams was a caller
J Mrs Burl Welifr i n d daughter, Mar- j T h c h i s s e s Barbara Toma and
st^the Dispatch office Monday.
at w e « » F »
, W M w n 0 f ! ion of Pontiirr ' v e r c Sunday after ' G o o r g ; a p a c k e r of Dexter township 1 1
who a r e attending the Pinckney s c h - j i
j t o n Carpenter. ^
ool a r e making their homes h e r e i S
r
a
Mr>.. Ec
M^rtlt.
w n t c f ol Lansing spent}1j -Mr.
- a» n
* d»***••
kdward Collins and ^ . ^ t h c I J e r t V anHlaricum j r , and 5
Mrs.
E d nC
a VSpears
P a t * y , \ M r . and Mrs. O n n
=
8 Dent Sunday evening with M r . a n d l ^ ^ o r .
Mabcl Isham famiHcs.
MnIcWfReacor.
|Spe:icer of _ D e t ^ n t were
Sunday j M l s a M a r K a r c t Curlett and Mr
l g u ' C 3 t s a t tfrc lion e o : Mr and Mrs. Wm. Gillen who a r e employed in
Mr and Mrs. A. H. Murphy a n d
the Public Utilities dept. and t h e
son, Dick, of Jackson spent t h e w e e k ! w « " * <"W*
N
r
,
a
n
d
M
r
s
.
3
H.
Carr
had
as
auditor
p c n o r a J \ s office a t Lansing
end with Mrs. Mary Murphy
Sunday guests Mi! s Dorothy Carr h^Q b e e n n o t i f i c d l h a t they have 3 - ^
Mrs. S. H. Carr, Mr and Mrs.
O l l
Claude Reason and daughter, Leota, a n r J j r k R o b e r t , K ) f Detroit Mr. and s u c c e s s f u ] ] v p a , s c d the ripil service j | S S | C W
M
n
,
Mylo
K
e
t
l
e
r
and
family
of
Ea-)
.
b
e
r
Dilloway
w
h
o
|
§
*
^
*
*
^
* *
cswnination
Ro
t
w e r e in Jackson Monday afternoon.
t o n Kapids. H a r r s Lee and wife of is employed a t the state police dept. [ g S K I N L E S S
Mrs. Jiwk Schneider and daughtar,
L e t eland.
Marilyn of Windsor were Sunday
Mrs N. O , F r y e .in company with
The Ann Arbor Tlijrh School band g
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ross Read
f
Wr
and M M . H a r r j ' W a r n e r of Jack0
which spent last week at Camp Bir- (
Sunday callers a t the home
son, Mr, ancu *Sr*4 F r a n k Larue,Mr.
Mr*. F r a n k i e Leland were Mrs. Cecil
, fcett, Silver Lake, gave a concert
and Mrs. F.^rf ,te< pe of Howell a t Traver, Mr. a n d Mrs Ben Isham of * j , . ,
„
.
„ „ ' h e r e last Saturday night which was
e
y
tended t h e J t a s e re-union a t Ella f much
enjoyed. The band is led by
.Wwne.
Wm. Champion and consists of 40
Mrs. B . C. Daller and Mrs. H a r r y Sharye Part* j n Jackson Sunday.
Mr. a n d &fc*\ Gordon Hester, Mrs.
Lee cttended a board meeting of t h e Geovge Dnisfrtj ^ind d a u g h t e r of De- pieccs.The assistant director of thc
Livingston Oaunty King's Daughters troit Mrs. Ttox Wylie of Howell, Mr. University of Michigan band was al
%
a t the Amercian Legion Hall in Fow- a r d Mrs* Av 1¾ Ntsbett, Mr. andso present and directed t h e band in
lerville Monday. '
Mr,, a n d Mrs*. F r o d Wylie a n d fam-several selections.
1930 Pontiacs-See their:. 3 u v them
i
Del Monte
Cofcfee
Franco-American
1 Spaghetti
2
15c Lb.
Campbell's
Tojnitp
£
if
Soup
22c 3
CANS
20c
SPRY
\
GROSSE POINTE
ipgt
o v
Peaches
12
Vz
31c
Carnation
PKGS
Lge.
Pkg
10c
27c
PRODUCE
MEATS
Butter
ANY FLAVOR
6c 3
Tall
Can
Bisquick
vSZgn™IX'SST
Kre-mel
MILK
LB
C
26 Bananas 5
C
Sausage
19d
Oranges
1
9
j Bologna Sfoing -M_5c
15cLettuce - 9
FrankSurts 18c
I Bulk
Lb. 5c Onions A"I9
3 : - ^ . — - , * . « - M- Clay.;
LINK
POKK
LB.
n
OQUaTeS
**
LGE.
Size
! Sauer K?aat
FRI.,
Sept. 16
Only
OT,^irv......iMuu«iuilwMllllU»>i^^WUtatWWtWWtt<^
m^m^^mmT
•>5#
SPECIALS
M?.
•
•:W^,
.»> .^S^lki. 2-iS^i-M-
Sat.
fCfrt.1?
'A\
'#
:''}'<
1¾.
L * M ' V ,
u^.--
^
'
#
'
h
The Pinckney PUpateh Wednesday, September 14 1938
The Annual (
Financial
Statement
9
J-J
—&*
1939 FARM PROGRAM
The monthly aMerfcige fpr thitf COLD COVER, AID
ANNOUNCED BY A. A. A year is 8,929 repossession^ j j ? ^
l i t KEEPING MEA/
1937-38
-m
that said "mortgage will be foreelot*
ed, pursuant to power of sale, and
$ e premises therein described as:
The Southeast Quarter of Section
ivimber Twenty-six in Township
bour North of Range Five East,
Michigan, excepting and reservinf
therefrom a parcel of land described
as follows: Beginning at the Southeast corner of said Section, thence
West Forty-one rods; thence North
Fifteen rods and our feet; thence
East Forty-one rods; thence South
Fifteen rods and Four feet to the
place of beginning, lying within said
County and State will be sold at
public auction to the highest bidder
for cash by the Sheriff of Living*
3ton County at the front door of
the Court HOUSQ in the City of
Howell in said County and State, on
Tuesday, October 4, 1938, at two
o'clock p .n> There is due and payable at the date of this notice upon
the debt secured by said mortgage*
the sum of $3356.05.
Dated July 2, 1938.
4f
FEDERAL FARM MORTGAGE
CORPORATION,
a corporation, of Washington, D. C.
Assignee of Mortgagee.
DON VAN WINKLE
Attorney for Assignee of Mortgagee
Howell, Michigan.
i
PS-1678.
The outline of the 1939 AgricuU NEIGHBORING NOTES
Despite the centuries in which mail
tural Conservation Program, a proThe Milford school opened last has been an important human foo4
gram similar in most respects to that
science still uncovers facts about
week with 581 pupils.
of 1938, was announced this week
how
to keep and serve meats.
The exterior brick work has been
by Maurice A. Doan, Chairman of
completed on the new Milford Ford
Some of the newest information,
the Michigan Agriculture Conservatplant. The building is 200 by 60 feet offered through the home economics
ion Committee
Ray Holt, Howell Reo and Dodge extension service of Michigan State
The announcement was made afdealer has gone out of business and College, advises that most meat keeps
ter a conference in Washington in Alger Soles is now the dealer.
best if wrapped locl^y in waxed
which n ore than 100 farmer-commEugene MeLachlan of Ann Aibor or parchment paper 'and stored in
itteemen participated. All states weha< been appointed district deputy
re represented at the meeting. Be- lec:urer for the Masonic district of a refrigerator at a temperature of
si(!«..-: l\lr. Doan, Mrs . James A. Por-, whirh Pinckney, Howell, FowWvlle, 47 degrees Fahrenheit or lower.
Raw beefsteak and lamb and pork
tor, intension • Service Representat-{ Brighton, South Lyon, Chelsea, Dexive cii i?ie State Committee, and Mr. j ter, Valine, 'Ijiytootyh, NortJiville, chops keep best and longest if they
|VIIT.OV. X. Spencer, Kalkaska Coun- Ypsilanti and Ann Arbor Masonic are covered in paraffin paper. Steaks
ty fjirir.i'r and Member of the State! l o d g e s c o m p o s e t ^ g ^ p . MacLach- and chops left uncovered in the refrigerator dry out an( * acquire a
Curunitiec, represented Michigan ft
lan is a pa^t master of Golden Rule
hard dark leathery surface after
tile •Conference.
•*
Lodge of Ann Arbor and is employabout a day, while those stored In
'Whiie they advocated some chan- ed by the Washtenaw Gas Co.
a covered dish soon show signs of
ges, Mr. Doan said the farmers who
The village of Mason will vote on
too!; j ; . r t in the conference said they a $23,000 PWA project to enlarge spoilage. Because lamb spoils faster
....Meeting called to order by president, Guy Kuhn.
than pork of beef, it needs a temper
were o'ilain in the principles of the their sewerage system.
..1 he report of the secrelary was read and accepted.
ature of at least 45 degrees F. in the
Program were sound, and that the
With an estimated crop of from refrigerator.
The report of the treasurer was *ead aad accepted.
-ram should not be changed] C0,000 to 70,000 tons of sugar beets
Mo.^t of the modifications four times that of last year, the Mt.
....James Caskey and Mrs. Kess Marsiiaii were reUncooked roasts keep only about
1
J
were
intended
to
strengelected to the school board.
Clemens sugar factory will run for 2 days even in a good home refrig• soil-building and conservat' two months this year.
erator. The longer roasts are stored,
It was voted to rebuild the school on the precept
*s cf the Program and to
The Rev. Joseph B. Albers, Bishop the more color and juice they lose.
site.
and improve administration of the Lansing diocese announced
Cooked meat also keeps best when
Motion to adjourn made, seconded and carried
>rin-jiple;; of the Agricultural a number of appointments of priests
;tion Program as restated to new parishes last week. With the wrapped in waxed or parchment papThomas Howlett, Secretary
er. Most cooked meat keeps longer
.
n:s:zi?<id at the
conference!i exception of Decatur and Mt. Mor- than raw meat with the exception of
> the cstnblishmnt of an Ev-[ris, all were made to" Lansing Flint jellied meat, boiled tongue meat loaf MORTGAGE SALE—Default hav«RECEIPTS A NO BALANCES
.] Granary as a protection and Battle Creek churches.
and such prepared dishes.
These ing been made in the terms and conCash Balance June 30, i W /
. £ 1 nji.fQ~
ca-vity in future years; (2)
75 pupils of the Whitmore Ave. meat mixtures will not usually keep ditions of a certain mortgage made
i. /u
i; . >•: O.r r.:;tion's soil; (3) school in Dearborn went on a strike
Library rund
u-tirn of a supply of food last week when the school board took oyer 2 days. A cooked roast, howev- by GEORGE A. YENSON and MARTotal balance on hand including amount
THA L. Y E N S p N h i s wife, of the
;• ili-'t will prove adequate off some of the buses carrying pupils er, should keep 5 or 6 days in a good
|
ami
fiU
in closed banks
$1,183.34
refrigerator if covered with waxed township o^^Greelr^Oak, county of
i f :r tho country's needs and for ex- to the school. Some now have to
Livingston, and state of Michigan,
paper.
District taxes within tax limitation (.genera!
| ; .it.-, I>ut will not pile up or per- \ walk three miles to get to school.
Mortgagor
to FftED RASMUSON,
fund)
573.CO ^pai;a:e burdensome surpluses.
The Chelsea public school enrollof the city of Detroit, county of
NOViCE OF MORTAGE SALE
Delinquent Taxes
316.3:»
ment in 481.
Wayne and state of Michigan, Mort.
E£5Lr.TIAL POINTS OF
Default having oeen nsiQe iov gagee, dated the 7th day of NovemPrimary mjDney
1,03^.4^
Mr. and Mrs. Gustave DeDe^11939 PROGRAM of Grosse Pointe ar^ the new prop- more than thirty days in tl-e condit- ber, A. D. 1929 and recorded in the
Primary supplement fund
1,2:42.91
i rietors of the Hotel Ingham in ions of a certain muitiigo executed office of the Register of Deeds for
Equalization fund
611. 3
7: I V with the 103S Program, Stockbridge
by Maurice C. Davis and Lelia F. Livingston County Michigan on the
Tuiiion received from state
93.47
i;i. ::c! ••'.! .-oil-depleting crop goal
John Livermore entered the U. of Davis, husband and wife, to Osear 9th day of November, A. D. 1936,
55.51
'.' : spedul soil-depleting crop M. Hospital at Ann Arbor Tuesday Lt Tuthill and Lora P. Tutliill, dated in Liber 131 of Mortgages on Page
Library (penal fines)
fjr Avli'j'at, corn, cotton, rice, Dexter Leader .
May 29, 1935 and recorded May 29, 156, on which there is claimed to be
Tuition received from olher sources for
t L'ii'.co will be divided among
The Brighton High school enroll- 1935 in Liber 138 of Mortages,page due, at the date of this notice^ for
111.33
1937-38 school year
-, counties and individual farms ment was 403 this year, a gain of 390, Livingston County Register of principal, interest, tax and title
...Insurance on building and goods and
i r v u d by the Act, the acreage( 39 over last year
Deeds Office, on whkh mortage there search, taxes and insurance, the sum
3,428-29
1 :•• ilding fund ...
:v u* foi wheat for 1939 has Frank Van Atta, South Lyon cattle ii now claimed to be due the sum of Three thousand four hundred
0. UiHi'>hed. Acreage allotments dealer and meat .market proprietor, of fourteen hundred dollars,($1400) seven and 26|100 ($8,407.26) Doll«
75.00
From gr»n ral fund to buiidi,. k::
1(>1
t'
•
!•:• oilier commodities will be died at Melius Hospital, Brighton, principal, one hundred ten dollars ars; and,
'
64.48
Other rr.ic^llaneo"s receinl:
:l.!:d upon the brisis of the sit- last Tuesday night following an auto *nd forty six cents ($110.40) inter$7,607.94
No suit or proceeding at law or in
TOTAL RECEIPTS
-• afToctitig these cropj and can accident on Sept. 1st.
est, plus any insurance which maj equity having been instituted to reu; •:;
1
TOTAL RECEIPTS INCLUDING BAL-_
• dr*t nnined accurately until
this cover the debt secured by said mortScarth Inglie, editor o*f the Gales- be paid between the date of
1
•
I.
r
li.::s
production
is
known
ANCE JUNE 30, 1937
$£791.¾
burg Argus will sponsor a banquet notice and the date of sale, and al- gage, or any part thereof;
• infinitely.
no
by editors of weekly papers on the so an attorney fee of thirty-five dol- NOW THEREFORE, NOTICE
i|
EXPENDITURES
A
,>n:i] wheat allotment ' of 23 rd of September in honor of Gov. lars ($35.00) as provided for in hereby given thd£ by vjreue of the
~>.(i''•() Of 0 r.i'ri^, announced on July
Murphy. It will be'held at Lapsing. said mortgage, and no suit cr prr- ! power of sale \i\ paid mortgage conSalaries of board of education members $
50.00
". - ''pri'is with the ten-year averMrs. Gertrude ' Murningham of ceediags at law or in equity h»\vin. tained and pursuant to the statutes
tj. v/ o
Supplies for board cf education, pointing
i: cf rbout ^0,000,000 acres and Howell has bought a beauty fahoppu becji liieULuicd to recover the debt of tU f.-Jnte of Michigan in such
7.00
ii
;>( rc-\'c ;fode:i for li)38 of over in Mason and will move there.
Census expense
secured by taid mortgage or any case made and provided the under(i,
COO.
<)>',()
acre«.
Individual
farm
WiO
The typewriter stolen from the part thereof.' NOW, THEREFORE signed will sell at public auction to
Treasurer's bond and inp»
l
..i- ..INtmentx for the new 1939 real, estate office of Earl Sharpe in by virtue of the power of sale con- the highest bidder on Tuesday, the
Total general control expenditures
y8.2U
io'.!!';..i are now being established Howell was recovered in a Detroit fined in s^id mortrnp^, and in pur- 30th day of November, A. D. 1988
rt
co'iiity offices.
i.i ir
pawn shop.
;uance of the stcJutt in such case at twelve o'clock noon,
Eastern
INSTRUCTION
VVliat growers who comply with
made
and
provided,
notice
is
hereby
Standard Tin;e% at the main entrance
Teacher's Salaries unun)
¢1,030.00
J!!'",'1 wheat acreage allotments,
£iven
that
on
Monday,
the
19th
day
HOUSEHOLD HINTS
of the Livingston County Building at
qualify for advantages that ot-j
The
Teacher's salaries (women)
1,62000
v.-1
of
September,
\
.
D.
1938,
at
ten
the
city of Howell, Livingston Countang of home made pickles
I'K'!:':.
of
the
Farm
Program
off-l
and
o'clock in thp forenoon ty, Michigan (that being the buildteaching supplies ..
2b.b7
relishes is filling the air in and (10:00)
• j . i i m . ]<)')<) conservation pay-1 arour.d m»ny kitchens
Eastern
Standard
Time, said mort* ing where the Circuit Court for the
Books, readers, free text books etc
58.26
1
] ;i''o adjustment
payments,
'
It is important to remember that gage will be foreclosed by sale at County of Livingston is held), the
School library, books and expense
43.43
•y for loans on wheat if the pickles should never be used in the public vendue to the highest bidder premises described in said mortgage
Total Instruction Expenditures
$2,830.36
V."!
Loan Program is in effect ;:laco of fresh or canned vegetables. at the south door of the court hcu»o or .umcient thereof to satisfy said
OPERATION OF SCHOOL PLANT
v., and renewal of Crop InIt la not the use of moderate in the City of Uoweli, Livingston indebtedness with interest thereon
1'rogram policies.
Wages < i >*.:nlor and other employees ....$ 137.90
amounts of thepe highly flavored County, Michigan, which premises six percent (G%) per annum in accordance with the terms of said.mort
relishes that causes nutrition folks are described as follows, to-wit:
Fuel, suppi tj, electricity etc
441.40
FROGRAM PAYMENTS
!'
cage, and all legal costs allowed By
to frown upon including them in the
Fire Truck
50.00
n.
a to;: of the conservation and menu, it is the abuse of substituting
Township of Green Oak, Living- h;w and provided for in said mort.
'. lie ai'ue
Total Operation Expenditures
$620.30
adjustment payments in ihetr. for needed vegetables In the ston County, Michigan:- The North- gage, including the attorney
fees,
a c t i o n with the 1939 Program meals.
west one fourth of the Northwest and {?!so any sum or sums which
, t
(FIXED CHARGES
,h
<\\ n it I
(U-nnitely
determined yet
A relish with just the right fla- one fourth of Section 24, in Town may be paid by the undersigned to
U:
Rent
8500
so;-ae of the information, in- vor can add a company touch to 1 North, Range 6 East, Michigan, pmtert its interest in the premises;
e l m ng final stimates for the 1939
Which sp.id premises are describInsurance
44.6S
containing forty (40) acres of land
even a plain dish.
n
pr.-wmetion, to be used in computing
ed as follows: That certain piece or
Indian relish is a colorful mixture more or l t»s.
Total Fixed Charges
$129.65 j, til-'
-V' latos i„- rot yet available.
oarcel of land situated in the townmade from home grown vegetables
Tated;
June
16,
1938.
7!io
IVoiiable
rates
of
payments
hip of Green Oa'v, county of Living.
MAINTENANCE
found in most gardens.
Oscar
L
Tuthill
&
Lora
P
-,<i on the normal yield per acre,
i.U', and state of Michigan and d e *
Repairs on building and grounds
50.80
Indian Relish: 6 quarts of green
Toithill,
MORTGAGEES
ir;.
!9D9
allotments
to
farms
parrib*»a as followj, to-wit:
on
tomatoes, 2 quarts of onions, chop«
Repairs on equipment
184.69
ticipating in the Prograri are as fol- ped, 4 red peppera chopped, 3 green KINNEY AND ADAMS
All the southwest quarter of the
Miscellaneous repairs and replacements
6.24
low.-: ( Figures in Parcnthese s ar j peppers chopped.
Attorneys for Mortgagees,
southwest quarter of section \ 18
1 :>3';. payments).
115 Pontiac Bank Bldg.
Total Maintenance Expenditures
$241.73
Sprinkle with one half cup of
town 1 north, range 6 ea^Michifta
Wheat: 2G to SO cent; per bushel salt and allow to stand over night. Pontiac, Michigan.
c
£ U , » « g forty (40) acre,' a o r / S
(1:2 corns).
- CAPITAL OUTLAY (Additions to Building)
Drain off juice the following day
Potatoes: Approximately 3 cents and bring to boil in weak vinegar
Money voted to building fund
>
/5.00
together with the herditmenti and
( 75959-M) 447-27866 ••T^urtenances thc»of.
p( r bi:-h'.'l ( o.l cents for late ones) solution 1-4 cup of vinegar to 1 cup
New Jmrniture, etc
75.00
(ioneral depleting acreage: App- water. Drain off liquid from veget- NOTICE OF MORTGAGE SALE
Dated ct Detroit, MicNfe*
New equipment (Transportation, Heat, light
rox;;::nte!v ?1.00 per acre adjusted ables.
executed .by George E. Hunt and l"thday cf August A. D. W
Ventilation etc
10650
for prod'jrtivity.
Dorothy I. Hunt, husband and wife, r T ~ , • d tosrat^on, M a i
Xon-rlopletin,!?
acreage:
50
to
60
Total Capital Outlay Expenditures
-236.50
and Isabella D. Walker, as mortga- A HN MORTH, Attorney for .
c^nJ:- per aerogors, to the Land Bank Commiss- ^ 4 . 4
PenoWot » * ,
*
GRAND TOTAL Or EXPENDITURES ..$4,185.64
As in the CT.JC of 1938 deduetioner, acting pursuant to the prov)0!^ tro-.r. conservation payments are!
isions of Part 3 of the Act of ConCASH BALANCE June 30, 1938
to he made for plantings in excess
gress known as the Emergency Farm
General fund
$ 891.40
of
>f ?f>il-dcpletin,cr crop aHotmcnt.'.PayMortgage Act of 1933, as amended
Primary fund
197.17
v.or>'< for soil-buildin.cr must be earDon't put off until tomorrow the (U. S. C. Title 12, Sections 1016WANTED
nrd by carrymcr out sosKbuilding
uilding and site fund ($3,428,291 $75 ... $3,503.29
Defau^t
having
been
made
in
the
repairs that should be made today.
-racticcibrary fund
13.73
DEAD STOCK
Keep your car in good condition.l conditions of that certain mortgage
^
|
dated
the
1st
day
of
March,
1934,
Total amount on hand June 30, 1938
$4,605.64
You cannot exercise the care essen
AUTOMOBILE REPOSSESSIONS tial to safe driving on a highway 1019), as mortgage; filed for reHorses, Cows, Hogs and
Total Expenditures including balance ..^$8791.28
ON DELINK when your car will not respond to cord in the office of the Register oi
A.-; a criterion of improved con- the strain put on It Sudden changes Deeds of Livingston County, MichigTotal Receipts including balance
$8,791 28
Sheep Removed
di'ions in the <?tat«?. Leon P. Case, of lights, and unusual hazards on the an, on the 2nd day of April, 1934
Signed—Thomas Howlett, Secretary
f .• rot My cl "' re, points to the road require quick action. Your car recorded in Liber 140 of Mortgages
Promptly
do'"nc
of
automobile
repossess'•>n
on
Page
436
thereof,
and
which
must be in the best possible mechan^ .James A. €askey, Treasurer
Phone Collect,
in in.: ]n;-t fix months.
ical shape to meet these
mortgage was thereafter and on the
require-i^ordincr to figures recently rn- ments.
18th day of May,1938,by an instruBOARD O.EDCATION FOR 1938-39
Howell 450
Ic^'-'d, March, 1028, with 6,484 rement in writing, duly assigned to the
Office
Name
Address
Term Expires
:^).---region.': wn.< the prak. These have
You've heara the Lone Ranger on 1 Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation,
MILLENBACH BR<
Pretftdent
Guy Kuhn
Gregory
1940
•Tra<(ually decreased to where there the radio and seen him in the movies ' i corporation, of Washington, D. C.
Secretary
ver'j only l,f)41 in August of this now follow him a* a comic section and which assignment ot mortgage
Thomas Hov/Iett
„
1940
Treasurer
adventure feature in The Detroit was filed for record in said office of
,
Wort Prince Albert
James C. Caskey <.
1942
the Register of Deeds of the County
A
comp.inVon
of
general
business
In
the
"nifty nto«S»
Sunday Times every week. Other big
Trustee
Elizabeth Marshall
..
JM^
of
Livingston,
Michigan,
on
the
27th
United
State*
Mnatara ~ZL i u#Jt
and nutonobile repossessions over new features! New comicsf New conTrustee
Hazel Breniser
„
\
s\" 1941
i fiva, year period shows that when tests! New stamps! New cutouts! Be day of May, 1980, recorded in Liber I £ 3 i r f J E l ^ L f 0 * 1 ****
**»
143 of Deed* on P a g . « *
business is good, repossessions
1
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sions axe *sure to get The Ptfrolt gqn&y
lw*f
themaxko*
|>Jie lea«t and vice ywa«,
NOTICE i s US9XBX WVm
District No. 6
Unadilla Township
y$*
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The Pinckney Dispatch, Wednesday, September 14, 1938
K
Braid Trimming Is Smart
resentfully. "Ridiculous! Barbara, er, took it hot and cold, hot and cold tory, there was not a normal vocal
you shouldn't have let him in the till his head cleared, thought how chord in the Bowl.
Barbara Sentry, seaUaf to sober up bar house!"
all this would distress his mother,
was celebrating that must
assort, Johnnie Boyd, on the way borne from "Oh, he was rather nice! His thought of telephoning her reassur- beThere
done,
and Phil did it What had
a party, alapa bim, and attracts the attan*
m of a policeman, whom the boy knocks name's Dan Fisher, and he went to ances, thought he might send her a happened in Boston was forgotten
down. As be arrests bin, Professor Brace Princeton, and knows Joe Dane." wire, thought he might go horn
ne_for that evening; but it must have
« Harvard comes to the rescue and drives
over
Sunday,
and
then
remember
ed^sitared disturbingly in the back of
Barbara borne. On the way they see Bar* Joe was Linda's brother, at Yale.
bara's father drivim from the direction of He and Phil Sentry were classmates the football game and did not want his mind, since though it was three
«s office at 12:48, but when he gets home
to miss it, and in the end did noth- or four o'clock in the morning betoe tails bis wife it is 11:15 and that he's there. "But he wanted to see fa- ing
that day at all.
bean playing bridge at the club. Next morn* ther," Barbara explained, and she
fore he went to bed, he woke soon
tag, while Barbara is telling her mother added mischievously, "I tried to get
after ten, and remembered, and
But
he
did
read
the
papers
more
about her adventure, an urgent phone call
comes from Mr. Sentry's office after his de- him to come in and talk to me."
carefully. The police had found the opened his door to get the Sunday
parture. Arriving home in the late after*
Mrs. Sentry said in sardonic re- young Italian in Freedom, Maine. morning paper in the hall outside.
noon, Sentry reports his office has been
He read it, read every line in it
proach,
"Weren't you—unnecessari- He had been able to account for all
sobbed and a Miss Wines, former temporary
employee, killed. The evening papers lurid* ly hospitable?"
his recent movements. Other young that concerned Miss Wines. There
Sy confirm the story, and Sentry takes it
"Well, he said we shouldn't be men, friends of the dead girl, were were only two things really new in
bard. Mary, elder daughter, is in love with
Nell Ray, young interne at the hospital mysterious about it," Barbara as- being questioned. The girl's father, the story of the murder. The autopwhere she works.
sured them. "He said that would who was a scallop fisherman, had sy had revealed a probable motive
hurried to Boston. His picture ap- for the crime; and the hour when
just make it worse."
Mrs. Sentry spoke to her husband. peared; a long-legged, sad, droop- Agnes Wines was killed had been
CHAPTER H—Continued
fixed. A night watchman in a ware"Arthur, you'd better call up Carl ing little old man.
Bertie, make him stop that sort of
The police, Phil read, were in- house nearby had heard the shot
Barbara was called to the tele- thing." Bettle was publisher of one vestigating the fact that Miss Wines He had thought at the time that
phone, and Endle arrived and came of the morning papers, and an old had been mysteriously absent from it was a truck back-firing, probably
in to speak to them while Mary friend. "I won't be hounded by re- her lodgings for three days in Aug- two or three streets away, because
made last preparations. Mrs. Lor- porters."
ust last. The twentieth, twenty-first, the sound was muffled; but now he
an's brother, Endle, had somehow
Mr. Sentry shook his head. and twenty-second. She had told was convinced that it was in fact a
made a fortune in the last four or "We've got to expect that. Ellen, her landlady that she was going to shot which he had heard. He was
five years, owned a blatantly large
motor yacht on which scandalous
parties were reported to occur, was
perfectly sure of his welcome everyi
where; and he clapped Mr. Sentry
on the shoulder and said jocosely:
"Well, Sentry, a lot of free advertising, eh? Headlines! Produce
House Murder! You and Gus ought
. to have a flock of sightseers tomorrow. Better lay in a stock of bananas, eh? Sell 'em to people to
take home as souvenirs!"
Mary, in the hall, called, "I'm
ready, Mr. Endle." They departed.
Mrs. Sentry said icily, "He and
Sirs. Loran are alike, aren't they?"
And as Barbara returned from the
telephone, "Who was it, Barbara?"
"Johnny Boyd!" Barbara was indignant. "He thought last night was
at joke, and he thought all this was
funny! I shan't ever give him a date
again!"
"I suppose it will strike a lot of
people as a joke on us," Mr. Sentry
agreed, "I'm glad father isn't alive.
He was strong on the dignity of the
firm." And he reflected: "I'd better
run in and reassure mother. Care
to come, Ellen?" Old Mrs. Sentry
lived in solitary dignity in one of
the Back Bay hotels.
"I think not," Mrs. Sentry decided, but when Mrs. Furness
phoned presently to ask whether she
could bring Miss Glen over—"She's
so. anxious to talk to Mr. Sentry
"Oh, Don't Be So Funny!" Phil Exclaimed.
about this terrible crime!"—Mrs.
Sentry said: "I'm sorry. We're go- for a day or two. Barbara's right. visit a girl friend in New Hamp- sure of the time, having finished
ing out!" Others would be telephon- To refuse would just make things shire ; but this girl—not named—de- his one o'clock rounds just before.
ing. She and Mr. Sentry presently worse."
nied that Agnes Wines had visited Probably Ave or ten minutes past
departed in the limousine for town.
He added, "And after all, we've her, or had even planned to do so. one, he thought.
Barbara stayed at home. She was nothing to hide."
Phil was relieved to -see that that
Much was made of this fact. One
reading the story in the paper again
of the papers said in so many words blaze of publicity which yesterday
when the doorbell rang. Nellie came
that the police were seeking the had focused on his family and on
CHAPTER III
to say that a young man wished to
dead girl's unknown lover, and car- that of Mr. Loran had somewhat
see her. "He asked for Mr. Senabated now. Yet he knew so vividly
Miss Wines was found dead in the ried a subsidiary headline:
try," she explained, "and I told him
how
they would each react to this
hall outside Mr. Sentry's office at
LOVE CLEW IN PRODUCE
you were the only one at home."
ugly
experience. His father would
HOUSE MURDER
Barbara went into the hall. The about eight o'clock Friday morning;
be
concerned
about the effect on the
a Friday in October. The afteryoung man said, "Miss Sentry?"
Phil threw the paper aside at business; his mother would resent
noon papers cried the news; the
"I'm Miss Barbara."
last,
andfinisheddressing; but when the offense to her personal dignity;
morning papers on Saturday spread
"I'm Dan Fisher," he explained, the tale over three or four pages.
he went to lunch, more than one Mary, like so many persons comwatching her appreciatively. "I'm a
egocentric, would feel perPhil Sentry, a junior at Yale, comedian asked, "Were you myste- pletely
reporter. My editor sent me out to
sonally
wronged
as though the world
riously absent from your accus—well, to see if your father had any would have slept late that morning. tomed haunts in August, Phil?" He had conspired to make her ridicuideas about this murder. And to There was to be a football game grinned and took it, as the easiest lous and unhappy. Barbara—Phil
get some pictures and so on." He in the afternoon, and the pre-game way to put an end to this raillery; smiled, thinking of Barbara—would
added, "I'm sorry to bother you." celebranon the night before had in which even the innocent may feel, keep her head high, make a joke out
And then he grinned and said, "If his case risen to a somewhat fe- he tried to recall where he had of the whole thing, try to make
I were you, I wouldn't even talk to vered pitch. He had no early class; been on the dates given. He re- them laugh.
but Fritz Rush, his roommite, had;
toe."
membered at last that he had reHe thought of telephoning them
Barbara liked him. "You're a and when Fritz returned to the room turned just then from a cruise on some
word of reassurance, but the
funny reporter," she protested. "I in mid-forenoon he pulled the bed Bill Hoke's schooner, had stopped telephone
was unsatisfactory. He
thought they wore their hats in the clothes violently off Phil.
in
Boston
to
see
his
father,
found
felt
vaguely
that they might need
"Wake up, Phil!" he shouted. that Mr, Sentry had gone to New
bouse."
him;
that
there
be something
"You're thinking of plain-clothes "You've got your name in the pa- York on business, and himself had he could do. Andmight
also,
an intangible
men, policemen/' he suggested, pers!"
gone
on
to
York
Harbor
that
afteruneasiness-oppressed him. There was
chuckling; and he added, surprisingPhil blinked sleepily. "What? noon.
something in, the tone of the newsly: "I met you once. You don't re- What's happened? We didn't start
paper
stories that suggested the
He
%as
relieved
at
being
able
member? You were with Joe Dane anything last night, did we?"
writers
knew more than they wrote.
in New Haven after the Princeton
"Read 'em and weep!" Fritz in- thus to account for his time; and Phil was young enough to want to
game two years ago. Joe introduced sisted. "All about the murder in later he forgot the murder for the
be assured that everything was all
in."
high life! Pretty stenographer foul- football game. Yale went into the right; he was old enough to want to
last quarter trailing by ten points;
"On! Were you reporting the ly slain! Here, have a look!"
when in a feverish fifteen min- help and comfort if he could.
jxame?"
Phil sat up and peered, blinking, and
(TO BE CONTINUED)
"No, I'd been helping coach the at the headlines; he turned the utes they had fought through to viePrinceton ends. Used to play a lit- pages and saw photographs of the
tle, myself. That was before I went dead girl, of his father, of Mr. Lorinto the newspaper game."
an, and of Sentry and Loran's old Task of Protecting Batherg Has Now
She said courteously: "Why, then brick building in the market disBeen Reduced to Art by Lifetavers
we're really old friends! Will you trict. The history of the firm, foundcome in? There's no one at home, ed by Phil's great-grandfather, was
but father and mother will be back related; and his father's clubs were
Now the lifeguard starts to the flocking to the miles of patrolled
soon."
listed, and his mother's charities. rescue before the victim knows he's beaches.
He hesitated, shook his head.
The names of Loran and Sentry,
From now on the lifeguard has his
'Thanks," he said, "I don't think even though the connection was in trouble!
job
cut out for him.
That's
how
scientific
the
art
of
I. will." And he confessed, a little slight, lent a certain importance to
He's
ready for it. He has to be.
amused at his own scruples: "Prob- this murder of a pretty stenogra- preventing drowning has become on
Guards
are chosen nowadays on
ably a real red-hot reporter would pher; yet an old newspaper man, the beaches of Los Angeles county,
such
a
strict
basis that only the
get some pictures out of you, and though the names might have been notes a writer in the Los Angeles
best qualified ever get to the point
an interview. If your father- were meaningless to him, would have Times.
of
being paid members of the variAnd
when
it
works
on
40,000,000
here—I'll tell you, I may come back guessed from the extent of the
ous
groups functioning from Long
persons
it
must
be
a
good
system.
later,"
spread that there was more to
Beach
around to the Ventura county
Furthermore, if a swimmer gets
She sodded, understanding his for- come, that there was a whisper of
line.
into trouble, swallows some water,
bearance, grateful "I shouldn't sensation in the air.
Rip tides, incidentally, cause 78
know what to say," she admitted.
out and is dragged ashore, he
Even Phil sensed this faintly as passes
per
cent of the rescues. And most
"If I Were you, I wouldn't say he glanced through the pages; but doesn't have to worry about the life- of the
persons who have to be resig to reporters," he advised, before he had finished, two or three guard sticking a hatpin through or cued are
men. The women are
refer them to your father. "I fellows came in to jest st his ex- tying a handkerchief around his more cautious
their bodies natmean for any of you to be pense. Was Agnes Wines one of his tongue. The old method of resusci- urally are moreand
buoyant.
rknn about it, of course. That conquests, they demanded. What tation is as passe as skirts on s
only make it worse." And he was this power he had over women? woman's bathing suit. Resuscitation
•aid: "Thanks a lot Good-night." Where did he bury his dead? He is painless nowadays.
Lather League of America
Lifssaving hat become a profesBarbara was almost sorry he de- grinned, and then swore.
The Luther League of America is
parted. Her thoughts were terrify"Cut the comedy," he said harsh- sion. Its members are proud and s national organization having for
lag company* But when she heard ly. "Haven't you guys any sense of jealous of their status., They won't its purpose the unification of the
her father and mother return she decency? She looks like a nice kid." even let you drown
want to. young people's religious societies
met them smilingly,
on their that are connected with the Luther"Where were you, Mr. Bones," That puts a black
an churches in America. It was
"Wan, yon missed it!" she an- Joe Dane demanded in inquisitorial records.
founded at Pittsburgh, Pa., in 189S.
nounced in lively tones. "I've been tones, "between the hours of—"
All thesethingsThe motto is "Of the Church, by
entertaining'« reporter!"
"Oh, don't be so. funny!" Phil ex- M the, water, w
the Church, for the Church."
"A reaortert" airs. Sentry echoed claimed. He ftaQted into the show- grows balmy and
sports silk for general wear, as
well as of percale, calico, gingham for the house. The very
short kimono sleeves are just as
easy to work in as no sleeves, and
much more becoming. Straight
panels front and back, gathers at
the sides of the waistline only,
give this design an unusually
good figure line.
The Panty*Frock.
High waistline, puff sleeves,
square necklines—they all look
adorable on little girls. This flaring frock buttons down the front
so that ambitious tots can easily
dress themselves in it. This design will be pretty in so many different materials—gingham, challis, percale and dimity. A dressup version in taffeta will be sweet,
too; trim that with ribbon instead
of the braid.
The Patterns.
1570 is designed for sizes 34, 36,
38, 40, 42, 44, 46 and 48. Size 36
requires 4% yards of 35-inch material without nap; 2¾ yards braid
to trim.
1516 is designed for sizes 2, 4,
6 and 8 years. Size 4 requires 3
yards of 35-inch material; 4½
yards braid or ribbon to trim; 1%
yards ribbon for belt.
Fall and Winter Fashion Book.
The new 32-page Fall and Winter Pattern Book which shows photographs of the dresses being worn
is now out. (One pattern and the
Fall and Winter Pattern Book—
25 cents.) You can order the book
separately for 15 cents.
Send your order to The Sewing
Circle Pattern Dcpt., Room 1020.
211 W. Wocker Dr.. Chicago. III.
Price of patterns, 15 cents (in
coins) each.
SYNOPSIS
IT'S
so easy to sew a few rows
1
of braid onto a house dress or a
little girl's panty-frock, and it's
such a smart way to brighten up
simple fashions and make them
more becoming. So let's rejoice
that the fashion of using braid
trimming is back with a bang, this
Fall. Here are two very attractive and unusual designs that
you'll enjoy making at home, in
pretty fabrics of your own selection. Each includes a detailed
sew chart to guide beginners.
The House Dress.
Here's a style so becoming and
attractive that you'll probably
want to make it of thin wool or
ASK ME O
ANOTHER f
A Quiz With Answers
Offering Information
on Various
Subjects
custom of sacrificing a horse at
the burial of a warrior.
4. Havana, Cuba, heads the list
with its thirty-three broadcasting
stations.
5 In 1900 there were 81 divorces
per 1,000 marriages, and in 1985
there were 164 divorces per 1,000
marriages.
6. There are about 5,000,000
slaves, chiefly in Central Asia and
Tibet, and in Arabia, Abyssnia
and China.
7. It is one built by Firestone
for a special Le Tourncau earthmoving unit, which is 79 inches
high and weighs 1,304 pound The
tire carries 25,000 pounds and has
a 20-inch tread.
8. The English word China
comes through the Portuguese
from the Chinese T'ien-hsia,
meaning the Celestial Empire.
The official Chinese name is now
Ta Chung-hua Min-kuo—the Great
Chinese Republic.
9. Considering the numbers engaged they were heavier. At the
battle of Towton fields in England,
historically a minor engagement
and scarcely noted in history
books, 27,000 were slain. At Tours
200,000 fell.
10. There were 30,000 this year,
an increase of 20 per cent over
1937.
The Questions
1. How tall are President Roosevelt and his sons?
2. What is the largest school system in the world?
3. Why is the horse of a dead
officer led at his funeral9
4. Which city in the world has
the most broadcasting stations?
5. How many divorces per each
1,000 marriages were granted in
1900, and what are the latest figures?
6. Are there any slaves in the
world now?
7. What is the largest tire that
has ever been made?
8. What is the origin of the
name China?
9. Were battle casualties heavier in earlier warfare than in modern warfare?
10. Are there many semi-professional baseball clubs in the United
States?
The Answer*
1. The President is 6 feet 1;
James, 6 feet 3; Elliott, 6 feet 2;
Franklin Jr., 6 feet 3; and John.
6 feet 4.
2. It is that of New York, with
1,110,000 students and 38,000 teachers.
3. It is a survival of the ancient
Scientific selection, years of ex*
perience and tender care have
nude possible the Thoroughbred horse of
today. Half t century of research, of strict
adherence to highest-quality specifications
is behind Quaker States scientific achievement . . . motor oil purity.
When you buy Aeid-Fw Qfmktr Sua*
Motor Oil, you are pfottctittj jmt ssotor
with the best that modern re&ftiaf csa pro*
vide. Your car will ran better, l**|MBfe
letail price, 35* a quart Quakat MpflY
Itfiaiai Corp., Oil Cqr, Pas^wsiaW*.
I
•
,*-
<fi Bell Syndic.tte. — WNU Service.
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e Pincfa^y DUpatcfcWecWciay, September 14 1938
HIGH SCHOOL NOTES
|
The Classes of Pinckney High
School held their meetings Friday!
afternoon and selected their officers (
and sponsors.
i
Freshmen
Pres
Barbara Toma
I V. Pres
Richard Amburgey
Secretary
Keven Ledwidge !
Treas
Eloiae Gardner
Sponsor
„
„
Mr. Hole
Sophomores
J
Pres
Robert Martin ? >
V. Pres
Rose Mary Read j
Secretary
Don Widmayerj
Treas
Virginia Baughn
Sponsor
Mr. Burg
on
Juniors
Pres
V. Pres
Sec
Treas
Sponsor
respectful,
profess equipment marks 3 our
ional effort to
be service a symbol tit
atof assistance. A desire to'
tainment,
serve aided by a modern
^
PJH SWARTJfCPE
•*
"FUNSRAL
Dorothy Jasmer
-...Jack Young
Jeanne Ritter
„
Emmett Widmayer
Mrs. Wilson
i FOR SALE
19 breeding ewes (B»
Senior*
[broken
mouths),
20 feeding lam!
Pres
Lloyd VanBlaricum
i l Little Giant Bean Puller.'
V. Pres
Victoria Kulbicki
I
J. L. Donohue, 2 1-2 mile
Sec
Glennon McClear
E of Gregory
Treas
Helen Kennedy
Sponsor
Mr. Hulce
FOR~ SALE—Electric ice box.
The girls are playing soft ball
Dilloway's Tavern.
daily after school. As soon as their
soft ball schedule is completed they FOR SALE—Twenty-nine ewes yi.J) FOR SALE-Three acres ,of land and
a basement barn.
will start volley ball.
five blacktop rams.
P. H. Swarthout
The girls will have a basketball
Will Roche, Three miles N. W. of
FOR SALE A
McCormick grain
team this year and will play a schAiiiicr^on , Four miles N E. of Gregbidder in good repair.
edule of eight games.
FOR~SALE—Fine wool Buck.
Will Roche, Unadilla.
Bert Wylie .
PINCKNEY HIGH SCHOOL
FOR SALE ..Plymouth Rock Squab*
FOR SALE—Squash and Melons.
FOOTBALL SCHEULE
W. B. Gardner farm
W. C. Hendee.
1938
FOR RENT-160 acre farm, known
Sept. 23, Milford, Here
*4 *
FOR SALE Blacktop Rams
as the Charles Love farm, 3 ½ miles
Sept. 30, Hartland, There
£ ^
Bert Reason
northwest of Pinckney. Cash rent.
October 7th, Ann Arbor, Here , *,
Anton Herk, River Rouge, Mica.
FOR SALE Used and antique furniOctober 14, Manchester, There | M
45 Florence Ave.
ture aiso piano and enameled kitchOctober 21, Romulus, There
i m
October 28, Hartland Here
| JJ_ en range, like new.
WANTED TO TRADE— Corn and
R.
K.
Kelly,
Kelly
Road,
Pinckney
Nov. 4, Stockbridge, Here
( ^ j
Potatoes for pome wheat.
F
U
R
'
S
ALE—Youni
guinea
hens.
I Nov. 11, Ann Arbor, There
Mrs. W. B. Gardner.
FOOTBALL TEAM OUTLOOK
Steve Peto.
FOR RENT._Ho»-i£e on M-36, weit
Coach Burg stated last night that;
Dedc Hinchey
"The boys who make this years team WANTKD^Salesman to sell Buicks, of Anderson.
Pontiacs,
G.
M.
C.
Triuss,
Used
will have to show that they desire
FOR SALE, _A Home Comfort Rato play the game, that they are will- Cars, in and around Fim-kuey, got
nge.
ing to 'give' in order that teamwork set now to sell the Ws. We will haWill Marshall, R. F D. Gregory.
be maintained". A new
offensive ve c, better sot up than ever, wonder
system is being used this season and fut future for the right party. See FOR S A L E _ 1 9 and one half acre
the boys are learning rapidly which R. Housner at. Chi.rlej* A. Bryants, chicken farm. Price, $1100 cash or
leads the coach to believe that the Buick Pontiac Dealer. Howell.
in payments, $1300 and $300 down..
team may produce. This new system
For information see Mr. Eli AroH.
WANTED:
Representative
to
louk
which is being learned from the
} and
one half
miles north of
'ground up' will
take time
with after magazine and subscription in- Pinckney, Route 1.
plenty of long, hard practice drills terests in PINCKNEY & vicinity.Our
Z^t '"".'
~ ' " ' ? ' ","" *
nl»n enables you to securo a good
p U n e na
The team is handicapped somewhat
, " , *" , „ f Anli.irti
,nr>nt
by having no punter orr field general part of the hundreds of dollars spent
returning from last years squad. in this vicinity each fall and winter
Oldest agency in U.|
Both positions are still open and the for magazines.
i v ^ - rates on
- all
boys th&». show the most promise will S. Guaranteed lowest
pet the call. The season opens with periodicals, domestic and foreign.
free.
Milford here Sept. 23 at which time instructions and equipment
Coach Burg hopes to have the boys'! Start a growing a.-d permanent busisufficiently well, versed that t h e y ] n e s s i n w h o l e o r s p ' a l ' e t i m e " E s p e ° "
may,give a good account of t h e m - l i a l l v adaptable for Shut-ins.
selves. A preview of the team will [Address MOORE-COTTKELL, Inc.,
P O R i A G E LAKE,
MICHIGAN
be seen this Friday when Brighton Wayland Road, North Cohocton, N . \
comes here for a scrimmage which
Established 1865
will give all those interested a Register of Deeds, Frar.k Biuh ..12b
Circuit Court Com., Reed Fctchcr 23 |
Incorporated 191-4
j
chance to see the boys in action.
Burce Hadsell
-0
8i
-.»•<
J. B Munscll jr
WORK TO START
v M
Dram Com. Floyd Mv
'
119
ON SCHOOL PLAYGROUND Coroner, Harold Bordon
30
Some time ago the Pinckney Sch- Clevc Copelaml
3<J
ool Board purchased 5 acres of the Guy Grieve
!,
—
5
Dr. Haze farm adjoining the school
Henry Wine.-*'5
for a playground and athletic field.
Surveyot, Clay Gordon
112
A PWA project was submitted and
Supts. of i'oor, Jake F:iger
1)1
Tver Sixty-Eight Year*
acc.pted by the PWA. Work is slaCharles Itscl
83
of Safe Banktiv\
ted to start on it next Monday This
Frank Wilson
,
00
playground will consist of base ball
Delegates to county convcimon arc
diamond, football field and tennis
Stanley Dinkel, Ross Read, W. C.
court. Most of the work will be done
Miller, Abner Watkins, Ona CampAny person bom in the year 1900
by tractors and truck as considerable
bell.
grading will be necessary to level
or before remembers the day when
the field.
an automobile was a "horseless' carWe are informed by the school
ria. je. If one rode in one of these
board that plans are now being convehicles his life was in considerable
sidered to install showers in the
danger either from the machine itbasement of the school for the use
of the athletes after games.
seK or a run-away shay. Those time*
associated signal .lights with ships
C O N T from Page 1. Election Result
and the sea. Now we think of the
Court Com.
Francis Bairon 2
green, amber, and rod lights found
Drain Com
Burce Dankers, 45
Coroner
Howard Gentry, 38
at every important intersection fei
Dr. Jacob Singer
~
28
the city or country. Our every m o w
Supt. otf Poor*
Wm. Fear, 31
ement in an automobile is regulated
Wm Golden
28
j by these signal lights.
Rudolph Meinke
29
Delegates to county convention: M.
Our own lives are regulated much
E. Darrow, C. H. Kennedy, P. W.
the same way. When the green light
Curlett, Lee Lavey Harry Murphy.
is on we go, that is we have money
Republican
in the bank. When tho red light if
Governor
Roscoe Pitch 8
or. we siot;, hat is our funds
Governor
Frank Fitzgerald 125
low ebb. With a savings account^
Governor
Harry Toy 82
WM, BLACKNEY
Lt. Governor
Barnaby 32
which is regularly attended to, we
Lt. Governor
Dickinson 64
VILLAGE TAX NOTICE
can asure ourselves of a light full
Lt. Governor
Fehling 10
The villi:o taxer
now due
Lt. Governor
~
- . Moore ti> tod payable at my home
every f u I 1 o f * * « " light*. Without proptr
Lt. Governor
.....Powers 6 Thursday afternoon.
thrift we may have many starts and
stops,
Lt. Governor .....
Read 52
Blanch Martin, Village treas.
A-=**ttr
Congress
Wm. Blackney 104
Congress ........ Edward Hubbard 34
I
MASONIC PICNIC SUNDAY
State Senator
Paul Eager 72
Pinckney Masonic and
Eastei" l
State Senator
Harry Hittle 68 Star Lodges are invited to attend a
Legislature
Charles Adams 92 Masonic picnic to be held at the
Legislature
Thurber Cornell 57 Huron River Park, east of Dexter on j Money to loan at reasonable
[Prosecutor
Stanley Berriman 79 Sunday, Sept. 18, by Dexter Masonic lVarest paid on Savings Books
\ Prosecutor
Joe Gates 79 and Eastern Star Lodges. Pot-luck
Sheriff - Fred Bell
32 dinner at 1:00 p m.Soft ball game Tim* Certificates of Deposit.
Claude Fawcett
104 between Dexter- and Pinckney. In
Member u* Federal Di^oa* ! » |
RHONE N u
FIMCKNJ
ICHJOAN
Classified
Want Ads
U
Boydell Bros
5 Gal. Lots
l Gal. Lots
$2.69
$2.79
Free Admission
LAVEY HARDWARE
Ladies on Tuesday
Children on Friday
Newport Bathing Beach
Baker's Cocoanut 15
Gold Medal Flour r g 23
Lotus SESS
7*
Matches 6 boxEs
1*
!
/aa
LB.
PKG.
24½ LB. SACK
CoSSeC
Cha
*« & Sanborn
LB.
Bon-Ami Ponder
Pan Cake 5 l i b
Famo
Floor
Bag
Cheese
Ritz Crackers
ffemSl
Clarks
& THE HOME OF HIGH QUALITY MEATS 7^
PINCKNEY, MICH.
fT
23
12
23
Wi Mirer
at all Tim*
McPherscR
State Bank
Signal Lights
McPhersoQ State Bank
I
Clerk, John Hagman ...
Ml:
Mc-:r
•smi
H7 case of rain dinner will be served at1
tht Pttter. Masonic Ttmpje, ~^*v«M
\
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