03-17-1937 - Village of Pinckney

Transcription

03-17-1937 - Village of Pinckney
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"™TIncEeynCivSag»ton County, MichiganWednesday, March 17, 1937
Vol. 53
Past Master's Night Livingston County
Is Fri., March 25
Has a Jail Break
Democrat Luncheon
Is Friday Noon
Livtng.ton Lodge No. 76 F. & A. M.
Will Hold Their Annual Banquet
Two Inmates Escape From Howell
Honoring the P J U U Master* of
Jail Saturday Morning and Vanthe Lodge on Thursday, E v e ,
ish, Leaving No Traces.
March 25. Usual Attendance
Looked For.
Early Saturday morning about
2:30 A. M. two men, Arthur Simmons
On Thursday evening, March 25, and Gorval Grey escaped from the >
Livingston Lodge F. & A. M. o f county jail at Howell. Simmons wa^i
Pinckney will hold their 8th annual serving a 90 day sentence for giving]
past masters night banquet. The ban- a bum check to Wm. Dilloway of
quet will be served by the Pinckney Pinckney and was to be turned over
0 . E. S. Chapter 145 in the lodge to Kent county officers for a similar
dining room at 7:00 P. M. and the offense at the expiration of his senprogram will follow. The speaker tence. Gr*y was held for breaking
this year is the Grand Master of the his probation by robbing the Holkins
Grand Lodge of Michigan, Judge Lumber Co. of $35 and was to be
Neil Reid, of Mt. Clemens, circuit sentenced. The latter is Livingston
Judge
Macomb county.
m
~r" of
"v""T
"i
*" By
" 1 1a" coin-.-"- county's probiem child and in spite
cidence he also spoke at the first | o f D e i n g b r o u g h t back from Oregon
banquet held in 1930. Dr. Francis B . j t o a n s w f i r charges some years ago
LI idpiogram
land willhas
be been
toastmastLaanbie
e r and aoffine
pre- a n d i a tter D e i n g arrested on a larceny charge, has always escaped on
pared. It is as follows:
suspended sentence. The men escaped
by taking a wire coat hanger apart
and by this means reaching the keys
PROGRAM
to the steel gate of the cell block
which hung on a nail outside. They^
Music
Howell Masonic Orchestral escaped through the kitchen door and
Welcome
Percy Ellis broke into an oil station on Grand
Toastmaster_Dr. Francis Lambie, River to get money, however, they
Midland. R. W. Gd. Junior Warden', only obtained cigarettes and candy.
Response
Russell Livermore. They wore seen by Nignl Watchman
Song
Bert Parks, Stockbridge' Hubbel but escaped. He recognized
Remarks..Charles Sherman, Lansing. Grey and called the jail^however, no
Republican
Senatois
Prevent
W;IR. W. Gd. Senior Deacon trace of them could be found.
Grey is a local boy who has been k o w t . a O u s t e r . M e a s u r e to A d Remarks .... Dewey Hesse, Saginaw.
j o u r n o n iWay 14 la r ' r e s e n t e c i ^
R. W. Gd. Junior L»eacon constantly in trouble for several
years. Simmons has a long criminal
Legislature
Begins
to U e i
record. This was received from
D o w n to b u s i n e s s .
Washington D. C. and lists 18 arrests since 1929 when he drew 4 to
resolution to declare the sen10 years in J&rkson. He has also ser- ateThe
seat
WatkowsM suved time in Wisconsin. As the two cunt and 01fillAnthony
the
place
by a spec^i
ars without money, it is thought they election lost last wc:;U when
tn^ lvcwill pull a robbery in order to get puoiican
senators
vo.ad
.^nuly
funds to make their getaway.
; against it with tne except.on 01 t. 0
wno refused to vote. i n c .-enaie ai
THE NO SUNDAY HUNTING LAW present
stands 10 to 1J and uie r.udition
of
a n o t l u r senator wotiid gi ->e
Although the No Sunday Hunting
the
Dtmociats
a wording' majt>^Hy.
ia-< wn'i ue voted upon ao tne elecIn
all
piobabiiiteis
a Democrat wsnud
tion on April o, mere seems 10 be
be
chosen
to
succeed
Wiikowski and
unit! or no discussion concerning it.
I
to
prevent
this
his
ouster was
*.iiiS is oiu; oi tne most urastic oiiis
j
blocked.
^ c i ' i-ieoeateu to tne voters ana
a d j o i n n Oil
A
m e a s u r e to '>''
.vouiu u j i uuiy line u larmer lor
,
v.
,
,»
.>i
t.,™
[mt
won
(l
i"-as
oeuii
HUiouuceu
u> u .
nuiitiiit on ms own iamn out wouiu 1
. , .
,,-.. ., ,,, . I cnuu'iiiuu oi tne way.* it^u
Newsot the
State Legislature
ai.->^ a«L»ject
iiiiii
tu
sc'.ic
soiHi-iiti, |
Current Comment
Are the black-top roads the answe*
j to the county road construction?
i Judging from other exchangee U a
e m o c r a t s of T h i s C o u n t y to H o n o r different
county road commisaioae
E d m u n d C. b ' l i e l d s , M u r r a y V a n
aiv having plenty of trouble wi &
W a g o n e r a n d J o h n D. L y n c h A t
; t h u n at tiie present time. The alUrLuncheon
Friday
Noon
At
nating cold and warm weather
if
Howell, Michigan.
this uititcr seems to have play< £
.
huvw with them. These roads havo
On Friday, March
larch 19,
19, Murray D. . rui-ed in humps until now riding ov -f
; a Wagoner, Democrat
Democrat candidate
^..^,
f ^h m^'remimh, one of the old cord-*
fo<- slate highway commissioner who i.>> roads, constructed in the old da i
is making a swing of the state will with lug bottoms. Also in many placet
be at Howell. He will b.< accompanied >.iii' i-waiis il:.\ e crumbled. This count f
by Edmund C. Shields and John I). • i> s I U I .vi'hi to have experience 4
' Mich, candidates for regent of the ilii' dam;,go that other counties hav •+
• niversity of Michigan. A luncheon .'-•an., of tin' blucktops here ha 0
•A iil be served in their honor at 12:0() 1 : , : *'d i'i i.aa-ip.s but we have not see3
!«>o'i in the Masonic dining hall. The. - Ni-i',.t deal of crumbling. In Wash*
• ieket.s are 75e. Anyone desiring one . -la.v (,'o. many loads have crww>
mould g t in touch with Lee Lav.v. !<-d, iiou..i\ 1, ;uid it is claimed that
Kdmund C. Shield is a former in.- .Milford road there will have to
Livingston county boy and also fa- \ lit I'i •:
i.
1 h.'se roads when ftnt
j b u i i l v. m
ie!ic\f(l to be the answe?
'. i '
a
: i > a t ;1 uuihlcrs
prayer as it WB1
i ci.l ilM'.'d iify would
stand contrati t i u n ;uui I'xpan-ioii.^This they appar-«
ia normal times but thsj
'Nid winter with its innumin.ces .-L'tins to have beeq.
for them. Maybe the coun*
-.:..• i mo ugh on snow remo*
v: '
vi'-tm- to repair them. Las!:
Rev. J a m e s O a r o l a n
Wii:
• ost Washtenaw
counts
Classes: b:30 as id 1-/:1.50.
- , 0 , , ( 1 U>\> fnuw removal and sand*
Devchun to Our .Mother of IVrpetuai
i i ' : . 'I'I 1 i.- yeai- the
bill was only
Help, Saturday at 7:00 1\ 'M.
iOO.
Coiuesbiuns 7 :Jl» P. M. Saturday.
1
Catiioiic Chareh Service
.\'[ii:p aqi jo s.topcu S>(Oo.tt ^BBq
>vmi' iiuonncd iollowing the
i ' a. Li;ii:aek atrocity that the police
i had cai.a-reil in numerous morons
-lid
Baalist Cunrcli
D' r
Dun 1'atLon
SlJp;!i>'
1'astoi
J and
I «; "
Service e a c h Suii'.:.i\
i0:3i
Morning \\ or 1 .in ...
Special and i c p a r : t e s i n \ 1UCS
f o r 1. iie Unit. J o IKS.
S u n d a y Sciu-ol
.
»or a'i
Classi
ivv'ci.mg U\-rs.Tip
I'hwrs. c v e i l i n g p l a y e r
Lo . < ein-; whether or nof they
11 |d : at<'d in it. The same
of the
t ! : i . . . . baj a in d ;it the time
•'• *i' ti' • Sireicher boy in Ypsiago and would
) : . i d i a simrt lime
p d r •»"_> b pfii'ii here if siich a crime
1 "i.a;:. (>in'. wonders why all
-n.ia
at large.
tie- e !'< acle are allowed
niswcr
is
that
as
yet
they have
Una
iiin'tii.'d
no
crima
and
are
known
1
ti. • auiiioii'ies and the other ansv. ei' i, ta.at ail stale institutions car*
ii.g for this class of delinquents is
fim'd to o', et ilawing. i nysoptlhic
ward.- at Ann Arbor has a waiting sift
of o l . Vork Asylum aOT, Eloise 17S,
I ontiac lTo, Ionia 20, Traverse City
'•I and Kala nazoo '11. We hav*» no
fi: :ui'(- • an Lapc:'!- but know that a
couple of y -ars apo a boy was held
in ja.l for several months for r*«e.oval there charged with a »ex crime
, ail v. a- finally released when the?
coir,-.,' •.'.;.- not able to get him ed»
\
j :C0
8:01
S:0t<
s-.-rvice
( ..
\. • . .
ii.'i;
B. Y. P. L.
1 a ataliy deficient
persons
for
• oaaia, in r e g a r d t o it
with
a
1
.uui'iii^
u.
v tiii v« a & o n e i
iiioas as a .^tar player on tlv l.'niv.isi'y of Michigan base ball team,
iie has served one term as regent of
the University by appointment by
/ u s e , Minister
Gov. Ounstock. John Lynch is a DeZ i u g l i n , Org-anib'
troit attorney who is well liked th-re.
OI'
Murray VanWagoner we are
F.mi' n 'luotinjr the following from the DtX10::50 ter Leader:
a
l
k."
\
\
( t
Our hat's- off to Murray D. Van
an
cl:>. -f»s Wai»oner for the way in which he
11 tf.0 hn.« beertHmn<Hh»ir-tl»e state highway
Voiur.
.v4<mi and obtained federal aid for
00 a r' e'an.
On other occasions _ we
•I
!
I v ( .a' V,' .1 a
I']
. m i ' ( i.^.'d some of his t ' l m n s ,
.,()
nN:j praisi<l the ^ood work be a . I! . . 1 1!. c . (. .
d'm»>,
birt the present mention is
!)•
t S Wit.',
mt i-iniliiig smTThe well deserves the
asro, Lucius E. Wilson
li:
<,,!)-. taiation and appreciation of the
cle
which W'c published
:! I'm
people of the state.
al\
ocat'd
deepening the
Ml
\
i 0 tin c n a i a h
Recent figures disclose the fact of
fiom
its
source near
IIM
C'.ll
a
u ' 11)
the total billions put into federal aid M i : l
ike lirie. In this way a
ir vi.
1
y would b:> developed.
la,,"A'
l bind •'i i d a \ "
I liavc submitted as a
T
i
e
.
O
i
l
,
:•.!'•
0
,('-t
-<M
federal
autohrities,
•
C
)
"
'
C
"
.
t' (.1
•
•
1
•
i-•
ity
of
Michigan auN • > "•
111 •
(
:
Inml
T|.
!
.m w
1 11
taken it up and are
I it e cat u r and speaking
'Ii
•r fr', ad are cordially (
Vo'l a r
organizations. H. O.
!'
aa
a
d 10 ;
the
university spoke
' ' I I ' I'r
\*
ol
am to e i .
MI;I da;
b.tary
<"lub
of Brighton
' lalb>
outlined
th-e project
1 1'
: a . A i ' c 1 he 1 -lo mile length of
EASm~i< SUNiGSE SERVICE
II111 <>ii lib. er. 'Hiis involves clear,1
On rave; of . ewjigc and obstroci aa re
<l)'cd:rin'_r the shallow places
C
l
l
U
i
'
c
i
l
\
lIU' T o
aa
t Ion
lA'U'
h wati^r, stocking with
A. . \ i . |
a n d i'a
at
J'., l i in-:
out parks and scenic
d otherj
fi a
av
the
stream. Some work
K...-K
r
•1
1
drivaa.Iaa•'already
been done on
a tiie d i a - I
e r (I:
- O !•t
j.re
iver
h
tween
Dexter and
1
a.
a
S.
S.
i
lor
1 taa
lll'on
There
a
scenic
drive has
d to fur- I
i A1Ml A r b u i ' .
1
milt
on
one
side
of
the river
!
!
s
C
l
\
<
J
.
.
1 'n
a c.
L-.nm.'m
HI.a!
and park- laid out. Most of this ifl on
Detroit Ivlison Co. land. This is a
i tr< mendous undertaking and it will
j be many-years before it is carried
' out.
'a-'eant of tne
Don't for;: t tia-
lanffre^ational Church
.ui c ^ i ^ n g a gun on Sunday. Tne , ^ . n m i u . e out t h , e ^ a c a e . ^
.nam iu«a o. tne Dill a e u n s to De that j ^ " e is uoubtfcU.
n, ia u^eiess u> aa& otner peopie not)
it was nccessaiy to
^
to Hunt on Sunday Wnen tne tariner i tnioa^n th^ u-^iMature U^L,
j jy.iiiit.iti iotatu
u u m .NOIIIUU
a c c e p t ti.uc JH;, it
JI la.id owner ninisell' ana ms m e n u s ! lUiciu^an
aiui
ui'j anowed that privilege, it seems a ^ l o U . m J u a t n l e t i c n i u
n o u s e 110m o a K u i ' u . iii 1^,^,,-, p
.iKe
a
return
to
tne
om
blue
law
Dr. Francis P. Lambie,
iays when stores were not permitted d e n t o i tiie liri^g.^ . \ n g . t j . 1 .n.Toastmaster
t
Song .. Maple City Four, Stockbridge o o p e n on Sunday and base uau w a s m t i u u u c e u oy b o i u i i o i A<.\..m
Remarks
Arthur Fox, Almont games, golf ,picture shows, etc. were 01 I p s i l a n t i .
Stmai.01' l i a r r y l l i t t l e of tin.R. W. Gd. Lecturer also toroidden on Sunday. Tnese
laws
hava
mostly
been
repealed
or
t
i
i
^
t .-.viuuiii let,= a ua> feo • oy \ u t .
Remarks
Paul Strawhecker
rendered
ineffective
through
disregard.
If
this
no
hunting
law
passes
1
.
m u o a u C i n . > - some kind 01 a bm.
Grand Rapids
(
we
wonder
if
a
law
forbidding
lishl
a u s t JUi; would subject hit anU 1 U . I
Remarks....Hugh McPherson, Pontiac
ing
on
Sunday
will
be
next
in
order.
drivers
who Kill or injure uo;;.-,
R. W. Past Grand Master
Considerable
revenue
conies
to
tne
pio.^eeuiion,
H ai.--o p r o u d .- i.m!
Gd. Treasurer
merchants
and
citizens
of
this
coperson
running
over i.;ul injunn.,
Poem
Bill Hodge, Howell
unty
each
year
from
the
summer
redog
must
give
the
V:ctim J.i.-t a.m
Song
Spencer Titus, Pinckney
sorters
who
own
places
at
the
lakes
r
h
e
house
commute
on con-tiu
Address
'.... Judge Neil E. Reid,
and
week
end
here
practically
the
tional
revision
has
introduced
a u,;i
- M t . Clemens, R. W. Grand Master,
Oil
year
around.
Passage
of
this
bill
providing
a
reiorenuum
\ot<j
Michigan Grand Lodge.
b,
might
drive
them
into
other
counties
whether
the
constitution
.mould
Characterization
Bud Kenner,
where
the
laws
are
less
stringent.
rewritten.
, . - ]
Howell
Senator Munshaw of tlrand lia;.ni.i
PAST MASTERS WILL PRESIDE
W. M
J- H. Hooker FOUR PARTIES ON THE BALLOT has intioduced a bill providinj',- i-ucompulsory insurance ior all motor
S. W
Azel Carpenter
There
will
be
four
parties
on
the
vehicles operated in the state.
j W
Russell Liver-more
ballot
at
the
spring
election.
They
House action has been dtia\ jd oa
S. D
C. W. Hooker
are
the
Democrat,
republican,
Amthe
ten year payment phm lor ommj. D
Glenn Slayton
erican
and
Commonwealth.
There
are
qucnt
taxes, o i u r e d by Hep.
\.iii
Sec'y
John Martin
some
16
qualified
parties
in
the
state
iirown
until
the
commutes
nas
na.u
PAST MASTER'S APRON
but only these will be on the ballot. a chance to hear couiuy t i j . ^ . u u . ~
PRESENTATION
H. C. Vedder
by P. W. Curlett The Commonwealth party has nomin- opposed to the plan.
ated John Wendell Bird of Lansing,
A liquor revision bill has bum aiThis lodge is one of the older former Ingham prosecutor as a can- fered by Rep. Tomlin and Muii>hy ui
lodges in the state and was given a didate for the supreme court and Detroit. Among the thinj-;s this wju.d
dispensation in 1855. The charter Jay Slaughter of Lansing for Supt. peiimit tha return of the old bar .-ymembers were Dr. Charles Haze, of Public Instruction. Walter Haynes tem of selling liquor. The ago 1 mi.
Master; Dr. John Goodrich, Senior of Milan is their candidate for nigh- would bc raised from lc to -1 year.••.
. ii,a
!>>
the
Warden; Furman G. Rose, Junior way commissioner.
The bill would curb blind pigs by \ i .-U: . O ' i e » a ' t o hi• aaiwol n e x t \\ e d The rocMii nation-wide broadcast
Warden; Johh Broughton, Secretary;
l . i : a : i n g pos.'.ession of i l l e g a l i . i i u o r a n ^ 1 ; a k - ,-U, l i s o f t h e
of
Prosidr-nt Roosevelt explaining his
,
ii
li-1,
u
n
d
e
r
t
h
e
1;
Freeman Webb, Treasurer; J. W. MEMORY GETS WANTED WOMAN offem.-e and w^uid uimiaate tne j,.i;- r . c . - i i a y lii.^'h
i.au.uau *w. shields
suprem
court proposal was interm
u
s
.
e
in.-tr
a
c
t
o
r
,
Hinchey,
Senior Deacon;
Henry
st:.t law making the polav pu/.c d . l ' e c t l O l l o i u i
roads Michigan has as much under preted in numerous ways by the press
Stiles, Junior Deacon; and James
Quick thinking on the part of Miss possession vvitii intent LO .e.!. 1 ••'•>M\ -. l v a M e v m s .
;v will ( )iob;iblvS^a..truction a.s any I'i of the 48 of the country, most of whom are
Rice, Tyler.
Leoia Stackable of Pinckney, who is bill would raise Uic hoV.-l bcen,es
Tin: s -aioi cia. • I ' * wi-k in Mav.' ' slutt -' i n l i l c m^ion.
In other words anH-Roosf-velt. Tho most plauseable
l'u.
The lodge got away to a flying employed in the cosmetology depart- from $1000 to $2000 and make tne be [jre.'ent
1 , d tin:,. ,, ,„. u,,,,,1,.,.
*(*,',''i
0,1
e
mile
in
evary
four
being dono one i.; given by the St. Louis Post
l
start and raised 21 candidates during ment at Lansing, resulted in the ar- bonding company liable to all injur- Sevend play. ;.re " ^
^ . m c o ^ c , throughout
tho United State?, and which says that he is using the lanb
.
. . . .
. .
the year of dispensation. The first rest oi Irene Davis, 43, no home, at ies arising from beer garden distur- ,-idcration tuid the choice win u^ , now underway,
is in the itate. Fac . >guage
.Uc,K . vof
,
O
L
Supreme
Court Justices
two candidates raised were on Au- uansing Thursday. The Davis woman
made
soon
1
bances
and
damagj
done
by
intoxicar,v.
C-mn
Co
of
Yndlanti
took
the
tors,
making
this
possible
were
that:
Hu':hcs,
Stone',
Brandies
and Cardosa
«ist 27, 1855, when Milliard F, Da> was wanted in Branch, county for
ted
persons.
Senior nictuivV this week. This com-' the state highway commissioner had i n t h o - . 4 decisions invalidating the
row, lawyer and Marcus Wilcox, mer- victimizing a beauty parlor operator.
Rep.
Rahio
of
Iron
Mountain
inrun now do"'s
doas the'r
their work
work in
in aa finj
fin: I " program and acted quickly to get ,.,AV v , h f n :i T u , t i r , Hughes in writing
chant, were received into the lodge. She had taken numerous orders for
11
troduced
a
Uili
making
the
a^a
limit
I^
now
do
,.s
inc.
_
'.,
= - - - - opinion stated that th*
.
. _ .
i the mir.evit
-tmiio
trailer
drawn
by
an
auto.
i
( f,.H,.v:,i hr.rn.fitn.- , The others raised the same year were beauty parlor uniforms and secured
65
instead
cJ
70
for
those
persons
majoritjustices were reading
hi
a
fina
showing
of
efficiency
five
rnaiontThe h-idies of the village have or
Jacob Sigler, Charles Young, W. M. a down payment but n>ever made any
eligible
to
receive
old
age
pt-nsions.
nto
the
constitution
things which
and
good
management
and
might
well
' a '-•"vm cla.-s and meet MUM
Younglove, Gov. Edwin Winans, Sam- deliveries. She once visited the cosjraaiz1: d,.u
A
bill
sponsored
oy
the
Michigan
,,,...
.
s-00
1*
^1.
Anyone'Do
copieu
oy
OUILT
u
^
u
m
u
i
u
.
«
,
w
r
o
not
there
and
basing
their dep V
\ n y o n e ' b e copied by other departments a=;;
uel Leddick, Alvin Mann, James La- metology department and Miss Stackn f
t
Lt
Federation
of
Garden
Clubs
would
w
i
V
m
'
o
euvoli
iinvited
to
come.
U
me:
n,
by
which
wc
may
o
b
t
a
i
n
'
.
,
c
i
r
own
personal
Opinnv !l i<
come.' a
obtain' r ; i o n u n t h
rue William Bertwhistle, Charles a. able recognized her and inforpied the
; 0
give
the
state
highway
department
The
voil-'
V>all
outfit
for
the
men
,
that
which
is
rightly
ours
and
due
8014 John Sigler, Charles Coleman,
' ball
men,
due i o n
authority to prevent the erection ot N e x r - d e d to arrive ,-oon and then us if we are awake to our opportune,
. . . » , . .
f T l - li^ AMector WM tried out i n
LADIES AID TO SERVE DINNER bill boards along the highways out- ho'mon of the village will have gym | ties.
side cities and villages which are
\l n , n i - h t a week
I Fiii.niingham
<"-onrn Avenll,
publisher
of tho, t i 1r . |i ; n1 tvam:irk Onisko murder a t
Kccantric,
and lifr-long
Congregational L. A. S. will meet unsightly and constitute traffic haz- N Mr ml Mr.. 1'. II'. Swarthout and I Fiii.mingham
Kccantric,theandelei-tion
lifr-long
Police
lieeublican advocated
of tla-'1
h ( . |.;.
without, State
success.
Some post
way
W ev.t
a k l.;-,nVmir
f
F. .
in the church parlors next Thursday ards. All bill boards would be taxed
For
tho
reason
he
we
e.".n\.
serm
to
get
much
confiMr!
a
n
d
M
r
a
.
F.
10.
Powers
w>
re
in
VanWagoner
$5
per
year.
buying
lighting
I h e r e stems to be much opposition ; ])(.T,-,,,(, la-'. Wi ek
March 18th, for dinner and business
that he would no Jimo 10 get: (j n r 0 i n i h l ^ thing. Tt was brought
to
Senat6r Hittlc's occupational <li,-i r i , : I a i r a n t f o " ' h ' .-tage. This in- ,taied
meeting.
. . .
.
^more
federal
aid from Washington' l 0 Howell last year in the Brown
c!u !'• ' O O ' L I ' ' '
Mrs. Elliott is chairman of this ease bill from several sources
de-j ior
for road building under the Uoosr- p trunk murder and the results wer«
hi
committee. Ladies! Don't forget wo bill would list the occupations. Now c e aTshe d• M-h.ool e1 a u l l n i e n t
nines,
|
v
It administration than a Rcpubli-j a i s o m n . py testing the blood p r e f
sonv-wh '*.
Floyd
have Tasty-Jell in all flavors to sell. the' jury has to decide it. Gov. /lur{sure and heart heats it is claimed
, > illiam D i l l o n , ( J c r - can highway commissioner.
phy is said to be against it and in Willif> D a r t
Mrs. W. H. Euler Sec.
1
Mrs.
Lavinia
Mas-.clink,
Big
"n-,
that it can ho found out if a person
!
-on
M
'
a
b
o
n
h;ivo
favor of a schedule bill. A s c h e d u l e aid D - p h e !
:
pid
,
candidate
for
the
state
board';..
11(½^ as beats and pressure a r t
Tim
H
u
r
r
b
c
h
i
l
d
r
e
n
h
:
i
v
e
>m*
was once incorporated in th 1 bill b u t left s c h o ' i l .
of
agriculture
wil]
also
speak.
\K;\U\ to increase while the subject is
move<l
i
a
l
o
a
n
o
t
h
e
r
d
i
s
t
r
i
c
t
.
was removed in committee.
- "•
j Heine. Mavbc, but it will be a long
T h e first h - ^ k f t
ball
gf>mo
was
1:
v
b
e
t
w
e
e
n
t
e
a
m
s
led
j
SHEEP
KILLING
DOGS
I long time/before .->. conviction is se«-yVi»
play •rl l a .
'
i
i
.
,,
Hilly
M
r
.
r
r
and
Vincent
Young,
j
_
cured on strength of the lie detectot
y
Pinckney Circle of King's DaughMARCH
27
IS
LAST
DAY
The
Young's
team
won
-K>
to
10.
Farmers
be
on
the
watch
for
a
a l 0 nc.
ters met at the home of Mrs. Herv.,nncr
m
t
nil
of
his
teams
point'
nnd
light
colored
police
dog
and
a
blue:
bert Palmer with 17 members and 4
FOR REGISTRATION
Paul Strawhecker
Win^on Paughn, Chubb Cornered
Myers got X his brother Kd.-el getting man sh pherd who have been seen ini
guests
present.
One
new
member
was
rhAma^ Webb, George Crofoot, Wilsi
voral
sheep
flocks
and
shot
at
but
.
niirlit. last week.
om
j •>. The first two aie the only ones
to
D. Crofiot, W. E. Thompson, taken into the circle. After the busiescaped.
I
have
had
9
sheep
killed
Saturday, March 27, is t.10 hist J who have had any experience. The including a black-top buck I gave 5 L PATRICK DANCING PARTY
I w * Wood. George Younglove, Mor ness meeting, Mrs. AtLee and Kitty
boys will learn the rudiments of the.
i b T W Toppmg and* Rowley Sprout Hoff took charge of the program. day on which voters can register for game this spring and will be all set L. C. Hendee $25 for and 6 wounded, j
x
Twelve of these were taken «1 on Mrs. Tansky gave a talk on organized the April 5 township and htate c k c - to a-o
Dwccii
i.e*
«
.
.
.
^
.
.
These
dogs
were
also
in
John
Spears'
go
places
next
winter.
k
characters. Mrs.
« * * » . Zuse
. « — » won
" - » the
— rprize
— - tion. I will receive registration on
o S e r 15 of that year which must cnanic«!«.
According to plans the school will flock.lf the owners of the dogs are)
Mixed Dances. Sponsored by 8W
in a memory contwt. The next meet- ^ <jay up to and including that dato
1
it
O r Ing will be at MM. Ford Lamb's with & my borne or at the Darrow Barber have a baseball team this year and found they will be liable for said;hftMary * AHar Society
nlav 7 or 8 gam^^. T h m seeans to be damages,
_ M
.
ll £ ^ ^ ^ i M w c h * * ^
fc
(hi commits iurniiWng the lunch, shop,
-,^
,„
r. .
Considerable baseball talent aVailabU,
%«* B W | i l
1«<0A
^
r
1
i
.
.•}'>•-
1
.
;
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
•
.
M
I'i
1
Pinckney School Notes
w£ W
King's Daughters
Mrs, I, PftUtr, 8M,
tulu Ofrrow, Twp. Clerk
•*
4 •-
#
MSSB
vi^
'^^•$T:P9$$
*
The Pinckney Dispatch, Wednesday, March 17, 1937
Smart Knit Blouse a n d Skirt
colored string or yarn, in one of
the new shades! In pattern 5655
you will find instructions for making the blouse and skirt in sizes
16-18 and 3840; an illustration of
the blouse and of all stitches used;
material requirements.
To obtain* this pattern send IS
cents in stamps or coins (coins
preferred) to The Sewing Circle
Household Arts Dept., 259 W.
Fourteenth St., New York. N. Y.
I AM THE FAMOUS
O-CEDARMOP. THE
WORLD'S MOST POPULAR
HOUSEKEEPING HELPER.
I WORK FAST* HOLD THE
DUST-NEVER SCATTER IT.
I'M EASY TO WASH.
Pattern 5655
Like a gay addition to your "all
year 'round" wardrobe? Of course
you would! Then take a tip and
knit this fetching blouse. You'll
love the laciness of a pointed
yoke, so prettily set off by plain
stockinette stitch, and are sure to
adore the snug fit of ribbing 'cross
the hips. Ribbing also bands the
simple sleeves. Knit it of soft-
Big Minds, Few Words
As it is the mark of great minds
to say many things in a few
words, so it is that of little minds
to use many words to say nothing.
—La Rochefoucauld.
0(£dar
t'OUSH
MOPS . WAX
TRAD
Glad news indeed for the millions and millions of people who
like the famous Smith Brothers Cough Drops:-*
SnHb Bros. C M * Drips an tfci MrfytfrapsMotaioino VITAMHIA
This is the vitamin that raises the resistance of the mucous
membranes of the note sad throat to cold and cough infections.
PLEASE ACCEPT
THIS J/afJcj&WrT
4-PIECE SILVER SET
for only
25c complete with
your purchase
of one can of
B. T. Babbitt's
Nationally Known
Brand of Lye
THIS
0
A General Qui*
• BtU Sradkete,—WNTJ Service.
Lansing—According to word received from Washington, Senator
1. Is a waterspout at sea comPrentiss M. Brown has designated posed
of salt water?
James H. Flynn, Jr., of this city
2.
What
meant by a favorable
for West Point entrance examina- balance ofistrade?
tions.
3. What is a flambeau?
Ypsilanti — Women students of
4. What next to Russia is the
Michigan State Normal College out- most populous country of Europe?
numbered the men nine to four in
5. Is a lunar month shorter or
a list just released of all A stu- longer than a calendar month?
dents for the fall term. Of the
6. What does "fin de siecle"
thirteen students who received per- mean?
fect ratings in their academic work,
7. What is the difference befive of these were seniors, three tween an aria and an area?
does "centripetal"
juniors, three sophomores, and two 8. What
freshmen. Of this group, two were mean?
9. In what sea is the Isle of
local girls, Betty Malley and Susan
Man?
Haviland.
10. What is the difference beIonia—One of those oddities that tween
an oboe and an obi?
happens once in the proverbial life 11. What
voice is sometimes
time was revealed here. Zt seems called "treble"?
that a year ago Forrest Kuhtz, local 12. Which bird stands up to
mechanic, dropped his eye-glasses hatch its eggs?
on the floor. They broke. Last fall,
Answers
his new glasses blew off as he rode
1.
No;
it
is
of fresh
in an airplane over his father's water in the composed
form of rain or
farm near here. They fell 4,000 feet cloud particles.
to the ground. The glasses were
2. An excess of exports over imfound recently by his brother, un- ports.
broken, in a field.
3. A torch.
Sebewaing—Throw-back to zoolog4. Germany.
ical specimens of teeth of prehis5. Shorter.
toric man is the fourth molar ex-6. End of the century—up-totracted frcm the jaw of Wilfred date.
Sellers. The tooth, which c a m e
7. An aria is an air introduced
through behind the wisdom teeth, into an oratorio or opera, etc. An
was three times larger than a nor- area is an enclosed space.
mal molar. Commenting on the oc- 8. Tending or drawing toward a
currence, the dentist who made the center.
9. Irish sea.
extraction said that a fourth molar
occurs in one individual in several 10. An oboe is a reed musical
instrument and an obi is a broad
million, on an average.
sash
worn by Japanese.
Ann Arbor—This city's first sit- 11. The
down strike lasted but half an hour 12. The soprano.
penguin. The eggs are
recently. A local bakery gave 11 held off the
ground in the penstriking drivers assurance that a guin's feet.
pay raise would be granted. The
drivers, who are not union memSelf-Reliance
bers, mefae their demands informally. The proposed wage and comIt is easy fo see that a great
mission increases will equal pre- self-reliance must work a revoluvailing rates in Detroit. The bak- tion in the offices and relations of
ery owner remarked that only com- men; in their religion, in their edpetitive conditions had prevented ucation, in their pursuits, their
modes of living, their associations,
an earlier increase.
in
their property, in their speculaDurand—Those who long for the
tive
views.—Emerson.
good old-fashioned days, w i t h
friendly community song-fests and
choral offerings of a by-gone century, may well seek a haven in the
singing school conducted by Mrs.
Abigail Parsons. Using a tuning
fork more than 100 years old to
strike the key, Mrs. Parsons opens
a century-old song book to the tunes
ISCFOtU
of long ago. Both were used by her
grandfather, who also was a sing2 FULL DOZEN
ing-school teacher.
FOR 2fc
DEMAND
t!**\
Hillsdale—Jacob Beck, who has
AND GET
the reputation for never failing in
GENUINE
any of his farm projects, looked
back on his record and decided on
a new wrinkle. He made one selffinanced attempt to drill for and
find oil on his 600-acre farm tract.
Undaunted by his only business
Old Age Is Deliberate
venture that has failed, he is going
Young men soon give and soon
to try again. Machinery from the forget affronts; old age is slow
first well, which was abandoned in both.—Addison.
after drillers reached a depth of
2,200 feet without success, has been
moved to a place that Beck believes
looks promising.
Lansing—Extension of l i q u o r
sales by the glass to all parts of
Michigan has been recommended
i " ^ GENUINE
by V. F. Gormley, member of the
h
\
INSTANT
State Liquor Control Commission,
as a needed amendment to the liLIGHTING
liquor act. He denounced c l u b
licenses as too often a subterfuge
which rapidly is breaking down
I t SELP. HEATING
control, and recommended t h a t
Class C licenses be substituted.
nine
Allyodhmtodototars e vefoe.eMte u
Local communities could veto sale•Ad it llfhw ittta&tlr. Yea dee1* havetoJ
tfwaatehiwMa
thetreer-no bened Satan.
by-glass under the Gormley plan.
At any rate, it seems that teeth are
needed in the act.
for Mf.aa too*. Tea do
yow? IWtltfH Vita I M
Pontiac—The latest, and perhaps
effort, la eat-thlrdjlan tim*.
the best, safety drive, ^as been in
ft?* J* V* CtBBilM iMtMt-I . - , - . _
1 t'i CM iron tyvry woman wants, It't a <
progress in Oakland County. Depuf ol tint tad labor unr-sothiag like it.
Cotanan jt the ooay way^te Iran.
ties make nightly roundups on
SSWa POtTSJItJD tef H K l rtfelaf aaS r e t tewaei
county highways of motorists who
T M « e O L I M A M L A M P A N D S T O W CO.
JtapMTBW WMMa. Zmm.t Clliafi.n.i
have faulty lights or no operators
licenses. "Courtesy" tickets a r e
A Vital Motive
issued. The drivers who receive
Ideal education is a vital motive
these tickets are given five days in for any and all good work.
which to fix their lights or apply
for a license. If these "warnings"
go unheeded, says the sheriff, the
drivers will be prosecuted on the
same basis as those who receive
regular violation tickets.
Parma — Keeping up with the
times, this community saw its first
strike recently. It seems that students in Coach John Tomshack's
history class at the high school
MORNING DISTRESS
went on a sit-down. Studies were
ttdue to acid, upset stomach.
out and books placed on the floor.
MUntsia wafers (the origSmart handling came from Coach
inal) quickly retitrt add
Tomshack, who lectured them on
stomach sod give atcttiaiy
the history of strikes, in place of
elimination. Each wafer
•quali 4 teatpooafah of milk
regular work. Next day the stuofaufnetia. 20c, 35c &? 60c.
dents were back for regular classes.
Tomshack gave them an examination on the previous day's lecture.
23 of the 28 students flunked.
Owosso— Front page news of New
York's "Prosecutor of rackets/'
Thomas E. Dewey, recently appointed by Governor Herbert H.
Lehman, brings to light an interBUYS something
esting local biography. Bom in mort than space tod drcoladoa
Owosso, Dewey left to enroll at the ia tht columns of this newspaper*
University of Michigan. He didn't It bays space tad circulation
know whether he preferred to he
a lawyer or a singer, but proved pins tht favorable consideration
his musical talent by winning two of oar readers for this ntwapaptff
singing scholarships. Then on to and its advertising patrons.
Columbia University went Dewey,
to graduate in law. Now, at 34 U t Us TtfcMfei Mora Abort X
he is a "crime and gang-buster."
LOOK FOR
THIS CROSS
BAYER ASPIRIN
How to Cat Your Siber Sot
To get your 4-piece Silver Set, merely
send the band from any can of Lye shown
at right, with 25c (to cover handling,
maJttng, e tc.) with your name and addr
OUT
Ask Me Another
ft**
This lovely pur* silver-plated Set-knife,
fork, wrap spoon and teaspoon in aristocratic Empire design is offered solely to
get you to try the pore brands of lye
with 100 uses, shown at right Use lye for
cleaning clogged and frozen drain pipes,
for making finer soap, for sweetening
swill, etc. Yon'll use no other Lye once
you've tried one of these brands.
TEAR
iftnnmnninnnwni
to B. T. Babbitt, Inc., Dept WN, 888
Fourth Ave., New York City, N. Y. Your
Set will reach you promptly, postage
id. You'll thank us for the Set and for
Producing these brands of Lye to you*
B
OF F I R
I/ion tka
CaMjUJau
BRAND
ADVERTISEMENT
AS
A
REMINDER
Coleman
*1 $eT you Sksgway
wass dat turn to
de right!"
Pre)** H rev yeause/f with tht
"First Quart" test. Drain and refill
with Quaker State. Note the mileage. See bow much father this oil
takes you before you have to add
the first qusrf. The reason is:
"Tbm*i am txtra quart if lahritaUon in tPiry gallon." Quaker State
Oil Refining Corp., Oil Gty, Pa.
Toe recall price is 35** per quart.
A RE the robins showing interest
* * in real estate out your way—
and have the kiddies been hinting
that it's about time to go bare*
foot—have you been trying to get
a little house cleaning done—and
have you noticed a few of the
town's rabid sportsmen out poking
around on the fairways—have you
had any knights of the road stop
by for a hand-out or seen any gypsies—in short, is it Spring out your
way? That, of course, brings us to
the omnipresent subject of fashions, and this in turn to the
ubiquitous topic of Sew-Your-Own.
One in Silk; One in Cotton.
If you're a devotee of trim lines
and real comfort make this new
all-occasion dress for yourself
(Pattern 1973) in two versions: a
silk print in which to greet the
bright new season; a cotton one
for day in, day out service.
There's no daytime occasion too
auspicious nor a household task
too menial for one or the other of
these versions. For completeness,
then, and simplicity as well,
there's no substitute for this stylish number. It is designed for
sizes 36 to 52. Size 38 requires 3¾
yards of 35 inch material.
Two Versions From One Pattern.
And see what the Chic Twins
have, two lovely blouses with but
a single purpose—to make you
look your very veriest. They're
combined to make Pattern 1271
the biggest hit of the season.
Think of the endless variety these
clever bits of fashion will give
your wardrobe. Especially now
will ensembles be worn, and to
have certain success with these
one must choose the blouse carefully. Wear the notched lapel
model with casual sports outfits
and the ruff-collared style with the
more tailored suits. Puff sleeves
and saucy peplums are particularly intriguing features of both
blouses. Either is available for
sizes 12 to 20 (30 to 38 bust). Size
14 (top model) requires 2 yards
of 39 inch material or 2¼ yards for
the other. Remember, both are
included in Pattern 1271.
Sewing Easy; Frock Charming.
Pattern 1259 is truly an Ode to
Spring—one that's fit for print,
too. A bright nosegay, for instance, will be just the thing to
promote your charm and grace.
The far-reaching collar and grosgrain ribbon tie will indeed become your pretty face. The puff
sleeves and smart cuffs fairly
snap with chic. Simple to make,
delightful to wear, this frock deserves to be called an Ode to
Spring. It comes in sizes 12-20
(30 to 40 bust). Size 14 requires
6¼ yards of 39 inch material plus
H yard contrasting. The bow requires ¾ yard ribbon. In full
length size 14 requires 6¼ yards
of 39 inch material.
New Pattern Book,
Send for the Barbara Bell Spring
and Summer Pattern Book. Make
yourself attractive, practical and
becoming clothes, selecting designs from the Barbara Bell well-
Foreign Words
and Phrases
planned, easy-to-make patterns.
Interesting and exclusive fashions
for little children and the difficult
junior age; slenderizing, well-cut
patterns for the mature figure;
afternoon dresses for the most
particular young women and matrons and other patterns for special occasions are all to be found
in the Barbara Bell Pattern Book.
Send 15 cents today for your copy.
Send your order to The Sewing
Circle Pattern Dept., Room 1020,
211 W. Wacker Dr., Chicago, 111.
Price of patterns, 15 cents (in
coins) each.
O Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service.
FEEL A COLO COMING?
Do these 3 things
Keep your head dear
Protect your throat
Build up your alkaline
reserve
LVDEN'S
COUOH DtOK
HELP YOU DO A l l 3
Constancy Completes Virtue
Constancy is the complement of
all other human virtues,— Mazzini.
SOREM
MADE HER
ACHE
ALL OVER
Feelsft*a
new wonsn now
Why suffer with muteular pahaVof i
neuralgia, lumbago, or cheat cold?
•ay Hamlias Wizard Oil bring* quick relief to
achiag leg*, ansa, cheat, seek, back. Juat rub it
c»>-rub it in. Maka the akin glow with warmth,
—muacka fed soothed—relief cones quick.
Pleasant odor. Will not stain clothes, At all
HAMLINS
W I Z A R D OIL
f o r M U S C I I I A H />( H I S .:n<1 l>HIN*>
»«<• t o R H F U M A H S M
N F U R / A I <.l "V
IUMHAGO
CH1SI
COlOs
Refinement Bent
Decency arises from a natural
predilection for refinement
Gas* Gaa Mi
theTtmeJSanH
Bat or Sleep
"The gas on my stomach was at b a t
I could not tat or steep. Even my
heart aeemed to hurt. A friend sue*
pasted Adlerlka. The first doaa I took
brought me relief. Now I tat at I
wish, sleep tint and never ftlt bettor.'*
—Mrt. Jat* Fllltr.
Adlerlka acta on BOTH upper a n t
lower bowtla while ordinary laxative*
act on tht lower bowel only. Adlerlka
pi vat your system a thorough etaana[ng, bringing out old, poisonous matter
that you would not believe wat in your
system and that hat been eauting s e e
paint, sour stomach, ntrvoutntaa and)
headaches, for months.
* / • sdewlue) » iaaessaw
a m U y Nrfaeet bmurim
*?*•
SuggSta?
M
_ —
v
bcwt
w.?i
l? see
• * •hew
* « • goad
eleaneliit
with *AXf"Ju
Adlerlka and
you
0
IVi* iV*!, "?, •seenfoi retiavat OAt
"
Uad,nB
BaaaaaaaaBa^aaaaBBaaMBaaaBBaBi
Sit tibi terra levis. (L.) May the
earth rest lightly on you.
Mise en scene. (F.) A stage setting; a scenic effect.
Tout de meme. (F.) All the
tame.
Vi at armis. (L.) By force and
arms; by main force.
Flaneur. (F.) A lounger.
Place aux dames. (F.) Make
way for the ladies.
Dernier cri. (F.) The latest
fashionable fad.
Mutatis mutandis. (L.) The necessary changes having bean
made.
Enfant terrible. (F.) A child
that is always making inopportune and embarrassing remarks.
Y e w douz. (F.) Sweet ayes;
toft glances.
donta. (F.) Without doubt.
AdvertismgDoUar
"Quotations"
— V
I with very nock we eould feces
the attention of more peepta on the
appreciation and mcjentandins of
music—Mr*. Franklin D. Roo$**lt.
When the praeaot Japrimloa is
ever wt will never again be quite
tht tease America* Wo will have e
new and finer Kxatritk.—Alfred M.
London,
Greedinett k natural t bot not restraint It is human nature to re*
tent; H is not human natnrt to for*
|ive,-,4. A. MiifM.
Aa the arts of production improva.
fewer people need to be employed
in producing foo4 and fibre. Unless mort can be employed in indpe*
try inert it trouble,—Henry A. Wd->
lace.
P^ : : !:..-^ ^ . ^ ^ i ^ l S T P I I B I
HBIB^^P
mm*.
T^H
twUr:.'i.'v
tmmmma^
•
' • • * * .
:m-
> ' • ' • . ' * '
ThePbckn«yDUp>tch, .
• ^*a^H^C
\
V/AMO*,
WftcK 17,1537
NOTICE OF MORTGAGE BALE
j W W FOBB ^ U
CAnOMU
I * % * » * « * '** **»**y night. I
>F 1, CHI A,
COUNTY AGENTS LETTER
5 l
*** Temperance play "The Fruits I
Default having been made in the Tk- B T i £ T / J _ i
conditions of a certain mortgage The Probate .Cow* for the Cooaty of the * i n e Cup" wiii be presented!
Soil Conservation
made by Thomas J. Fauasett and
of Uviagetoa,
-, at the Odd Fellowa Hail in rUainfield
The 1936 soil conservation proGoldie £ . Faussett, husband and
gram is nearing a close. The procewife, to The First National Bank of the Probate Office in the City of mission 15c
in said County, on the 17th
Fred Kay of Gregory has moved dure for 1937 is somewhat difterent
Epwell, Michigan, a Federal Banking dHoweU
1987
than tnat followed last year. m e r e
Corporation, dated the 29th day of a L 2 f *tbr3**7tJb»P*
j on the Jay Backus larm.
will
be no spring visitations. Instead
May, A. D. 1928, and recorded in
Present; Hon. .Willis
JudgeL.ofLyons,
Probate
each and every iarm operator will
1 L
the office of the Register of Deeds
receive a statement of his soil deplet- • J I M
>:
for Livingston County, Michigan, on l a the Matter of the Estate of
Minnie G e r d W , M. I.
ing
bade as established by ttie comthe 29th day of May, A. D. 192?, in
—i
Carrie Gardner having filed in said
munity
and county committees. This
Liber 128 of Mortgages on pages
The Quinn clothing store was badly I l « u r e W l l i represent the number of
632-633; and Edward J. Drewry Court her petition, praying for lirea
of row and grain crops that a
having been duly appointed and cense to seii t h e interest of said es- damageu by lire iasT wee* Friday a t ^
certain tract ot land is eligible to
Whatever make it is—and whatcommissioned Receiver of the said tate in certain real estate therein Srignton.
grow
First National Bank of Howell, Mich- described,
I x n e Line at Brighton is building
*** s w U b e m compliance with
ever's wrong with it—well fix it
in€
igan, on the 18th day of June, A. D.
It U Ordered, That the 22nd day' on a *S i t . extension.
i
PW**™This
limit
is
optiomd
and
right the first time! No coming
1934, by J. F. T. O'Conner, Comp- of March, A. D. 1987, at t e n o'doc*;
Ben Reunan, formerly of the Fam- 8ee
« f mandatory.
If the operator
8 l t
lant a
troller of the Currency of the United in the forenoon, at said probate of- ijy hestauraut, Howell, is now mana, j * *
^ e a t e r aoerage of
back for arguments and readjust
States of America, by proper order, fice, be and ia hereby appointed f o r ge? of the Hotel Ingham, Scoot- ^ 1 . depleting crops than this base he
w u not b
merits. No extra-charge work
a certified copy of said order being hearing said petition, and that all bridge.
^ ^
*
* abl u e * «°mply. 1* he is
recorded in the office of the Register persona interested in said estate apHoweU, Brighton and Bunker Hill interested in the program he should
without your permission. And we
of Deeds for Livingston County, pear before said court, at said time Catholic Churches are ail planning P i a n t t 0 ^ « P * " f aceiage of row and
leave no grease on the steering
Michigan, on the 18th day of July, and place, to" show cause w h y a He- S t Patrick's Day Banquets. Howell s g1"*111 c r o P 8 b e l o w t l w established
b a s e acera
1934, in Liber 177 of Deeds, on page ease to sell the interest o f said ee- is on the 15, Brighton's the 17 and
e?e,
wheel to soil your clothing.
fcbi; and said Edward J. Drewry, tate in real a t a t e should not be and Bunker Hill's on the 18.
j
Poultry
Receiver, having^ resigned as such granted;
, j , D , Redtteid of Fowlerville was
Professor Card interprets present
Receiver on July 25, 1936, said resigIt U Further Ordered. That public married to Uiadys Shaffer of Howell trends in terms of future egg prices
9
b
b
iwtion'beine""duiif' "ranted"'thru nt lo0 tKi cue f tiienot
«
&**«»
y
pnbUcaat
Coldwater
on
March
6.
to
mean
that
poultrymen
witn
pulWilliam
Prentiss,
Acting
Comp. a w p y «f this order, f o r three
Vestor Mock of Springport has lets coming into production by Sep»
... . ... . —
.~.>>^w»i, the
wu« n
v k U i g6 vv
vwuiy
- <• Currency,
- '
tioler
of- the
and- on *"-^
said successive \vtfck* previous to said day been appointed chief apiary inspec- tember should be in line to realize
date last mentioned the said Acting of hearing, in t&e Pinckney Die- tor of Michigan by Burr Lincoln, substantial profits from their flocks.
2\^rrency havin*
having patch a newspaper printed and cir- state agricultural commissioner, to He bases this forecast on the theory
<Jji.\.tioller of the. Currency
^niof^rj jin. said
..iA county.
*~
t succeed Don Barrett of Howell.
that the time to get into a business
duly appointed and commissioned culated
.Willis L. Lyons,
Murray «J. Martin, Receiver of the
According to the secretary of is when others are either getting out
i
said First National Bank of Howell,
Judge of Probata state, half of the motorcars of Mich- or staying out. Right now hatchery
A
true
copy.
Michigan, by proper order, recorded
igan still lack 1937 license plates orders and sales of early hatched
Celestia Marshall,
i;i the ohice of the Register of Deeds
which would indicate another last chicks are subnormal all over the
for Livingston County, Michigan, on
Register of Probate.
minute rush. O f the 1,500,000 cars country.
the 19th Jay of August, A. D. 1936,
registered only 861,107 have bought
I know it is hazardous to risk a
in Liber 185 of Deeds, on page 2 5 ;
STATE OF MICHIGAN
plates.
prediction
on future developments in
and the said Murray J. Martin as The Probate Court for the County of
Jonn Hoey of the D. E. Hoey & tne poultry business but in the light
Receiver of the said First National
Livingston.
Sons firm at Dexter was laid up sev- of past history, I believe it is reaBank of Howell, Michigan, having
A t a session of said Court, held at eral days last week as a result of sonably safe to advise farmers who
elected under the terms of said mort- the Probate Office in the City of twisting the ligaments in his leg
have i&ed and prospects of more
gage to declare the entire principal Howell in said County, on the 23rd while playing volley ball in the new feed
next summer to raise early
an J accrued interest thereon due, day of February, A. D. 1937.
LOCAL
LONG DISTANCE
Dexter
high
school
gym.
hatched
chicks this season.
which election he does hereby exerPresent,
Hon,
Willis
L.
Lyons,
Livingston
County
was
eliminated
The h i g h cost of
lt
f
d
h
cise pursuant to which there is
Judge of Probate.
P
claimed to be due and unpaid on In the
s
n
T
c
o
^
*
^
discouraged
many
p
oultr7men,
.ho
Matter of the Estate of
STOCK—GRAIN—CREAM
said m o r t a g e at the date of this
snip contest last weeK wnen rowier m u g t b
ordering
early
Frank Lewis, Deceased ville, its sole ? entry in the regional h a t c h i 3 d ' c hf k kds ' f ^
notice for principal the s u n of Four
*
*
It appearing to the court that the conteets at Albion^ was beaten by enU h e a v y 8al<JS o f ^ p r o bs ap brl / g f oarn<d
Thousand Ono Hundred Fifty Dollars ($4,150.00) and interest in the time tor presentation of claims East Jackson 41 to 15.
summer chicks, whien can be
Produce of All Kindt
Bid? amounting to $690,000 for early
ised iargely on range
mm of One Thousand Five Hundred against said estate should be limited,
That
also
and
that
a
time
and
place
be
apwidening
Grand
River
Ave,.have
mst
j
^
a
n
s
the
bulk
of
the
p'ul
probably
Forty-five Dollars and
Seventythree Cents ($1,545.73) and taxes pointed to receive, examine and ad-1 been let by the state highway de- let c r o p w i l i n t b e g i n c o n t r ibuting
ana insurance paid by said mortgagee just all claims and demands against partment The HiWing <fonstruction K ^ /
s u p p l y until T e end of
WEEKLY TRIPS MADE TO DETROIT
in the amount of One Hundred Fif- ^ d e c e a s e d by and before - ^ - ^ ^ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ^ f £ $ ? J th. yaar or nearly 1938. You can
teen Dollars and Twenty-seven Cents
draw your own conclusions on what
It is Ordered, That creditors of W9 1 ?. a nthe
two projects between Ho- that* will do to fall and winter egg
($115.27), san*e making a total of
d
Brighton were let for $351,- prices.
Five Thousand Eight Hundred Eleven deceased are required to present 1 8*N
j
£ . he _ , . , , • „
,
_ ,
„
Dolars ($5,811.00) and no suit or their claims to said court at said
In
making
your
decision
when
and"!
Seemless Tube Co. how many chicks you will buy this !
proceeding at law or in equity hav- Probate Office on or before the 28th 'a t T,0 Michigan
L
n haa
increased the pay year, remember that the feed prices ,
ing been instituted to recover the day of June, A D. 1937, at ten o f ^ ^^ y0° 8
l°%\
debt secured by said mortgage, or o'clock in th« forenoon, said time and j Tj h?e ^ ¾ ^
place being hereby appointed for the
Milford school has a radio this year have been brought about I
any part thereof;
examination and adjustment of all j equipment
purchased with funds by the drought of 1936. Industrial J
reiae
NOW THEREFORE, by virtue of claims and demands aaginst said de-!
djit a school carnival which plants in Michigan are raising wages
1 1 8 a
the nower of sale contained in said ceased
t P* ™ * ^ rooms to be reached by of their employees. Indications are
that in spite of the strike in Michmortgage and pursuant to the. statIt is' Further Ordered, That public J i m r ^ n t „ a . ? - n ? ! i n c e m e n t s :
| Attorney for Assignees of
utes of the State of Michigan in such
Rev. Lewis Dion, former pastor of igan will produce more cars this
J
Moi Lgagce
case made and provided, notice is notice thereof be given by publica St. Mary's church, Pinckney, will year than in 1936.
y o a k.*end
'
liusiiie^a.
address :
hereby given that on the 17th day of/ tion of a copy of this order for three hold two St. Patrick banquets this
You have heard the slogan "As
HovvciJ, .Michigan.
April, A. D. 1937, at ten o'clock in successive weeks previous to said day year, one at Gaines and one at Deer- the automobile business goes so goes
C«C our pric<
the forenoon, Eastern Standard Time of hearing, in the Pinckney Dispatch field.
< Michigan." If this is tru;.* you will
at the West entrance, of the County a newspaper printed and circulated
A group of business men met be wit-e not to decrease the size oi
NOTICE Vt
MORTGAGE SAL2
Couit House in the City of Howell, in said county.
with
Norman Gallagher of the De- your poultry flock but to have the
;
Di-iauit.s
having
UL'CII made in tiid
Willis
L.
Lyons,
County of Livingston, State of Michtroit Waste Works at the high school usual pullets coming into production
:
conclitiuns
of
a
ccitain
mo. .
Judge
of
Probate.
igan (that being one of the places
gym Wednesday. He desires to build next Septa Tiber, or October. Farm
imme
by
Lluyd
A.
JJIIWS and Florence
«
^
i
A
true
copy:
where the Circuit Court for 881(11
a factory here with a water power flock* for best returns should conW. Dav [.-<, )ub wilV, of the City oi
Celestia Parshall,
County is held) said mortgage will
sist
of
at
least
75%
pullets.
Now
is
to
employ
about
60
men
and
women
1
HuwiMl, i,i\ iii|;.->Loii County, Micnigu.i
Register of Probate,
foreclosed by a sale at public aucthe
time
to
mike
your
decision.
in
a
spinning
and
weaving
mill.
A
to
jju.Mj'j OVvM'.ii'b UMN t u . . .
o.
tion to the highest bidder, of the
t a r e fixed far tarou*
i'OK.v
1 'ioS, a Lojpoi.i:tion orgjanSTATE
OF
MICHIGAN
I
committee
was
appointed
to
inspect
Determine Germination
remaining premises described in said
nis
I
work
of
d
»
kind
IZ(<I
uiKici'
Uii' lawn of tlje Umte-i
Farmers in Michigan may have to
factory. _ Dexter Leader
mortgage as security for said debt, The Probate Court for the County of \
Stales
of
America,
dated December
cjouble-qdcfc t u t ,
or so much thereof as may be necesLirlngtton
Miss Katie McCabe who has been worry about the supply of seed
^•i
iii.'j.j,
u/id
rerorded
in tlie oltioj
t
sary to pay the amount due as aforeAt a session of said Court, held at wintering in Florida has returned available for planting some of their
ol
the
Kc'i.'Ler
of
Deeds
for Liviii^I fields, but the average of the supply j
said; and any sum or sums that may the Probate Office in the City of, home.
bioti
County,
Michigan,
on
DecemI in the state is good as to volume and *
be paid by the undersigned at or be- Howell in the said County, oh the
ber
28
li>y.i,
in
Liber
147
of
Mortc
o
n
s
i
d
e
r
e
<
t
n
e
e
c
u
a
l
o
r
fore said sale for taxes andjor insur- 23rd day of February, A. D. 1937.
Mrs. James Roche spent last Wed- gagee, on 1'ages 22-22 and said monMi%kA6 n f *)f\ Vfl2it*C A f l A i
*
i
superior in
Present, Hon. Willis L. Lyons,
ance on said premises and all other
n U l v v 0 1 H V I 6 4 U 9 A M U quality to the sesd supplies in nei- nesday with her daughter, Mrs. Kus- gagcu having elected under the ternitt
ghboring states.
sums paid by the undersigned, with
Judge of Probate.
sell West in Ann Arbor.
i
uf ^aid niortgaKe to declare the ei.
intercut thereon at six per cent ( 6 % ) In the Matter of the E i U U of
N a w bean seed supplies are caus
Dispatch
of
March
21,
1912
|
.
tire principal and accrued interest.
per annum pursuant to law and to
ing worry. In 20 lots submitted for
Lucy M. Leece, Deceased.
MORTGAGE SALE
thereon
due, which election it do-'js
i
I ho «orr;s ci snid mortgage, and all
/\ • *~ *u~ ~.M..„i«wj ««.«^ifirt« .* i certification only two indicated 90
It appearing to the court that the
hereby
cxmci.se,
pursuant to which
Default
having
been
made
in
the
lr<»al cos!..-, charges and expenses'jtime for presentation of claims
Owing to the crowded condition of I
gemination. Farmers are terms and condition „ / • » , •
^ - there i.s claimed to bu due and unbclvrtfnfr nIT attorney's fee of Thirty ' against said estate should be limited,
theCorrection
institution,hasThe
Detroit House, „,,„• J «.* „„f k „,„ n„A +„„. .
ttrma aim conditions of that certain paid on said mortgage at the date of
canceled
five Do lira ($35.00), as provided and that a time and place be ap- of
to accept prisonersits a g . advised
made thid notice for principal and interest
by h /. in ucordance with *hr tern,- pointed to receive, examine and ad reement
d f o r to
t h eget
r a busy and
etest
r m , n a tbean
n m o r t ~ a f f e dated J u l y 8 , 1 9 2 5 ,
. . . ___nt.v
the sum of Four Thousand Six
from
i
^
,
"St
Jfl
g
«
°
^
d
executed
by
ELLEN
TOBIN,
on for
a v
of the aforesaid mortgage, which just all claims and demands against• ^ ¾ ^ ¾ ¾ ^ m e e t i n g 0 f the Put-' js will
94 percent.
The 8ai n Rwl ie d o owf aFno(w] l e rMICHAEL
TOBiN
° ! u t i run
. from."J15
" to
, Panting
beans
Michigan,
"as Hundred Seventy-seven and 30|HfO
ville
puv.iisw are described as follows:
said deceased by and before said
" nam -Hamburg Famvew Club will be' J h l s » P " n * w »» , b e .to s o w e x t r a s e e d , Mortgagors, to J. C. JOHNSON, of ($4077.30; and no suit or proceedAll of that certain piece or parcel court:
- - Mr.
- * and Mrs. Myron Hend- • to get a good stand.
- Fowlerville, Michigan, as Mortgagee ing at law or in equity having been
of land situate and being in the
It u uraerea, m a * creditors of W d with
h 30
The
It
is
Ordered,
That
Seed
c
o
m
supplies
are
considered
a n d recorded in the office of the Res- instituted to recover the debt secTown^-ip of Deerfield, Count7 of deceased are required to present f « * * ° » M f w
'
*<>»owing
e
t
t
e
r
than
a
year
ago
and
farmers
Livingston County, ured by said mortgage or any part
ed to atpre Baid ta the. program.
i s t e r o£ D e e d s
Livingston and State of Michigan, their claims to said court
are
indicating
about
the
same
plants
Michigan
on
July
13, 1925 in Liber thereof;
:
their claims
court the
at 28th
said K 3 L r : i ;
n.ove particularly described as the Probate
Officetoonsaid
or before
»",•"•" SiU»S mg intentions.
#
1123
of
Mortgages
on
Page 9 1 ; which
East One-half
( E H ) of the
ltatlon
m a
NOW, THEREFORE, by virtue of
day
of
June,
A.
D.
1937
at
ten
£
*
r
^
^
S
Grasses
and
legumes
are
available
mortgage
was
thereafter
and on
H
8aid
Norihcast one-quarter ( N E } 4 ) of
the
power 01 sal<e contained in said
but the price tags attached to alfal- the 23rd day of January, 1926 asSection Thirty-Three ( 3 3 ) ; and
mortgage
and pursuant to the Statufa, red clover and some of the s i f f n e d b y j, c JOHNSON to EDthe East One-half ( E H ) of the
tes
of
the
State of Michigan in such
grasses are far above 1986. A good WARD JOHNSON and
CORA
West one-half (WVs) of the
case
made
and provided, NOTICE IS
native supply of alfalfa seed is con- D . JOHNSON, husband and wife
Northeast one-quarter ( N E } 4 ) of
Geo. VanHom.
, ,
HEREBY
GIVKN
that on April 24,
sider3d a g o o d balance against the o f Fowlerville, Michigan, by assignSection Thirty-three ( 8 3 ) , T 4 N., ceased.
Ineubators and Market Production- higher
1937
at
12
o'clock
noon, Eastern
prices, so that planting inten- m e n t recorded January7 23 1926
K 5 E., aggregating one hundred
It it Further Ordered, That public
Standard
Time
at
the
westerly front
M n g E S warthout.
tions are rated about normal,
•Liber
••
-—
in
122
of- Mortgages door of the court house
twenty ( 1 2 0 ) 0 _.... 0
notice thereof be given by publica- M u g l c
Mrs. Fred Teeplo
the City
Red clover is about ten dollars at
Page
146,
on
which of HoweU, County of in
..^..,^ v * - w , acres more or less, tion of a copy of this order for three R_«d4 m B .
Frank Mackinder, m o r e
. U S A d .l ..
.
.
Livingston,
M
there is claimed to be due,
this heinsr the remaining piece or successive weeks previous to said day JTT *
Mrs. R. Conway \
^J
&** a ^
^
«c* mortgage
(that being the place of
at the date of this notice, for prin- .Michigan
Nwh
approxhnately
25
parcel
or
land
describea
in
said;
of
hearing,
in
tne
rtnocney
msp»wn
^^^g
,..
j
holding
Circuit
Court in »aid Counparcel of land described in said! of hearing, in the Pinckney Dispatch g j j t o j " " .
,.. Mrs. James
l S j ^ a buXl *
. , ,
, j cipal .interest and taxes, the sum of ty) said mortgage
mortgage not heretofore released, 1 a newspaper printed and circulated Question Box.
will be foreclosed
Farmers are
ftt
Dat
advised
to
lo- Qne Hundred Thirty-nine and 921 by a sale at public auction to the
^™li?
5¾.1.¾^. .
tin said county.
• Nathan Knight of Brighton has cate suitable soybeing
bean
and
sudan
M T J R R S ^ J . MARTIN. Reoaiver.
Willis L. Lyons*
i e a s e d the C. V. VanWinkle farm.
, v weather
— ,«A has.,^o«
Dollars,
suit highest bidder of the premises des( $ 1 3 9 . 9 2 ) at
grass seed. Winter
not ol r0 0proceedings
law 6r and
in no
equity
FIRST NATIONAL BOOC OF
Judge of Probata
B ( ? r n t o ReV. a n d Mrs. Ripon on been favorable for new stands of le- hav?«» fc*,** ° « t i f „ f ^ •* «*«„-.- *.vl cribed in said mortgage, or so much
e
HOWELL, MICHIGAN.
,,
,.,
. _.
to recover the thereof as may be necessary to pay
A true oopyt . „
v « having been instituted
Mortgagta,
Johk ifclntjrrt has Purchased the gume seedings. Lack of snow has d e b t s e c u r e d b
Celestia Parshall,
Jd m p r t g a g a
or
the amount due a* aforesaid ,and any
•tARTIN J. LAVAN,
Register of Probata.
residence of the lata Frank Sigler killed off some of thei^youmj plants. a n y p a r t t h e r e / f n o w t h e r * J J W | b
eum
or sums which may be paid by
Attorney for Mortgages,
and W. E. Murphy, that of Rueben while others have been broken of] v i r t u e o{ t h e ^ ^ o f ^ ^ c o n ^ the undersigned at or before said
Business Address:
JEHIM
near.the surface from fraesing and , d i n 8 a i d m o r t g a g e , and pursuant to sale for taxes and, or insurance on
Brighton, Michigan,
•'TWMlf
" a J w a r d Smith of South Lyon has' $ 2 * % .
M| .
the statute of the State of Michigan
sums
sscured a patent on a shorthand '•«» "ices Hitht
intertypewriter.
, t
Poultry and
and to
Dispatch o n S r c h 1?» 168?
Garner Carpenter has rented the
At the January 1 .
„
„
_
.
,
and all
Ida Clark house across the pond and it required 8.82 dozen*
legal
costs,
charges
and
expenses
.in^ T h e Dispatch editor wonders why ^ ¾ *!£& ^"tieHitata "roads this; buy 10 pounds of poultryration as Eastern Standard Time, said mort*
cluding
an
attorney's
fee,
which
Pinckney cannot support a market yUr>
compared with 4.97 dozens a year ( gage will be foreclosed by a sale at
fair as weU as Stockbridge, CheUea, ' ^¢^
Mercer underwent an ap* ago and 2.21 dosens on January 15, public auction, to the highest bidder, premises are described as follows:
That certain piece or parcel of
BrijjHton, FWkrvilk1 and^ Howell.
ptnScttis oparmtion last w«ek.
l y 3 3 . The Feed Chicken ration on at the westerly entrance to the Court
land
situated in the City of Howell,
Elton Jerfray has bought of James * H T W . Harris has rented tha W. E. the same data was 14.34 pounds of! House in the City of Howell. LivingCounty
of Livingston. Michigan,
Mills, theA fine stock horse, Marshall Murphy residence on Putnam s t
chicken to 100 pounds of ration [ ingston County, Michigan, (that bemore
particularly
described as:
Murat. John Jeffrey has rented the
yffa McLaren of Chelsea was i n ! whereas on January 15, 1936, it was; ing the place where the Circuit
The
South
half
of
Lot 43 of CowHwtn men ar\d kn&tt may poufbl*
•ighattt farm in Marion.
^^
WednwcW-He contemplates es»] 6.87 pounds
"
"
dry's
Addition
to
the
Village (now
Utar iht Mtru clothtt.* ^.
•
Jerome Winchell, founder of the tabliahing a chain of motion picture 5.08 pounds.
is held), of the premises described
City)
of
Howell,
as
duly
laid out,
MA8CH
-^
i TWspatch. who recently sold his d r t « S e a t t e s ' a n d " would "male*1 Pinckney J Continued mild weather during in said mortgage, with interest thereplatted
and
recorded
in
Liber
12
li-G«iU.S.GrantUmade '
business here has gone to the wilds o n e o f them •
j February over large areas of the on at seven per cent (1%) pet anof
Deeds,
page
250.
Also
a
part
ot
commander of Unloft
of Kansas to locate. His family will, p f r c y X)t&*7 has sold his fine country'and the nearness of spring num and all lejz-al costs, charges and
the
South
half
of
Lot
88
of
said
follow H m later.
'driving b o n a to Fred Merrill.
are favorable xact-jrt in the feed. expenses, including attorney fees al
Cowdry's Addition, described aa
The
funeral
of
Joseph
Brown,
who
j
£
\
«
t
l
n
g
of
the
school
board
situation.
Egg proauction. having [ lowed by law, ana also any sum or
m
t
lS-Fii* bleed oi the Amert
follows:
Beginning at tha " Southdied at hh1 home in Marion, will b e ^ j d March 16 tha entire teaching been relatively heavy during the win sums which may be paid by the ascon Revolution is shed,
east
comer
of said Lot 8$; thenco
Friday with Rev. Joslyn officiating. -%£ w 4 1 hired for next year. They ter months, uero will probably be signees of the mortgagee .necessary
1775.
Westerly
along
the Southerly line)
Henry Damnum of Genoa after M Supt,.H. D. McDougall; Princ, some relative decline in the later,
later to protrct their interest in t h e prem14-Bl Whitney patents eoV
of
said
lot,
10
feet;
thence Northhaving successively become the fath- j ^ ^ Benhajn; 7th and 8th. Gregory months of the laying period. W i l l i s e s . Which said premises are deston gin.chamgtogsouth^,
erly
parallel
to
tue
Easterly lin*
era agriculhtfe, 1794.
er of seven fine boys is now the p^vareaux: 5th and 6th, Joie Dever- steadily improving buying power,. cribed as follows:
of
said
lot,
66
feet;
thence
Easterlyfather of a girl.
... aaux; Primary, Jessie Green.
consumer dc -ana for eggs and
poulLand in the Village of Fowlerville,
Il—Gen. Pershtno set out en
J
J
parallel
with
the
Southerly"
line or
try
iiici-caee. "^'
This demand County oftlvihgston, StaU of MichThe contract has been let to build
' ""t=£
*•- should
*
punitive expedition into
said
lot,
ten
feet
to
the
East
line oi
should be further aided by the fact igan, and described as follows, toMexico, 19I&
the new Baptist church at Gregory. *«P»OXY PRINCESS".
said
lot;
thence
Southerly
along
the)
r
Over
21,000
has
already
been
sub'•- " — - *
*°
A NEW SERIAL SfORY that competitive meats are rela- wit: /
American ihip sails with
East
Hue
of
said
lot
66
feet
to
the)
scribed.
tively higher in price.
*
Vilfage lot No. 11 of R. A. Hales
ioed for rtarrtoo Rue*
place of beginning.
Kuhn Bros, would like to know
Opening chapters of a grippln
NtwYcrkTieW.
Addition to the Village of Fowlerville Dated:
January 27, 1987
who took a sheet of business station- romance, revealing the exciting an
duly laid out, platted and recorded.
17~Britlsh evocuated BostOB*
"Proxy
Princess.*
a
new
novel
of.
ary from their desk o n March 14 and '• i ^ o r V u aa adventures
of a girl who
HOME OWNER'S LOAK
Y Dated at Howell, Michigan, January
ptvino Aoertcans
wrote a very unworthy letter t o a' rSiinbled
t*100** movie star, will Love, intrigue and adventures of a]
CORPORATION
hope in war. 1778k
Mortgagee
Gregory jrftUenpn same.
. . 'be found in The American Weekly, girl who looked like a famous movie
EDWARD JOHNSON ....
Shields
A
Smith
M, J. Clark will work for 7. T,, thai creai educational and entar- star, beginning in The American
CORA D. JOHNSQW, hueAttorney ^ot Mettftftt
tenan this year and John Krnje, Hf S R a g M i ^ i w W " ^
^ ^
band and wife.
ddi
1
Auto
Repairing
Notes
h. i.
i
All Work
Guaranteed
Pins 4 0
Charles
3
Clark
8
A.A. A. Service Station
HAUUNG-TRUCKING
W. H. MEYER
T
£'alc
Bills
PRINTED
^
^
s
Notes of 50 Years Ago
I
It?-
•«*
"W
'i
3
LPfej
f •wit'
»
e-^p^eree^^ w ^ i ^ ^^p>?ewrw.^^j|
IrVstyeHntata
**
£$5*;
'• f>
f?
• >»
Y^V;-*
• '• ^--.y^"#v
:;rn^r^it^«ru**
The Pinckney Ditamteh. W e A
Stf%.
Howell Theatre
WeA, Than., Frt.,
Mar h 17, 18, 19
ERROL FLYNN- -AN1TA LOUISE
"GREENL1GHT'
\
X
with
MARGARET LINDSAY, SIR CEDRIC HARDW1CKE
WALTER ABEL, HENRY OWEIL
Newi
Short Subjecta
Sat. Mar. 20
2 Feature* 2
Mat. Z P. M. 10c and 20c
BUCK JONES
in
" T H E A C C U S I N G F I N G E R >»
"SANDFLOW"
>j
with
LITA CHEVRET,, BOB KORTMAN, ARTHUR AYLESWORTH, ROBERT TERRY
Comedy
with
MARSHE HUNT, PAUL KELLY
ROBERT CUMMINGS, HARRY
CAREY, BERNDENE HAYS
Novelty
Sun.,Moa. Mar. 21.22 S M M D ' I Biggest, L*r fe »t Hit Mat. Sun. 2 P.M.
JEAN ARTHUR • GEORGE BRENT
in
"MORE T H A N A SECRETARY"
with
LIONEL STANDING, RUTH DONNELLY, REGINALD DENNY
DOROTHEA KENT
Comedy
Newi
Oswald Cartoon
Tua*., Mar. 23
2 Features
2
15c with Courtesy Ticket
Oswald Cartoon
"DODSWORTH"
"ALONG CAME LOVF."
with
WALTER HUSTON, RUTH CHATTERTON
PAUL LUKAS, MARY ASTOR DAVID NIVER
Wad., Thur., F r i Mar. 24, 25,, 26
•Sponsored by the Daughters of the American Revolution
M,r
"LLOYD'S O F L O N D O N "
'
Starring
FREDDIE BARTHOLOMEW, MADELINE CARROLL, SIR GUY
STANDING, TYRONE POWER, C. AUBREY SMITH, VIRGINIA
FIELD and a Mammoth Cast
Betty Boop Cartoon
News
Coming—Jane Withers in "The Holy Terror"
"Champion Waltz"
"Sing Me a Love Song" "On the Avenue"
5SHSH5SHH"HHHSfiHHHEI 9
and Misses Elizabeth, Mary and Williamina Clark of Detroit were at the
Zachman cottage at Buck Lake over.
Sunday. They atso called' on M1M
Juie Adele ball at Top 0 ' the Hill's
Piace.
Howell Chapter, D. A. ft. are
sponsoring a historical play, "The
Lloyds of London" at the Howell
theatre March 24, 25, and 26. The
proceeds are to be used for a marker
to mark the homesite of the late Gov.
Edwin Winans in Hamburg township
near Winans Lake. The residence on
the site wad destroyed by fire January 20, 1924.
Tm
, March 17,1937
3*r-
Chubb * Corners
Mr. and Mrs. Orville Ford and
family of Dearborn spent last Sunday evening at the Fred Yoeman
hcime.
Glenn Kingsley who is working in
Jackson, was home Monday and Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Wagner spent
Sunday in Fenton the guests of Mrs.
Wagoner's sister Mrs. C. Clake and
Mr. Clarke.
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Campbell
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. L.
D. Coffee and family of Fowlerville.
Lion Florence Rozek, who has been
.. o lung in Howell is home on ac^unt of illness. .
Mrs. Karl Niskanen Sr. and Mrs.
Kar] Niskanen Jr. and sons of Fenton. Azel Niskanen and wife and sons
of Flint visited old neighbors here
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Wagoner, Mr.
and Mrs. Andrew Campbell and daughter and Mrs. C. Kingsley spent
Saturday evening with Hartley Bland
and Helen, north of Howell.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank White and
daughter of Howell spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Smith.
M. J. Hoisel was in Lansing last
Thursday on business.
R. Schaffer was in Detroit Monday
on business.
Mrs. C. Kingsley in company with
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Bennett and
children of Jackson spent Sunday in
Dearborn, celebrating her birthday.
Plainfield
Here's a Tip
For Your Easter Trip...
Plan this Year to Go by Bus
Mr. and Mrs. Vance Miljer and
Herbert were Sunday dinner guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Erwin Huston.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lidgar, Wayne
and Margine of Northville called
Sunday on Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Dutton.
*
Mrs. Edith Stowe spent Thursday
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Lillywhite, Mrs. A. L. Dutton called
RECORD LOW FARES ARE AVAILABLE TO
in the afternoon.
Mi. and Mrs. A. L. Dutton called
ALL POINTS
and remember
Sunday evening on Mr. and Mrs. B.
W. Roberts.
YOU'LL BE 8 TIMES SAFER ON A BUS THAN IN
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Watters of JackYOUR CAR.
son were week-end guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Watters and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Anderson
BUS DEPOT AT
are planning on moving on the Harwood faim in Marion this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Leland Miller and
family of Holt were Sunday guests
i^ i r v j i
of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Holmes. Dr.
PHONE 53F3
Braley and Mr. Brown of Highland
Park called Sunday afternoon.
Rev. and Mrs. Ryan visited their
son, Horton, at Litchfield who will
,„ , , , ,
begin business as a veterinary in
| back to her Thome.
Wisconsin this week.
Mr. and * rs. Edgar G. Mayer of Mrs. Fred Hotfmeyer was hostess
Ann Arbor aime Wednesday evening Friday for the Plainfield W. M. S.
Mrs Smith Mow,,, ™.,c w + tB „*. troy rRe m iPnrdy e rMr «Mayer's father, Hen- for dinner, tables were laid for 27.
t h a t Jt w a hi b i r t h d a
ths r L u l S m o n t h l vy m p ^ i n ? f l•£*
'
* *
y After which plans wer* made and
hc
iVkpKS ri^u )5 K g a >D arf
°
'
annivers-i,v.
Other
guests
were
Mr.
nam,* drawn for the Mystery Mother
^h!l hL
M ^ » u U ^ r U ' r r f l a n d Mrs - J™** H. Hayncr and Mr. Contest and the following officers
daGu™wereMrs ^ ^
and were ebcted for the ensuing year.
1
W
5
t w o sons Ja
:¾ i J ~ A . * rL„i 1 il,lt.fr! !?
- ™es Jr., and Charles. The I Pres., Florence R. Dutton; vice-pres.
" '
"
Mrs. Mar/ Was-
Kennedy Drug Stoie
r
t*r*i wt#6 sent to users of electric rtmgei « M |
those ore tome of the replies. Loom for yootfo*
l w * mony advantages you enjoy with an electric
rati^o . . k features no other Move will*give you I
Hamburg
?
9-
i
^
: MI
I K HEW IUCT8IC RANGES ON OlSPUr A?. M F * » ! M f « '
ym%, UKT«C*I sums, ANDm onion
^ ^
n
Mr. and Mis. Sherman Southwell,
Jackson, were Sunday guests of her . «iikiiiiiiiaiuiiiiiiiiinimiioiiiuiiiitiHiiiiHmiiiMiuiiiii
. u.
..
,
She is recovering.
*"
i kTd *Mre TlivVoilins alternate to lister, Mrs. James Livermore and
n
B
f St
Ste h
s
« ^
W t a ^ j 3
I
FT*? ? , P - * Episco- ^ suYelo^vention held at Lan-Mr. Livermore.
quests taoie oeing cemerea wan a p a l church Ladies Guild have been, sine. April 27, 28 and 29,
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Groshans called
birthday cake with lighted candles in having a number of quilting parties
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ryan of De- on Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Mayer, Munith, Sunday.
honor of the birthday anniversary of at Mrs. Charles S. DeWolf's with troit were hqme Sunday.
25
young
people
from
the
C.
E.
T
h
e
q
U
i
l
t
Mrs. Henry
M.was
Queal
Viola
pot-luck¾^i
Mrs. Charles McConnell entertained
Each
p rand
i n t eMiss
d with
a ^
¾
^
class
were
in
the
choir
at
Millville's
her
daughters and husbands, Sunday
Pettys. Each was presented with a
Miss Marguerite Dunning, district C. E. meeting Sunday night.
in honor of Mr. McConnell's birth'
email gift.
Mrs. H. J. Dyer and Mrs. Rollin day.
supervisor of the Flint Dairy and
The meeting followed the dinner Food council, Miss Sdma Vand«vmer Fockler were sick with flu the past
Mr. Fred Anderson is working in S
with the president, Mrs. Charles
a n d Mrs
arr
week.
Ypsilanti.
<3
opened
with
singing,
"BeautlluTlsi!
!
^
,
^
¾
^
1
^
"
^
y
Wehner, presiding. The meeting
Unusual
of Somewhere", scripture reading Burgesso f of
Saginaw were week-end
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Galbreath, 5
M
Miss Viola Pettys and repetition of f"J*«
» « Running's parents
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ovitt, Mrs. Fan- 3
a n d Mr p
the Lord's n^ver
I
Burgess'
uncle
and
aunt,
nie Hill and Mrs. Ralph Hartley, all
Offldal andycommitte reports were * * • « " * Mrs. E. Clyde Dunning.
Mrs. James O'Conner and baby, of of Gregory, and Mr. and Mrs. Ray
•ptead father
given by Mrs. Clifford VanHorn, Mrs. "Mr. and Mrs, Clifford VanHorn Kalamaaoo visited last week with her Hill of Holt, called on Mrs. F. M.
Lester Metzgar and Mrs. Harry Lee. \ were Sunday dinner guests of Mrs.parents, Mi. and Mrs. Fred Ander- Bowdish and Olen Marshall at the
and wear longer
Mrs. Metzgar also reported for the VanHom's uncle. George Parker and
Pinckney Sanitarium, Sunday.
so",
^
Junior circle. Communications were family at Geddes.
Mr. and Mrs, Faye Townsend and 1
*"* ordinary kimk
read. The president appointed Miss | Mrs. Retta Griffin of Waterford is
Glenn Caskey was home over the children of Dansville spent Sunday , 5
Pettys, Mrs. Metzgar and Mrs. Van visiting her sister, Mrs. Smith Mar- week*end<
wit hher parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lon 11
Bacaunoladia.
Horn a committee to form a budget tin, and family.
Worden.
|
The
March
King's
Daughters
meettinct advantafi
for the coming year, subject to ap- Dan J. NoeKer, Henry B. Pryer, ing has been changed from pictures
Clinton Andarson is hopne during 3
no othtre can
proval.
S
Henry M. Queal and Frank Van at the hall to an afternoon meeting the strike at Hudson's.
I
It was voted to establish a loan Antwerp attended the meeting of the at
Claire
Barnums'
lost
their
home
3
the
home
of
Mrs.
W.
L.
Cruthert,
clotet with materials. Mrs. Martin Huron-Clinton River Parkway as- on Wednesday, March 24. The third in Unadilla Tuesday evening, by fire.
It meant aun«y
chairman appointed Mrs. Bert C. sociation at thi Union Building at division will serve. Bring books i o r Only part of the contents were saved,
Hooker and M T ^ e t t y a t o assist her Ann Arbor,
» J*>* pocket
Some insurance wae carried, They
Sanitorium.
,
WJ
in the work. Miss JPetty^ was at»-1 Charles Foland ion,1 Durward and theIvan
will
live
in
th«
Jackson
house
until
to know what
spent Sunday with Mis they build,
pointed chaplain, Miss • JMt Adele I grandson, Charles Jr ., of William- parents Hill
tbii
n a m ia>
at Holt.
t
Ball read torn the>Si}ver Cross B t o n w e r e i u a c heon guests Sunday
Mrs. Charles McGee is 11.
UAik
magazine. Mrs. Harold^ogers con- 0 f Charles Foland's brother-in-law
Mr.
Olin
Marshall
is
in
the
Plnckducted a peanut race, the prize *Jj-!and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Smith MarBendUy.Vroeman Daajaf
ney Sanitarium with bloob poisoning
net being Mrs. Ira Navarre. The tin.
• f aWttouff
Junior pillow was won by Mrs. Wil-, Mr. and Mrs. Ben E. Pryer and in one hand.
H. K. Firth who has been spending
A
large
group
of
members
attended
H S T v H \ ^ , b € 5 t ; u Tvhe n e x ) J e € t t n ! daughter, Rita Marie of Ann Arbor tire Bereau Sunday School class par* some time in Pittsburg, Pa., Toledo.
• yffl 1be held ot nthe home of Mrs Ira c a n e a on Mr. Pryer's parents, Mr. tv at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ohio, and Ann Arbor has returned
to his home here,
)^
fl*!!? ?.*
uu" ,,Arbor Tuesday, a n d M rs. Henry B. Pryer, Sunday.
Robert Downing of Detroit is 2
April 13, with pot-luck dinner at Mr. and Mrs WilliPrn Biad?s sp4nt Thomas Howlett, Dan and Clifford,
Friday evening.
spending a few days with his w i f e ' *
>??• ,
.. ^ 4
* ^ , j 'Tuesday
and* Wednesday
with their
noon
~
— •
^
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Anderson and at Strawberry Lake.
K
€ M t t l 1 > u , eflt Grtaine
*t.iff?
L
V \
.
l daughter, Mrs. Dan Brooks and fan- children of Kalamazoo spent Sunday
hda
p rty
at
er h
e a t i,v 8 t
night with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Elmer Stofflet of SWinans
w'£ iJS
^ \ «. \
^ ,
Ypsilanti.
Mr.Anderson.
rranx wowiett oi uewovc was friends* in Toledo ^hici
Bob White Beach, Strawberry Lake,
Hayner and Charles Ben- Fred
Jame8
Mr.
Frank
Howlett
Detroit
of"Mr.ofand
Mrs,was
B.
William McFadden and children
In honor of her sons. Mortimer's and, n e tt called on Mrs. Grace Beckwith a supper guest
..Mwujee's, 13 birthday anniversary.,at Melius hospital, at Brighton Tues- E. Marshall, Fnday.
o f T o l e d o 8 p e n t t h e w e e k . e m i here> 1 1
Gut*tewere Mr*. A1 W a t r o w . a n d , day where she is recovering from a
Cleve Poole spent Sunday at his The j ^ p . y H e l p e r . g C l r c l e o f 5
dOBt Junior, of Detroit, Mrs. Edwin | recent operation.
home
here.
. . . . . King'e Daughters meet with BarbarajS
.fflwmdB Jr., Edwin Shannon III,. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Crawford of
Mr. and Mrs. Ray U v e y and child-' r^u W a y Saturday. The meeting was i f
MeWn Shannon. Weslev Shannon.|Huron river hereTwere Sundav ^n rjn were Sundavdmner guests of, l n c h a r g e o f th eir'ieader, Mrs. 1 H J 2
Jeaime Bennett, Donald Shannon and ner guests of Mr. and Mr" Robert Mr.
and Mrs. George Roche near M e t l g a r and ctdUd to o r d e r b y t h e §
^Murray Shddon. The afternoon was Bleakly at Brighton
ivooeir Dexter.
president, Maxine Wallace. This was
•pent playin* keno, first prize being
F r e d DeWolf was a wGek.«mri
Misses
uenevieve
ana Arore
aonn- A e birthday party ^or Shirley Case, i l
Misses
Genevieve
and
Ardis
John'.won by MeWn Shannoru second by meat of Mr. and Mrs. Spencer Tkus son spent Friday night with their ) J o a n ^
^ g
hm
Metzga'r
^Mnrray Sheldon a^id third by Jeanne at Pinckney.
s.p«nCer m u s sister,, Mrs. Duane Jacobs. Plainfield. | Barbara, The pnext
meeting will be
A
frsm&tL Luncheon was served.
; Mr. and Mrs. Byron Baldwin and
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Anderson were with Jean BrockmiTler in April.
mnniiiiiiiimiimiiHiH
"Mm.
John W. Dyer when return- family of Detroit S e at; S S ? logweek-end guests of their children in Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lee had as
in* home from Carl Bennett a in cabin at Bob White Beach due to the Kalamazoo.
dinner ffuesta Mr. and Mrs, Mylo
Mrs. Inez Hadley, Dexter and Mrs. Kettlor
•(rUmour* viiUsre turned one of her i strikes.
lad children of Eaton Ra»
ankWa*: in doin* sn the fell, break-j Dan J. Noeker attended the meet^^1*1*1**™«™
W.C.AtUawa,inD^ftatf«to
• n T ^ b bonei in the l e , Just-ibov. ,„rof SU 8 ¾ d r t at HowS ^ M ^ ^ K ^ l d S ^ L l l ^ ^ ^
* S
6 Meabon
J
• J ^ f c t o . S h ^ ^ s taVan to tf>e, wnere
where he
r a n d % two
two vocal
vocal IOOI
solo %w n
S J^ ^
t ^ **
ui.
ne rendered
« R.
« BV B
£ ^ ^* aI SMS SL11
AOWWW
OX *****wtwore.
amV
jreno 2?^
Warner of J S ^&"»
M M wart
it- -
Bradley
Vrooman
Gregory
Paint Products
Lakeland
TEEPLE HARDWARE
ife.«
<$-.^:
2¾ ••
•Ipjlnaf f»»itaihiia where Dr. ilt> much to the pleasure of iha club
#piliiiirt|teiiisiiiiM
•j*h.
'
» £ 7 : JL5:i-™5W!L •??1^ ¾
'•
ftps*
...'/
7'fe«^v
Mi.
-
Mr. *«4.
^
Iwno Wawar of Jackta* ldi.
•*V»:tt$v
'**"*'**^Mmmv*w>i*-** aw
y%
•?<fl
/<:?;-TS»,..",.'s„, >'.>>
£^.^
'.••J' ' . '
7>+-
23
«ft£*ft
WWNte^wiiXj^n gii "11
. JIM in
1
•-.
«PP»3t'A.v >'
C\*...t,*~
The Pinckney Pitpatch, Wednesday, March 17, 1937
•
THE
•„ J L ~ ,
•*•*>
I.Iin m i
°
Cash Specials
•p
For Balance of Week Ending March 2 0
Gold Medal Hour
Fancy Pink Salmon
$1.12
24 1-2 Lb. Sack
3 Can. 29C
Amita Fruit Mix
Maxwell House Coffee
Drip or Regular Lb.
31C
Shredded Wheat
2 ""• 2 3 c
18c
LBS
P. a Soap
4
LGE. BARS.
•
«•
18c
25c
CANS
Lux Toilet Soap
3 Bar.
bun-Ray Crackers
2
2
20C
Pure Buckwheat
LB
Flour 5
19c
Extra Fancy Rice
PER LB.
7c
Banner Nut
Oleomargarine 15c
Strickly Frosh
Eggs PERDOZ. 23c
Cookies Assorted
4 Kind» Lb. 19C
Armours Star Lard
SupremeSalad
Dressing Qt, 2 2 c
Catsup Jge. 14 oz.
Bottle 1Qc
Raisins »PKG. 1 0 C
Paimolive Toilet
Soap per cake
5c
j .J,, i
iff
a
lie Piockney DUpaicb
S T R E Entered
at the Poatoffko
& WHITE
'S*.
I
PER LB.
17c
4LB.PKG.
35c
ALL PRICES SUBJECTS TO MICH IGAN 3% SALES TAX
C. H. K E N N E D Y
Phone 23F3
4 &t Pinckney, Mich, M
Second Claw Matte;.
Subscription $1.25 a year
m Advance.
_ _
PAUL CURLETT
PUBLISHER!
Your Car Washed
at Your Convenience
Mr. and Mrs. Lupo and daughters
were in Ann Arbor Saturday.
We will call for your car, give it a guaranteed wash
Nick Coluber of Detroit spent the
week-end at his farm here.
or grease job, then deliver it to you at an appointed
Miss Leola Stackable was home
from Lansing over the week-end.
time.
Mrs. Roy Mzr.ill of Webster visited her mother, Mm Nettie Vaughn
Monday.
Ernest Frost who has been spending several weeks in Detroit has returned home.
Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Darrow visited
Rev. and Mrs. W. H. Simmons in
We have installed a
Brighton Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Walker of
Detroit were Sunday guests of her
father, Mr. James Martin.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Amburgey of
Detroit were Sunday visitors at the
nome of Mrs. Jesse Amburgey.
: st
Mrs. Gladys Clinton and son,
Ralph, visited Mr. and Mrs. 0 . W.
t ishbeck in Lansing, Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Clare Miller and
son, Rickey, of Detroit are visiting
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Miller.
Ambrose Eichman and sister, Delorss, of Detroit were Sunday guests
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Sprout were
Mr. and Mrs. Max Parkinson were
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Claude
Reason.
in Lansing Friday.
in Pontiac Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Simard of
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Soper were | Stanley Dinkel transacted business
Detroit were Sunday callers at the in Ann Arbor Monday.
' in Detroit several davs last weeK.
nome of Mr. and Mrs, Clifford Van
Gerald Clinton was home from the
Mr. and M«. John nornshaw of
Horn.
city over the week-end.
Detroit spent the week-end with his
Curtis Brown is drawing logs to
Gercyz and Rudolph Petras mother here.
his saw mill, on the C. A. Brown of Peter
Detroit
speiit the week-end here.
Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Murphy and
farm, preparatory to sawing thera
The
Misses
1
o»s
and
Helen
Kenson,
Dick, of Jackson spent the week
into lumber.
end
Mrs.
W. E. Murphy.
Dr. and Mrs. C. M. Sigler and dau- nedy and Betty Carr were in Howell
Mr.
and
Mrs. Joe Standick and
ghter, Marjorie, of Detroit were Sun- Saturday.
fejmily
of
Detroit
were week - end
day callers at the home of Mr. and Chester Decker of the Fred Teeple
guests
of
Mr.
and
Mrs. Orville Nash.
farm transacted business in Howell
Mrs. George Sigler.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Claud;- Reason atWhile bringing a horse to Pinck- Saturday.
tended
the
funeral
Mrs. Francis
riey, Saturday, in a trailer behind
F. E. Bowers and wife, Mr. and Rose in Ann Arbor of
Thursday
afterhis car Syl-'etter Harris tipped over Mrs. P. H. Swarthout were in De- noon.
icar the Wul Mercer farm. He suf- troit Monday.
Mrs. Ida Henderson and Frank
fered a broken
hip and was Mrs. Edith Te-c-ple of Jackson spent White
of Whitmore Lake w-ere Fritaken to the Pinckney Sanitarium. the week-end vith her mother, Mrs. lay dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. W. H. Meyer and Mrs. Philip Nettie Vaughn.
\ . L. Nisbett.
Sprout were in Ann Arbor Friday.
Sunday guests at the home of Mr.
Mr. and Mr,. '. D. Stackable Sr.,
Sunday evening usltors at the their
ind Mrs. Arthur Shehan were Mr.
daughter,
'
*ola,
son,
Henry,
Will Brown home were Miss Kew
>nd Mrs. Frank Brown, H. G. Valand Ralph Derbin of Detroit, Miss and granddaugh.L., Patty, were Sat- entine and wife of D-troit.
urday
supper
guests
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Smith of Ann Arbor, Mits GeraldSunday guests of Mrs. Ella McD. Stackable Jr.
ine Han-is of Lakeland and Ralph J. Mrs.
Will
Brown
spent
several!
CIuskey
were Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Hall.
days
last
week
with
her
sister,
Mrs.
Nanry
and
family of Ann Arbor, AlCharles Clark has moved into the Joe Brown and Mr. Brown in
•
•
»
-bert
Smith
and wife of Howell.
Iosco.
Frank Johnson house on Unadilla
.
Miss
Dorothy
and Jack RoMiss
Gertrude
Mcintosh,
nurse
at
St., recently vacated by Clarence the Pinckney Sanitarium, returned berts of DetroitCarrspent
Stackable. Mrs. Ida Mowers will home Monday fr< n a trip to Flor- night with Mr. and Mrs.Saturday
Herbert
move into the house vacated by Mr. ida in company with her cousin from Palmer and with th"m motored
to
Clark, which she recently purchased. Holly. Miss Cooper of Stockbridge Lansin g Sunday where they were
Mr. 2nd Mrs. Don Swarthout visit- substituted for her at the Sanitarium I ^ ^ guests of Mr. and Mrs. A.
ed Mr. and Mrs. Victor Bourbonnais during
Meyer.
her absence.
n Lansing, Sunday.
Call 59F3
Spark Plug Cleaner
Lee
Lavey
We Deliver { L m u t t i m u m ^
fen Driver of Dexter was in town
Joe Basyblo was home from DeMonday.
troit
the week-end.
NEEDS AND DESIRES
Lee Lavey was in Lansing on busi- , Tony and Walter Ribka are driv- i ~
ness, Monday.
ing a new Ford V-8.
Lucius Wilson Jr. was home from
Mrs. Rober Kelly and son, GorNOT THE SATISFACTION
Lansing Sunday.
man, were in Howell Thuisday.
OF NEEDS, BUT THE GRAMrs, Louis Shehan and Mrs. Edna
Miss Mary Ellen Doyle of Ann ArSpears were in Detroit Thursday;
TIFICATION OF DESIRES IS
bor spent the week-end in Pinckney.
Helen
Vanderwall
visited
Billie
A, M. Roche of Lansing called on
WHAT KEEPS THOUSANDS!
Baughn, Sunday,
his mother, Mrs. James Roche, MonOF PEOPLE
POOR AND
Miss Olive Bullis was home f r o m l d a y
Detroit the week-end.
j Mr. and Mrs. Frank Martin of DeSTRUGGLING ALL THEIR
Mrs.
Ben
Adarns
was
taken
to
the
"troit were dinner quests, Saturday,
LIVES. MONEY ALONE IS
Ann Arbor hospital for treatment, • of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Bucher.
GENUINE
WEALTH. NO! Monday.
| Mrs. James Koche, Mrs. Kathleen
Mr.
and
Mrs.
C.
G.
Stackable
and'Crotty
and daughter, Norine, were
OTHER MATERIAL POSSdaughter, Julie, were Lansing shop- Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and
ESSION IS AS USEFUL.
pers Saturday.
Mrs. Russell West in Ann Arbor,
Ed Knopke and wife of Detroit
NOTHING WILL TAKE ITS
Mrs. Nellie Briggs of Howell
were
week-end
guests
of
Mr.
and
I
spent
the week-end with her father.
PLACE.
Mrs. W. C. AtLee.
I R. G. Webb.
Mrs. C. L. Sigler and Miss Fanny
R o „ w v , ^ a B„A .. •#* „ n*t FT^d a J l
BEND ALL YOUR ENERGIES
Monks were in Ann Arbor last Wed- e v e B n " W w l 5 v nT^ S ^
£ ^
Mr
nesday
afternoon.
22?"^*Tft*
JP*S
*
.
?
'
^sil
TO BUILDING UP A LARGE
Wh
a
1
Clarence Stackable and Henry, J * * , ^ , ¾ ¾
Sanitarium.
BANK ACCOUNT, EVEN AT
MrS
U
l e aTld
Gehringer
attended
an
Insurance
n
i
;
?
£
l
j
?
°
?
- MAr> aAnd
M
r
THE COST OF GREAT SELFBanquet at Flint Tuesday.
w - S T v J S f f S - M ^ ? m A n n Ar"
DENIAL. SOONER OR LATER
d
M l Bergin
and Mrs,
W.on
J. Mr.
T^lady
and | b o Miss
^¾¾
i Monday
Stackable
and Mr. ElM f » Mary
Jane
called
and
Mrs
YOU WILL FIND THAT REden
Burton
of
Detroit
wero
callers
WARD COMING TO YOU ' C. G. Stackable Sunday.
at
the
home
of
her
parents,
Sunday.
Mike Damascus, who has been held
THAT COMES
ONLY TO
Mrs. Ida Henderson and Frank
in the county jail for some time, was
Henry
of Whitmore Lake were FriTHOSE WHO HAVE THE
taken to the Pontiac asylum, Monday.
day
dinner
Miss Helen Reason won the spell- L. Nisbett guests of Mr. and'Mrs. A. ,
STRENGTH TO DENY THEMing contest sponsored by the Detroit
SELVES THE UTTLE LUXMr. and Mrs. Lee Lavey had as
News
at the Pinckney school reURIES OF LIFE IN ORDER
Sunday
guests, Mr. and Mrs. Leo
cently.
Lavey
and
children, G. B. Patterson
to ACQURE THAT GREATEST
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Stackable Jr.,
Q
OF ALL LIFE'S NECESSITIES
and children were 'Sunday dinner ^ 1 ^ * £, J a f k a g n Dinner guests Sunday of Mr. and
guests at C, G. Stackable's home.
—A LARGE BANK ACCOUNT.
Mrs,
C. E. Bucher were Mr. and
Merlyn Shehan and wife of WindMrs.
Albert
Groh and Mr. and Mrs.
sor spent several days last weak with
G.
W.
Goodson
and children of Dehis parents,. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
3
troit.
Shehan.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Standlick of De- X
Orville Amburgey has sold his farm
to Dr. Sohilski of Detroit. He will troit, Homer Milliron and -vife spent s
ui HowtlL
remain there for some time, how- Saturday evening with Mr. and Mrs.
L. J. Henry.
ever.
Under Federal Saperrieion.
Dr. and Mrs, Walter Mercer and
Friday callers at the home of Mr.
Member Federal Deposit Inson,
Billy, of Webberville were Sunand Mrs. James Wylie were H. G,
surance Corporation. All Deday
afternoon
guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Roche of Wailed Lake and Bernard
posits Insured up to $5*000 lor
Will
Mercer.
Kitson of Wixom.
'
oaab Depositor.
Sunday callers at the home Geo.
Mrs. Walter Glover of FowlerBland
were Miss Burdetta Carr,
ville and Mrs. Millie Glover of YpsiMiss
Lessie
Farrington, her daughlanti were dinner guests Thursday
ter,
Helen,
and
sons, Lyle and Franof Mr. and Mrs. N. Pacey.
cis
of
Stockbridge.
Mrs. John Hornshaw was notified
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Grelner, their
!
of
the death of her brother, Joseph Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Stackable Sr.
er, Mary Jo, and Marion
of Detroit spent Friday at the Watson, at Brighton, Tuesday. The had as Saturday dinner guests, Mrs.
funeral will be field at Detroit under Kinney, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Greiner home.
Stackable and son, Fredrick, of 1
, The Past Matrons of The Pinckney Masonic auspices, Thursday.
Whitmore
Lake.
Mrs. Nettie Vaughn had as Sunday
Chapter of O. E. S. were entertained
Mr.
and
Mrs. M. E. Darrow atby Mesdames May Bullis, Marion guests, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Reason tended a birthday dinner Sunday at
Pearson and Nettie Vaughn at the and son, Mrs. Edith Teeple, Miss the home of Rev. and Mrs, W. H.
hitter's home, mi
Simmons at Brighton, honoring the
o'clock luncheon.
birthdays
of Rev. Simmons and Mrs.
of Webster.
H.
C.
Adkins
of Brighton, Myron Ely
I
of Ann Arbor and William Fogg of
Cbieftfo.
I Mrs. George Meabon Jr. was hostess at i dinner party Sunday the oc*"'
her birthday anniverpresent from out of
Mr. and Mrs. Milton WatA^daughter, Frances and
of Jackson, Mr. and
„.. _,
ttehum their daughter,
REASON
SONS
I FH.,Mar, 19 G A S H S r feGIALS Sat.,Mar 20
Spry
THE ASSURER
ALL-VEGETABLE
SHORTENING
Frying, Baking, Biscuits. Pies
I Macaroni or Spaghetti
BULK
14
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
LB.
SWIFTS
Com Beef
CAN
Jello
C DELICIOUS FLAVORS
4
FKGS,
KCLLOGG'fr
WHOLE WHEAT
JP^Bitcuit »•
H
Uttfla and sons, Clare, Herbert, taw*
m e t tad Sari of Lanalnf, Mr. and
K% Urau Maafcm and ion, DonaM,
oi Pontius, Dm Mwwu«? i t f wih
SODA
2
Lifebuoy
HEALTH SOAP
BARS
Oleomargarine
Frankfurt.)
Oysters
Cod Fish
of uaeanj*.
'**,.; ;&£i
l'•'*"•• i„
V
Crackers
» BOX 17c
1
The Pinckney Ditpatch, Wednesday, March 17,1937
THIS
1 SAME
WASHING TON
Awarded Vail
Medal for 1936
NEWSLETTER
CONSERVATION
DEPT.
NOTES |
Py Congressman Andrew J. Tranaue
Sixth Djttrict, Michigan.
Record for sales of deer licenses
are still soaring. Up to Feb. 28, 1^37
records compiled indicated 133,116
Coal and Court*
While the Senate started hearings had been sold.
in the Judiciary Committee on the
Karl F . Lagler of Cornell Univeri Presidential proposal to reform the sity is making a study of t h e ques' Judiciary the House of Representa- tion as to whether snakes, turtles
l lives last week passed the
Guffey- and birds a r e predatory enemies of
Wilson bill to regulate and help the fish. His salary for 18 months will
rar""
soft coal industry while improving be paid by the Wildlife Institute. 1 he <
the living conditions of 500,000 coal University of Michigan will supply i
miners, and began consideration of headquarters.
I
neutrality
legislation. Outside of
The National Forrest Reservation
Congress the other highlights of the has approved an exchange of land
I woek in Washington included a sen* with the state of Michigan involving
tence of 30 days in jail and a $100 60,000 acres for conservation
purrine for Dr. Francis E. Townsend for poses.
abruptly leaving a House Committee
State park
authorities
reported,
Investigation, and H a r r y K. Thaw
revenue
accrued
to
them
las*
year
Congress is debating the Pettengiil bill which;
learned that it costs $2,200 to punch
of
$'<,884.6Y
i
r
o
m
the
sale
of
candy,
I
a hotel waiter in the eye.
in substance, would permit the railroads to com*
soft drinks, tobacco, bath house anU *
Attorney General Homer S. Cum- bathir.g mi: lencals and boats in
pete with intercoastal steamships*
mings was the first
Adminstration state owned parks.
|
witness to testify before the Senate
r
During the last l o u r years the 1
The clause of the Interstate Commerce law
Judiciary Committee. He withstood
C.C.C.
zorces
have
completed
more
J
a barrage of Senatorial questions afwhich the bill would'repeal was perhaps once
ter outlining and advocating the than 34,t»0U acres of laKe and pond
beneficial, but has become restrictive*.
pl.m pn -v.'Mted by President Roose- development anu 3,164 mii^s of
i •.
velt. '1'
..unate hearings began the stream improvement.
A boom year has been reported by
(iay •
. ihe President gave his secI
No like prohibition governs the railroads' land,
Michigan
l u r trappers. MusKiat pelts
uii
: ..o address on the plan.
j
air and water competitors, and none is contemcoal regulation approved
by doubled in value.
147 bobcats, coyotes and wolves!
plated for them* It applies to the rails alone, with
.;•(• wouse of Representatives marks were kiiled b y ' b o u n t y ' h u n t ^ s in this
the ,ucond attempt to enact laws s t a t e m J ? e b l . u a r v . There were 77
the original need for it non-existent—imposing a
that are designed to improve the Am- b o b c a t s b y w o l v e s a n d x
l e m a l e
w
encun .standard of living, particu- w o i l
handicap on them while it confers advantages on
jarly among the coal miners
The
, ^ mild w i n t e r hag ^ ^ t h e ]ife ,
their competitors*
former Guffey Coal bill was outlawed' o f t l i o u s a n d s of trout by causing
1*7by the nd
Supreme
Court on account
of American merganzers to do their
hour regulations.
The new
Repeal of this clause will hurt no one; will
bill omits the wage and hour feature hunting in otner places. These a r e
while setting up regional boards to expeit fishers and will take trout 14
make lower rail rates eventually not improbable;
fix coal prices under authority of a incnes long.
new Federal Coal Commission. Coal
Tne woiKing man will have 20
will create an additional 100,000 railroad jobs.
ronccrns that comply with the regu- Sunday's and a holiday to spend on
lations will get a rebate of 1 9 ½ per his iavorite trout stream. The season
Michigan Bell Telephone Com.
Nor will it reduce the ICCs powers; or enable
rent of a 20 per cent salos tax im- opens April 24.
Any Maytag may be had
pany plant employees cited for out*
posed at the mines. The ultimate
Landowners who burn their fields
with gasoline Mutli-motor.
the rails to charge rates that are unreasonable or
standing acts of public service that
I'urposi of the law is to -enforce the or marshes should do so as early as
:ii;'
us:"
•'
of
coal
to
share
a
proper
resulted in saving lives. Top, John
* The first payment made on
possible to save wild life. Much of
unduly low so as to eliminate competition, or to
c. t4 a!...^'
with
A Freese, e x c h a n g e repairman.
.
... the
.,
,home " ~ *--*"-* i this will be destroyed if this is not
a Maytag cast-aluminum t u b
washer a t today's low price
Kf.Iamazoo. Bottom, Floyd J. Evans,
raise rates if competition did disappear*
c,t a w with the home consumers | d
j
untiJ ^
nest^
seasonwill s t a r t a chain of washthe
coal
mined
building Inspector, Saginaw.
-ho use only a small percentage of
commissions as conservation
offl-1
days t h a t will save money
l p c o a l mNeutrality
med
Dispute
' c e r s without pay have been issued to j
The bill is favored by great bodies of shipfor you every week .A price
C?sh and Carry neutrality was in- all national iorrest rangeis. T h i s '
increase has been announced
DRESS YOUR AGE
troduced in the House on Friday un- gives the latter lull authority to as- I
pers, by trade organizations, by the railroads and
by t h e factory to be effecder a special rule a l l o w i n ^ t e n hours sist game officers.
,_.
WOMEN
ADVISED
f
tive soon. Get your Model
railroad labor* It is opposed by steamship inter*
i:fb:i(e. The House Foreign Affairs
ICiectric lighting devices will be |
80 Maytag now. Its covenCommittee
recommended
decisive provided in state parks this year f o r '
ests and coastal industries who would retain unience and quality will be a
if there are any
secrets aboiu changes in the bill already approved auto trailers.
source of joy for years to
spring scyius i o r uj t uiey uiu
fair advantages over inland competitors*
Where the Senate
The Ceobic county board of superL. j in (he Senate.
come.
vea in cue general Oil ui uu\iCe <.u ' I'itloian bill contains mandatory pro-' visors have offered the conservation
v. union, stjries are ut-sigjieu
Un*. vision-: the Houxe substitute niea department the assitance of
America's railroads face the most unprece—• - • w.^,'bnuiv niea-1 ,. ".i
.-..¾.¾. ^^ a motor
) v-ar Lu lit UJJV." m e r e <uc ->u iiidii^
c y c l e S( uad. t 0
•^ti'-o
would
allow
the
Presidr-nt
greatenforce
the
game
dented competition in their history* Unneeded
uiuexcjil siyic-s this .spring uial si I.> or l a t i t u d e and discretion in dorid- Jav™*
.„
„,....II.IIUII
111
Ul't.'lU"
i-ussiUie lor every Woman to wear J.
Nearly two dozen kinds of ducks,
restraints, like this obsolete clause, should be re*
j int»: iibout munition .shipments. House
SUJL inat it. u i n e i e n i irum uuti oi a
three speck's of geese and one swan
t
l<'fuiers
insist
the
Senate
.measure
moved that the lines may better be able reasonmend.
„,...,^
migrate through the Great Lakes reii >ou are long and slight, or ma- j is not flexible enough and would even gion, according to Dr. M. D. Pirnie,
ably, and legally, to compete*
tuie out v\iHi a youtjiiul n g u r e , U;u i prevent ti'jido between the United in charge of the W. K. Kellogg Bird
i
Slates
and
Canada
if
Great
Britain
smartly tailored tuit wiui .shun
Sanctuary.
Gregory, Mich.
Michigan, and its railroads, will benefit from
jacket and nipped in waiht line u u i i j wont to war with some oth«r nation.
More than 07,000,000 barrels of
Standing
Room
Only
slightly widened .shouldu.s i.s the one
Easy terms on balance. Lib*
the repeal* Support for the Pettengiil bill should
liefor' 1 an «*uidionce that pacl<ed crude oil have been produced by the
eral allowance on your old
suggested by hithcl G. Webb, iissut:- !
oil industry in Michigan to date, aceveiy
inch
of
./);»fe
in
the
new
Suwasher.
late prolessor in clothing at Alienism
be asked of the State's delegation in Congress*
coiding to records of the state geoState College. The very shuit loo.-.e j jireine Court building while several logist.
boxed jacket may be youivs if you an: linndi'td oth r persons thronged the
young and slight in iigure or il you i corfidu'' •; u sich' the court joom the
are older but slight
and
liavj a lot,I Su]:i'eine Court la.-'t w.eek announced CASE CRACKS DOWN
...
„
.
_—
..»..„
i ihuM'
would be no oral decisions that
GUS RISSMAN
i
ON USED CAR 'GYP"
ol
pep
and
can
livs
up
to
this
jacket,
i
d"'
y'1'he
l a r . e crowd came in antlci
PLUMBING and HEATING
1'neie is the wrist or I'mgLr tip pation of healing the Court verdict
over 20 years experience
jacket with a tuxedo collar which that would decide th > constitutionRevocation of the licenses of t\vo|
Will be glad to give estimates on Jianga loose and has a sleeve will)
used
car dealer sin the Wayne conuty
al ity of recent labor legislation.
t h e following installations:
some width at the hand. This might
area
for
the sale of re-built automoGood Morning Judge
•Stoker
be said to be agel-ss. If collarJe. s
biles
und'Sr
the presentation that they
Dr. Townsend announced an ap•Plumbing
it is better worn by a younger per- 1'oal from the 30 day jail sentence weie new, has been ordered by Leon
* Steam or hot air heating
son. This jacket may be worn with and $100 fine impeded in the District D. Case, Secretary of State.
•Electric pumps
other dresses if there is no contrast of Columbia court;: for walking ou.
All such dealers are licensed
by,
IV. WHAT OTHERS THINK
• W a t e r systems
in lining or trimming which make.- of a House .es.-un. A jury had found the Secretary of State, by law. Case i
•Oil burners
it belong to the original dross alone. Dr. Town.S'jnd guilty of conten,- ha.-, nctiiied uil second hand car deal-{
,
«11 E. Grand River, Howell
A suit of this style may haw- com- under t'.e J u d g e s i n s t r u c t J J I S
two ers of the state of the recent revocaFr
m
Phone Howelt 610
plete dress to accompany it as this is wct'lirf ago. The sponsor of tne .^ut/ tion orders, with the caution that all
o; •rom actual studies detailed prcvi- "As advocating effective roadside
lv it rc.-idiiy becomes apparent development and control in the jn*
much more flattering to many
fig- a riioiitli pen.'-ion plan ior pcrsui.s complains against i\ny licensees will!
Mich:
ures
than
a
blouse
and
skirt.
A
more
;an has much to do in the tcre;>t of promoting travel and in»ON W. VANWINKLE mature person may better select one ovei <JU yeais ol aye ashed ior a i^)C U , ' i y i n v e s t ' £ a t e d by ths Departmutur
of rcr.dside improvement be- creasing
safety en the highways of
,1P
.
new trial wiiich was refused by the I ment of State.
sides carry on the program of land- tthe
«at«««
Aktoraey at Law
nation.
which has just the skii-t, a blouse Luui't. 11 is attorney announced the
Any complaint of alleged illegal'
scaping now started.
"We endeavor to stimulate naOffiM •••>• Firet State Savings BanJc which is less tailored, and vith th •
practices
on the part of any u s e d j
u
.
s
.
"would
be
appealed
to
the
highMichisan
has
a
<rrcat
opportunity,
tional,
state and local legislation for
short
peplum
worn
on
the
outride
of
Howell, Mieh,
car dealer will result in a request
XatiTc has endowed the state with n j ? " effective control of roadsides."
the skirt. So mo blouses are shown est court in the hind."
that the licensee show* cause why his
Expensive Luxury
lakes and rivers and a variety of , T h e National Safety Council dewhich come over the skirt just at the
license
should
not
be
revoked,
Case
K c c u i t n c .viilJioJiaue h u r r y Thaw.
fanning. fruit growing, all interest- clares. Instances are too common
NORMAN REASON
front like a man's vest with a belt
has advised all concerned.
I
whio.se
escapades
have
been
inteinntiiiR.
The state has established 67 w h . e r c billboards obstruct the view.
across the back. The tuck in tailored
R E A L E S T A T E BROKER
Investigation
of
the
recent
com-/
teiit front page news ior o0 years,
state parks in all parts of the state u l s " o w , d e a r c u t t h , a t the legisla«•, Residential Property and blouses is youthful."
plaints
was
made
by
Joseph
Charwas tne defendant in a damage »Uitj
to save locations of particular * " " h a s t h e power of regulation of
Frontage a Specialty. I Also
Thive piece suite usually are .4,irl.d by a Washington hotel waiter! noske, Detroit legal counsel for the
beauty. These parks are genuine billboards and signs and that such
"City Property to Trade.
tailored in a heavier fabric and seem who claimed Thaw punched him' in Dcpartmant of State. It is Case's bej.Jsvffi-ounds for the peonle and are o c m ' e r »»"<>* }? impairment of priamy,
Michigan suited to young rather than elderly the eye. 'i he j u r y believed him and lief that not only will the public
connectcd by an excellent system of v . at . e a n d individual constitutional
w
r
JU
highways.
^.ts>
,
persons. Especially if fur trimmed ga\ e the waiter $200 i o r his eye benefit from such a policy, but that
and with a monotone of a lighter pain and $2,000 punitive damages the vast majority of the some 2,700
But perhaps Governor J a m e s
The safety council recommends
weight fabric this type with a var- to salve his injured pride and feel- used car dealers in the state will.
Rolph Jr., of California can state t h a t - a united effort be made to
en-|
iety of blouses is a most satisfac- ings. Th2 waiter said there was a welcome any mows which will
the need for roadside improvement s . e c u r . e adequate restraining legislatory costume because of its adapt- lighted cigarette in the fist that force ethical and legal practices up-i
more clearly, Governor Rolph said : *,,on , n a11 o f * « « a t « giving some
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE
ability to so many occasions and var- banged against his eye. Thaw's wit- on those few of their number who
"The values which accrue in Cali- department # therein control over
Pinckney, Mich.
ied temperatures.
nesses said he was an orderly per- might indulge in them,
forma from enjoyment of scenery r u r a l advertising signs .
Old Age Pension
son*
and the accompanying benefit of
National Grouw Active
Applications Made Out MARRIAGE L I C E N S E S ISSUED
.
outdoor recreation are beyond cal*
« • » • » • urowpe Aenre
Coincidence
The following (marriage licenses
culation in terms of money. Millions
Other
national organitationi
On the day t h a t James Thompson
have been issued in this county: Wil- of Flint registered at the Williard
are spent each year to improve the actively supporting the move to
liam Arney, 21, Flint, Carrie Roe* hot^l
noisi in
m Washington
wasnington last
highways of the state. More millions regulate roadside advertising so it
last week
week the
the
poke. 17, Unadilla, consent of mother hotel employees went on a sit-down
ATTORNEY AT L A W
are used both commercially and will not get beyond all boundi a r e :
H O W E L L , MICHIGAN
obtained; Raymond Reader, 22. How-strike.
The
management
asked
privately to develop recreational American Plinnmg and Civic Assoa* C#«m H M M
areas. Such sums however are small ciation; General Federation of
5%i
* Stewart, 2 1 , Howell; MaxThompson if there was any connecindeed when compared to the ready Women's Clubs; Izaak Walton
Wiltse, 25. Howell, Dorothy Warner, tion or contagion in his visit. The
'
u
opportunity
open to each citizen and League of America: National High25, Howell; Lyle Forsythe, 23, South strike was settled before the hotel
each
visitor
within our borders to ways Association; National ConferLyon, Mildred Spencer, 23, Brighton; guests were too much inconvenI know some drivers who take exrevel
in
the
delight
of eye and mind erance on State Parks; Woman's
J. B. Cory, 22 Hartland, Marjorie ienced,
~ . * , treme care of the condition of their
OtNTMT
offered by an endless variety of National Farm and Garden Associaautomobiles. The slightest squeak,
irony
scenery or to relax in peace and tion: National Council of State
(tMMMOf to Dx. R. G. OordAAlt^ Farnhaffl, 36, HartUnd.
rattle or noise is carefully investif
quiet
at a favored beauty ipot.
Garden Club Federations: American
aV^iP
5¾
^
l
e
W
f
f
?
j&ti
Washington
Goldfish
are
supposed
1UH N. MiehlgtA
gated even at the expense of time.
_ . . .
.
Society of Landscape Architects;
, to he the real thing among weather They might be on a trip and have
Offiet boon
j prophets, Spring is supposed to be at only the minimum time to complete
Governor Rolph Apprises
American Federation of A r t s ;
lll*_ll!00
liOO-5;00
J the door when the Goldfish are their appointment, yet they will stop
"California is the motorists'para* American Institute of Architects:
dise and failure, then, to develop the American Nature Association and
' dumped into the ponds and fountain for minutes a t a time to correct some
184 iiturday ivtnlnfi
full possibilities <of her roadsides American Scenic «nd Historic Prespools in public parks and in front insignificant little r a t t l e t h a t does
wouJd be a serious mistake. A far- ervation Society.
of m a n y public buildings. Last week not harm the efficiency of the autoHowfl}
sighted policy of beautifieation will . One hundred and fifty-eight nathe Goldfish were dumped into the mobile.
,
encourage t r a v e l and help our tional advertisers have announced
• inn,
- .
outdoor water one day and on the
when they have discovered
people in the enjoyment of life."
their policy of refraining from road"Thnft i5 toe leu at the'botim ofthi next day Washington had its heaV* theThen,
Under
such
crystalline
thinking
»
i « advertising but the list of
rattle
and
have
corrected
it,
they
iest snow storm in more than a
;
pur it"
the
state
set
out
to
"V\
ork
together
offenders,
local, state and national
6eem
to
forget
all
about
the
rights
of
month.
to make our California highways the ^ ¾ '* largeothers. They have no judgement as to
ll-Sattleehip Orecjof) e:arta
FHWJWtr, MICH.
most beautiful and safest in the . Next read about queer conditions
•'.:*:
spend and apparently lose all control
A NEW STRIKE ANGLE
her fcrmou.* trtp around
United States". What is true in m Michigan.
of
good
driving
sense.
the
Horn
1893
A
new
Rtrike
angle
has
developed
H&H 1*00 i« 2.90 P. M.
California is true in Michigan
A safe driver in n t v e r a spectacuin t h e KEO sit-down strike in Lanafc-Prtnt flr«t Issue o/ Phildsing. The strikers asked some of the lar driver. He is considerate of the
_
dclphia Public' Lodoer,
Lansing ministers to hold services rights of others. He makes sure his
PERCY ELLIS
ar
properly
there Sunday. Rev. Ross of the South ccar
, mechanism is prober
1/ adjusted,
II—Marines
tended
In
HonAUCTION!**
Baptist church refused. He said af- and also makes sure that hjs mental
durns to pfot*»d Arr.ari*
Mrs. Lee Lavey and children visited
is such t h a t he will appre• Speciality——
cans in revolution. 1907 ' ter long prayer and conferences with ccondition
iate
W
o t h e r s
Mr.
and Mrs. Steve O'Brien near
his congregation
he_ had decided it
,
™1
««P«ct him to do
. ngregat
lS'Ftl
Stockbridge
Monday afternoon*
was
> il— New method of inoculatwas n
no
o tt his
his dutv
duty to
to conduct
conduct an**
such I on the highway*
ing toil 13 patented. 1904.
services. Also he said the manufacMr. and Mrs. C. J. Kinnane and
Miss Mercedes Merrill spent the
t u r e r s had never desired services in
daughter,
Catherine, of Ferndaie
week-end
with
relatives
in
Jackson.
WIN A $10,000 FORTUNE
tt—Preeldenl Rooeevelt a>
spent Sunday with Mr, and Mrs,
the factory.
t\
prove* new Philippine
j Mr. and Mrs. H C. Vedder visited Philip Sprout,
PSUXANCI
On the other h a n d Rev. Ledyard
J.
Conlttfution, 1935.
, I mi MF»
of the First Universalist church acYou still can e n t e r The Detroit
"
^ to D e t r o i t S ^
44-fti-ben Koeh announces
cepted and said it was the duty of Times $15,000 All-American Puazle! d a. .y. ^ ***
d a u l r h ^ r 1 ! ; . ? - J« Kin**** and
^
tiixoveryef tubtrcuJosii
^ ¾
Catherine, of FernSe
the church to go whereever aa%ed,
M 1SS
99tm, 1681
Contest, but act now, for soon it
,
Evelyn Darrow spent the ^ ^ 8 T &urtday gue
that Jesus Christ preached everywe k
Phill
will be too lata to participate in this! f -end with her sister, Connie, in * *
P SpreS.
It—Lord eVtlumere'tfir*col*
where. He also panned the attitude
6
1
m
p
e
a
t
competition,
for
details
on
how
|
^
^
^
'
Mr.
and
Mn. w
eny ignes in Maryland, i of Rev. Ross saying this was what
,J
m
~ AT UW
I
to
catch
up
in
thia
contest
see
The'
"'
—
^
~
'
'
' had driven the working man gwgy . Detroit Tiroes. Go ftftw that 110,.
aytag
Removing an
Unneeded Restraint
WILL SOON
COST YOU MORE
1
COME NOW
<•</
LOW
Down Payment
Howlett Hardware
Michigan Railroads Association
IS 'PROVING MICHIGAN ROADSIDES
N. O. Frye
JATTRSWEENEY
T
_
-
'
ML & R. MtCLUSKEY
H t l M C. L S1GLER
Local and General
LEE LAVEY
6^
J. LA VAN
Srlikt*-
f ¾ ¾ , , • • ••* '•••••
/ram >hi church,
„••;
f4&'-".>'..-V
J
i
*±
The Pinckney Dispatch, Wednesday, March 17, 1937
Purse from Sow's Ear
A featurt of the exhibit of
Arthur D. Little, Inc., at the National Exposition of Chemical Industries in 1921, was a silk purst
actually made out of a sow's ear.
The ear was made into glue, softened with water, brought almost
to the point of precipitation with
acetone, then forced through a
warm container into a spinneret,
and through this into a hardening
solution of formaldehyde and acetone in a V-tube. It was picked out
of the V-tube, reeled, dried,
treated to a 40 per cent glycerin
bath in which it was also dyed,
then reeled and dried again, woven and sewed up.
TRUE Bl] THE SUN
CHAPTER I
—1—
The agent in the small, dingy station at Glendale was, obviously, a
little hard of hearing. Jim Fielding
repeated- the question in tones
pitched to command attention.
"Can you tell me how to reach
the Vaughn place?" he asked, conscious that the two or three stragglers in the waiting • room were
listening with interest.
The agent lifted melancholy features.
"Three miles back country." The
agent peered through the narrow
grating. "You expected?" he asked.
"No," Jim answered.
"They
aren't expecting me."
"I was going to say," the agent
continued, "there hasn't been anybody from the Vaughn place in here
today." He reached toward a telephone on the shelf beyond the window. "If you should want to call—"
"No thank you," Jim said hasti»
ly, forestalling complications.
"Well, there's a garage across the
street." The agent was determined
to be helpful. "They run taxi service." A wink lightened, grotesquely, the solemn cast of his features.
"Don't let Joe Tanner overcharge
you," he said. "He don't read the
papers and nobody's told him
Don't Try to "Save" on Home there's a depression."
Remedies—Ask Your Doctor The stragglers laughed. Jim
smiled. The warning, he thought,
There is one point, on which prac- was an often repeated pleasantry.
tically all doctors agree. That is: It was a compliment, too, perhaps,
Don't give your child unknown remedies a compliment not entirely inspired
without asking your doctor first.
by his own prepossessing appearAll mothers know this. But some- ance. His destination, he surmised,
times the instinct to save a few had something to do with the matpennies by buying "something just
ter. The agent was disposed to be
as good" overcomes caution.
affable to a prospective guest at
When it comes .to the widely used "Meadowbrook." If he knew the
children's remedy — "milk of mag- facts of the situation—! Jim's smile
nesia" — many doctors for over half
a century have said "PHILLIPS." deepened. He thanked the agent
For Phillips' Milk of Magnesia is the again and walked out of the waitingstandard of the world. Safe for chil- room.
dren.
The smile faded as the glare of
Keep this in mind, and say "PHIL- early afternoon struck him full in
LIPS' MILK OF MAGNESIA" the eyes.
when you buy. Comes now, also in
Three miles back country! Jim
tablet form. Get the form you prefer. stood irresolutely on the narrow
But see that what you get is labeled plank platform. The prospect was
"Genuine Phillips' Milk of Mag- not encouraging. He glanced across
nesia." 25> for a big box of the tablets the street where, in a forest of gas
et drug stores.
pumps, stood a sedan placarded
ALSO IN TAtLET POtAfc
TAXI. But the garage would charge
Each tiny tablet
him a dollar at least. He couldn't
lithe equivalent
afford that extravagance.
of a teeepeonM of genuine
A fool idea anyway! Jim leaned
Phillips' MOk
dispiritedly against a post in the
shade of the jutting roof. Why had
he thought that to find the MacPhersons would help him spiritually
or materially? There was an anMILK OP swer to that. The MacPhersons
MAGNESIA were all that remained of the debonaire world of his early youth
which had vanished so completely.
Room for All
This world certainly is wide
He was fed-up with his present
enough to hold both thee and me. existence, sick of trying to find a
—Sterne.
job, of sponging on his brother-inlaw, of making himself agreeable to
pay for his bed and board. The
week-end just past had been the
proverbial last straw. He'd thought
that to find the MacPhersons might
from common colas
restore, in a measure, his confidence and self-esteem, might help
him, somehow, to carry out one or
another of the drastic decisions he
No matter how many medicines had made in the Calenders' guestton have tried for your cough, chest room last night.
cold or bronchial irritation, you can
It wouldn't of course. A damnset relief now with Creomulston.
Serious trouble may be brewing and fool idea! Jim's eyes glowered out
you cannot afford to take a chance into dusty heat from under the brim
with anything less than Creomul- of his hat. He was as he was and
sion, which goes right to the seat
of the trouble to aid nature to nothing could alter the facts of the
soothe and heal the Inflamed mem- situation. There was no place for
branes as the germ-laden phlegm him in this new world of post-panic
Is loosened and expelled.
uncertainties. He was one of the
Even if other remedies have lost generation, the boys who had
failed, dont be discouraged, your
druggist is authorized to guarantee left college in 1929. There were no
Oreomulsion and to refund your jobs. The contacts he'd made led
money if you are not satisfied with, exactly nowhere. So what?
results from the very first bottle.
Get Creomulsion right now. (Adv.)
He was too mercurial, too impulsive, too—what was the quality?
Well, too romantic, perhaps. Kay,
Brought to Light
his sister, was a hard-headed maA man's character s e l d o m terialist She'd stood by him like a
changes— it is merely revealed.
soldier. But she had no patience
with the vagrant impulses which led
him, from time to time, in varying
r
directions. Kay set her course and
YOU*
steered by it with no deviations. She
RS. AmeHe H i m of 1431
lacked
imagination. What of it?
La Create,
M]Loomie St, "Everythtac
WU,. eaid:
She'd
done
very well for herself.
seemed to 'get on my nerree1
Kay was right, of course. A grim
and I felt to doll and tired.
But Dr. Pierce'a Favorite
smile
touched Jim's lips. Impulses
Prescription takes as a tonic
were luxuries. He hadn't thought
changed all thia, It Cave me
an appetite and thru thia X
of them in that light in the halcyon
gained energy and felt fine."
days before the panic. Then im
Bear sow of your neighborhood drofgiat.
New d a , tab*. 50 eta. Liquid $1.00 k fl.JS.
pulses had been the cocktails of life
For free medical advice, writ* to Dz.
and had led to charming adven••• Clinic Buffalo, N. Y.
tures. Or if following an inclination
resulted unfortunately, there had
Culture Needed
been any number of people to resThe enjoyment of art demands cue him from difficulties, his una certain degree of culture.
cle's lawyer, Aunt Emily, one of
his legion of friends. All that had
11—37 changed. Impulses were costly risks
WNU--0
in the new order of existence. There
was the impulse which had brought
him here in search of the MacPhersons.
• To Jim they were more than that.
The
gardener's cottage at "WhiteDon't Neglect Them t
ttetnre designed the ktdam to do a hall" had been, in his boyhood,
mrrikm Job. Their Ut*tato keep the more friendly and exciting than the
floMM Mood stream free of aa exeaai of
great formal house set in acres of
1
velvet
lawn. The memory of Mrs.
tho kidaoys ttert rcsjovo from
id if woof hearthtoto «4tm MacPherson's spice cake gave him
M -—the Bdpeyj f*a>fgetio» ee
Nsttmtoteoded,there
******J a feeling of nostalgia. There was a
' that may etast body aide die. tort of preserve she used to make,
plum and orange together, spread
thickly on freshly baked bread. An
atmosphere of comfort and tart
ajaya oat.
good humor had been her natural
environment. She'd had the sharpest tongue and the kindest heart in
. The lenogHtoid aad proper _.
to a dhratta BMdkma to beipthe _ - » . the world.
got rid of ajjpai potoonooi aoflj isafa
UM DmfTpak. They asva had aero
thaafer^ years rfpoDtoayprovaLAr, MacPherson had taught him to
play an excellent game of chess.
SaaTVsAatX&aM.
He'd told rousing good stories, too,
and let him putter around the gardens with a wheelbarrow and a
•pads. As ha grew older, how often
How Many
Pennies Your
Child's Life?
•- MSiHy**-" J^we>
PHILLIPS'
Beware Coughs
That Hang On
Nerves on Edge?
Bu L1DA LARR1VIORE
f) Lid* Laxrimoro.
WNU Service.
MacPherson had helped him out of
scrapes and, outwitting his Presbyterian conscience, had whitewashed
the accusing evidence of some
youthful folly. The lectures the lean
sandy Scot had delivered privately!
Jim winced at recurring memories.
If he'd been spoiled, it wasn't the
fault of the MacPhersons.
They'd been fond of him and
proud of him. He had parted from
them with sincere emotion when the
crash came, when Uncle James and
Aunt Emily had gone to California
and a mortgage company had taken
over "Whitehall." He'd promised
to look them up. He hadn't, of
course. Not that he had forgotten
them. He'd been occupied with
the business of trying to find a job,
with singing for his supper, with
rediscovering Lenore.
The MacPhersons had meant to
retire. He'd been surprised and a
little disturbed when, through his
uncle's lawyer, he had learned that
they were employed by people
named Vaughn — T. H. Vaughn,
"Meadowbrook," Glendale. A card
from Mrs. MacPherson last Christmas had confirmed the information.
"Dear Jamie," she had written under a lavish sprinkling of holly
sprigs and tinsel, "Andy and 1 are
wishing you'd come to see us."
Jamie! No one except the MacPhersons called him that. The name
woke sleeping memories. If he
could be "Jamie" a g a i n Sentimental idiot! The half-smile
touching Jim's lips widened into a
derisive grin. It was only t h a t Well, the week-end had been humiliating. He'd been hurt and he
was running to the MacPhersons
for sympathy and comfort. A damnfool idea! He was ashamed of himself. To find them would be, at
best, only a temporary anesthetic,
scarcely worth the pains of walking
three dusty miles.
He was through with misleading
impulses. No more romantic whims.
He would take the first train back to
town, pick up his bags at the club
and go on to New York. Perhaps,
if he made close connections, he
would reach Roselyn in time for
Kay's party. At any rate, at the
first opportune moment, he would
ask Lenore to marry him.
Jim lit a cigarette. Mental per>
plexities lulled for the moment. He
was conscious of physical discomfort. Hungry, that was it. He'd
had nothing to eat since breakfast.
There must be a restaurant, somewhere in the village. He calculated
the depressing state of his finances.
Worse than he had anticipated. He'd
had no business to play red-dog
with the Callenders last night. Such
dissipation was for the opulent.
Well, he could manage a milk-shake,
at least, and a drug-store sandwich
or two.
The time-table gave him half an
hour for refreshments. Jim left the
station and strode off along the
main street of the village. Not much
of a town, he thought, chain-stores,
a fish-market, an expensive looking
grocery, a small brick bank with a
Colonial facade.
The village, Jim surmised, served
as a base of supplies for the outlying estates. A post office painted
olive green, a tailor shop, a bakery.
The latest movies, anyway.
The drug-store occupied a prominent corner location. Jim entered,
grateful at once for the dim light
after the glare of the street. The
soda • fountain looked pleasantly
cool. He seated himself and removed his hat. Food and something
cold to drink—Lord, he was hungry!
A head appeared at the level with
the counter, a head foaming with
yellow curls bound by a band of
narrow ribbon. It hovered there for
a moment and Jim heard from the
obscure region behind the fountain
a vexed exclamation. Presently a
face appeared and then the slight
rounded figure of a girl in a tearoom uniform of crisp yellow and
blue. She had flax-blue eyes and a
tilted nose and she looked across
the counter with so cross an expression that Jim was amused
"Hello," he said and smiled
Jim's smile was very engaging.
The girl behind the counter re-
sponded to it at once. Her lips
curved in a friendly grin:
"Hello," she said. "Sorry to keep
you waiting."
"That's all right. What were you
doing, saying your prayers?"
"Chasing lemons—and oranges."
Her apron, he saw, was filled with
them. She began to arrange the
fruit in a pyramid on the counter.
"The darn things topple over a
dozen times a day." She breathed a
sigh of exasperation. "But we must
be decorated. The boss has fancy
ideas."
Jim felt his depression lifting.
The girl behind the fountain
topped the pyramid with a bright
green lime, smoothed her apron and
turned to Jim. "What will you
have?" she asked.
"A chocolate milk and a sandwich."
"Ham? Cheese? Or—?"
"Both," he answered promptly.
"Hungry?"
"Starving."
She smiled.
"Okay. In a jiffy."
She busied herself behind the
counter. Jim watched her deft manipulation of a knife with a razoredge blade. Cute, he thought, friendly, amusing. Her curls were synthetically blonde, of course. No
"Sorry to Keep You Waiting."
hair, he was sure, in its natural
state, was quite so glintingly golden. Her lashes were stiff with mascara and her mouth was a work of
art sketched in raspberry lip-salve
of an especially virulent shade.
Apparently unaware of his scrutiny, she glanced at him, a knife
poised over open jars. Her eyes
narrowed and crinkled.
"As one blonde to another," she
asked, "mustard or mayonnaise?"
Jim laughed. It was, he reflected,
the first natural laugh he'd enjoyed
since last Friday at noon. The atmosphere at the Callenders had
been strained. He'd spent the weekend smiling stiffly at Myra's acid
pleasantries, making loud noises of
appreciation, far beyond their merit, in response to Dick's tepid
jokes. Singing for his supper . . .
"Well— ?"
"I'm sorry," Jim apologized.
"Mustard or mayonnaise? That's an
important decision, isn't it? I'll
compromise. A little of both if you
please."
His reply seemed to amuse her.
She returned to her task humming,
just audibly, a gay familiar tune.
Funny kid, Jim thought. Kid? Well,
eighteen or nineteen, perhaps, What
was her name? Gladys? Gertrude?
Geraldine? Not that it mattered.
Nothing mattered especially. He'd
give his right arm to be interested
in something again. Anything—a
girl, a job, a dog-fight. Life without
vital interests wasn't much fun. One
might as well be a turnip—
There must be something that he
could do. He was confident, in spite
of repeated discouragements, of his
ability to get on in the world. He
had had an expensive education and
a fair amount of intelligence. He
made friends easily. People usually
liked him. He was healthy enough.
He'd been voted, during his last
year at college, the member of his
class most likely to succeed. That
was a lauch!
"Hell!" he muttered half aloud.
The girl placing a platter before
him, glanced up.
"Everything all right?"
*'I beg your pardon—Oh, fine J"
Jim assured her. He contemplated
the platter. "The sandwiches are
beautiful. That's a tasty arrangement of pickles and hard-boiled
egg."
"I thought—" she hesitated. "You
looked sort of sunk."
"I'm an actor," Jim said. "Doing 'Hamlet.' That was a private
rehearsal."
"Honest?" Her eyes opened wide,
then narrowed and crinkled. "It's
Mr. Barrymore!" she exclaimed.
"Fancy my embarrassment! Can
you forgive me? I'm a little nearsighted without my opera-glasses."
Jim laughed, a deep pleasant
laugh of genuine amusement. Surprisingly, he felt almost cheerful.
He applied himself to the sandwiches.
"Anything else?"
Jim glanced up from the remaining segments of sandwich. She had
made things tidy behind the counter and seemed about to disappear.
The idea was depressing. To detain her, he asked, though he had,
at present, no practical use for the
information, "Can you tell me how
to reach the Vaughn place? T. H.
Vaughn, 'Meadowbrook'?"
The question caught and held her
attention. It was obvious, at once,
that she, too, was impressed by
the name.
The girl behind the fountain supplied detailed instructions.
"South Valley road," she said, her
interest in Jim deepening perceptibly. "Turn left here at the corner
and again at the cross-road just
past the first stretch of woods. You
can't miss the place. It's a white
house on a hill. Sort of old-fashioned—but pretty," she conceded.
"There's a brook through the meadow."
"I assumed there would be a
brook," Jim said, "and one meadow, at least."
"Oh sure! That was silly, wasn't
it?" She had apparently abandoned
any idea of disappearing. The
Vaughn estate seemed to be an
absorbing topic of conversation. She
perched on a stool behind the fountain and regarded Jim attentively,
her eyes glinting with secret amusement. "You're a friend of Cecily's,
I suppose."
Jim was unable to make an intelligent reply. Who the devil was
Cecily? He had let himself in for explanations. Why had he asked the
question?
The girl, however expected no reply. That he and "Cecily" were
friends was an established fact, Jim
decided, so far as she was concerned.
"I know somebody who won't set
off fire - works because you've
come," she added with an air of
lively enjoyment.
"Do you?" Jim asked, slightly
startled. "That's not a pleasant
prospect."
"You needn't worry," she said
encouragingly. "You can handle
him." Jim felt that she was measuring the ample breadth of his
shoulders, appraising, with admiration which she made no attempt to
conceal, his six feet and an odd inch
or so of flexible muscles and lean
hard flesh. What in blazes? Who
was "him"? A potential rival, perhaps. Jim was intrigued.
"Are you sure?" he asked smiling.
"Dollars to doughnuts.
That
guy!" Her expression was scornful. "What Cecily sees in him—"
She broke off, her denouncement of
the unknown rival
apparently
checked by an idea. "When you get
there," she said, "you can do something for me."
"Out there" meant "Meadowbrook" of course. Now for explanations.
"Can I?" Jim asked, stalling for
time, curious to discover her real
interest in the Vaughn estate.
"You can tell Tommy—" She
paused to find fitting words in which
to phrase her message. The scornful expression was gone. Again Jim
observed her former, air of secret
amusement, the mischief glinting
like dancing imps in her eyes. "Tell
Tommy not to come in tonight. Privately, if you know what I mean.
You look like a pretty good egg."
(TO BE CONTINUEDJ
IfoweJioM $
• Qmfionr
Lukewarm wash water, lukewarm rinse water and a moderately warm place for drying are
best for washing woolens.
•
e
e
Peroxide of hydrogen will remove perfume stains from linen
bureau scarfs.
•
e
e
To make jar lids easy to remove, place the jars upside down
in hot water for a minute or two
or run hot water over the lids.
•
•
*
A little crushed ice added to the
cold water in a bag makes it comforting to fevered brows for a
longe- time than cold water alone.
»
•
•
Surveys have shown that oncea-day dish washing represents an
economy of time.
•
•
•
Add two tablespoons of shortening to the griddle cake batter and
it will not be necessary to grease
the griddle.
© Associated Newspapers. — WNU Service.
Dr. Pierce's P l e a s a n t P e l l e t s arc an
effective
laxative.
Sugar c o a t e d .
Children like '.!iem. Buy n o w ! — A d v .
Adversity Our Teacher
We become wiser by adversity;
prosperity destroys our appreciation of the right.—Seneca.
taz&it&
UNION MADE OVERALLS
L}50tiiyEAI>-THE OLDEST NHWONOVCJUIU
Genius Alone
Fortune has rarely condescended to be the companion of genius.
—Isaac Disraeli.
FITw HAPPY
fhti/ /Vever NeqfecfetfTh*
ALL-VEGETABLE CORRECTIVE
O wonder old forts talk about Netuxe'e
Remedy (NR Tablets), the all-vegetable
N
laxative. They work BO gently, yet thoroughly.
They are BO kind to the system. So refreshing;
and normal. So many achee and pain* varnish
when bowels are cleansed of their accumulated
poison in this way— not by mere partial action.
Kind out for yourself what thousands of other*
have proved. Try Nature's Remedy today. Get
an economical
2S-tablet b o x TO-NIGHT
only 25 cents at 1
TOMORROW ALAICHT
any drugstore,
Perfection in Art
The true work of art is but a
shadow of the divine perfection.—
Michael Angelo.
DON'T
NEGLECT
A COLD
» • * : !
West FIORIDR Facts
On Florida's West Coast Is a
troop of cities offering new
opportunities 1n bnslnees or
recreation, ifor free pi eta re
book of this Interesting region
write today to
"Of;,,
W. O. OKAOimCK. Issietery
Florida West Ceeet Aeee.
Sentinels
of Health
DOANSPiLLS
THE CHEERFUL CHERU&
eke
I f e e l I covld do. %
clever things.
I never t r y m y
b e a t I know.
Perhaps its just v *
well I dont
I m.6Ht be
disillusioned
so.
££4
w
T h e P i n c k n e y D i s p a t c h , W e d n e s d a y , M a r c h 17, 1 9 3 7
Bltllitllliaiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii^Mitisiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiittiiiiiiiicitiiitiiiiutiuiiiiuiittiu:
L | ADD TO LEGISLATIVE NEWS
WALL PAPER
k%
WITH CONFIDENCE
An understanding of human needs in time ofvBmvhas
made firm our relations with clients so begum Our
suggestions are offered in the light of our knowledge
of ceremonial requirements and financial circumstances.
•u
, You can call on our Funeral Home in
confidence, knowing that the minutest
detail will be executed as you would
want it to be.
The Rahoi bill lowering the age
for old age pensions from 70 years
to 65 also passed the house. This
will benefit 68,000 and cost $12,000,000 a y e a r extra. The requirement providing that
beneficiaries
must deed their property to the
state was striken out, except in cases
where no son, daughter, brother or
s j sister survives.
'
The house also approved and sent
to the senate a bill increasing the
salaries of supervisors from $4 to $5
a day and 5c a mile.
I The bill making drunken driving a
felony subject to one year in prison
or a fine of $500 also passed the
house.
A bil] providing for a secret primary ballot was approved by the
ommittee. Now the voter has to
state his party. The new bill provides he should be given a ballot of
each party. Vote his choice and
throw the rest in sealed waste basket.
Rep. Callaghan would divert $2,- FOR SALK—40 acre farm, 6 room
elec000,000 in liquor yevi»nu-.- to the house, lull basement, furnace,
x
tricity.
Reasonable
price.
1
a
miles
state police, l a w «ufo: cement and old
nortneast of Pinckney on Rush road.
age assistance.
Eli Aron.
Senator Palme of F'int introduced
a bill providing that schoo} districts
of less than 14,000 people could es- FOR SALE. .Hay and oats.
George Roche
tablish 13th and 14th grades.
Senator Diggs, Detroit, has a bill
requiring funeral benefit associations FOR SALE OR R E N T _ _ F a r m fo
which have sprung up in the state to rent. 110 acres. New buildings, Si.
deposit $25,000 with the state treas- room house and basement. X alsc
have marsh and bluegrass hay fo.
urer.
tale. Anybody interested come
a.
once
as
1
am
moving
soon.
NOTICE
Anna Samborski,
Pinckney, Michigan
Complete electrical installations of!
all types. Estimates on any
job,]
large or small. A full line of e l e c - l ' ^ K 2>Ai,£—uooa ooay wood (oaK)
tric;»l fixtures and appliances in stock; $^>S0 per cord.
Hicks F a r m
or on order.
1
la
miles east of town
Harold Hite,
Lirensed Electrician
eggs
Residence, Phone Stockbridge 55F11 FOR S A L K _ P l y m o u t h Rock
for
hatching.
From
accredited
stock.
Office and shop Gregory or Pinckney
Mrs. Robert Kelly
3F2.
.
P. H.SWARTHOUT
FUNERAL HOMES'
RHONE NO.39
PINGK.N6V
t*V
JB^*'
r
*1
if
FTICbnOANJL
FORSAL.B6*
feXCHANOF*
WANTED—Wood buzzing by
or job. Call 33 - F 5 .
_
hour
L
M. L. Hinchey
FOR SALE—Turkey gobblers
j»ens.
and
Dede Hinchej
Order your Baby Chicfcs now from
:he Squire Hatchery, Michigan Ave.,
Howell. Blood-tested Barred, White
Baff Rocks; Rhode Island Reds and
White Leghorns.
FOR SERVICE—Thoroughbred Durlam bull. Fee, $1.00. Fresh Holotein cow for sale. George Greiner.
FOR SALE
Good slab wood.
Inquire of W. H. Meyers.
CONSULT US for immediate cash,
$25.00
dollars and up.
WANTED—Married
man
for
farm
MORE TOWNSHIP TICKETS
work,
must
be
good
milker
and
all
Citizen's Finance Co.
Unadilla Republican
around
farm
hand.
Yearly
job
for
Howell
,
Phone 82
Supervisor
Ralph Glenn
willing
man.
Apply
Edward
Tansky,
Clerk
John Grosshans
Treasurer
John Taylor Pinckney. Phone*43.
HAVL JiUYERS—For small and
We have just received a new and complete line of wall paper at prices
medium priced farms. .
High. Com
C. A. Mape.s
you can afford to pay, 5 ½ to 20 cents the roll.
Justice
Ferd Bowdish
E. A. Strout Realty
Bd; of Review
Claude Rose
George Van Horn, Rep.
Kitchens, Dining Rooms, Living Room and Bed Room papers, every one
Consables
Leslie
Gilmore,
322
W.
Washington,
Howell, Mich.
a high class paper.
1
Hary Cooper, Emerson Kinsey,
Walter Corser.
ATTENTION: FARMERS
Call and see OUR paper before your buy your Spring Paper.
M arion Republican,
We are now paying for dead and disT l v class met with Mrs. Carri
We will be glc.d to show you whether you buy or not.
Only Ticket Nominated
Sw;M'thout on March 10 for
their abled stock....HORSES $5.00....CATSupervisor
Burr Clark ListiLil monthly meeting. With Mrs. TLE $4.00....HOGS, S H E E P
and
Cl*rk
Clifford J u b b lio.-e Hemic e presiding, the class be- CALVES accordingly .... no strings
(Treasurer
_ James MrNamara yan its a i r - m o o n business session to this offer! Prompt service....power
£1
j High, Com
John Bowman
~«„. " w ; u tVioyo ho nnv st«>SiI loading trucks....Phone collect
to
lhi
[Justice
Fred Fuller " n,? t ° " " T " hapl
P K '£51 MILLENBACH BROTHERS CO.
'< Bd. of Review
Norman Paton tin' scripture, with Mrs. Agnes Zuse
Howell 450
!
Iosco Democrat
oil'oring prayer. The roll call letter
Lvle Redinger lui this time was " A " . It was de- FOR SERVICE—Poland China boar.
llHlllllllliiliiimiiiliiiM!Hiii!!!!:i!!!;!!::;!:!-:M([|j;i:; f i! :; i i
![;;;,!;[; ;:uii!(nM!il IIIIIIIIIIIHiniUIIIUIIUimillUHIU Supervisor
Clerk
Charles Allen i ri i»'d to bring rags to sew for our $1.00 service fee.
Treasurer
Howard Wilson Missionary rug at our next meeting,
John Spears
High. Com
G. Waters ,,t v.ireh
•i-i
t'.iii; Mrs. A. E. VanSlamJustice
August Ruttman brv>ok will bf hostess. Mrs. Zuse and
Bd. of Review
L. Redfield Mrs. S. K. Swarthout were appointed Established 1865
Ioaco Republican
on a committe to purchase materials
Supervisor
Charles Showcrman for the- other articles on our quota.
Incorporated 1916
Clerk
Clare Miller Mrs. Hcndei/s resignation as presiTreasurer
Rex Wilson dent wits regretfully" accepted, 'and
High. Com
Lee Saum Mrs. R. K. Elliott was elected
to
| Justice
Lem. Hedican SL'fve For the balance of the year.
Bd. of Review
T, Armstrong
The Philathea members are
inDexter Township
vited to c o r d i a l / c .-0} crate in maki
Only Ticket Nominated
ing t h - Ladies' Aid dinner on this
' Supervisor
Gilbert Madden week Thursday a success. Everybody
j Clerk
William Clark invited.
I Treasurer
Paul Bock
i Justice
Ed. McGuiness
Wo arc looking forward to the
Bd, of Review
Ed. Can* church services on Good Friday and
REFUSES COMPROMISES
to those of Easter Sunday. In the
meantime come to S. S. next Sunday j
O w Sixty-Elfhi Years
President Roosev?lt has been in- and study John 19. "Christs' Cross'
formed by close advisers that he can and Mine."
win a reallv sensational victory in
of Saft Banking
his court fight if he will give them
HOWELL GIRL FOUND
the nod for a compromise. So far he
refuses to okay suggestions that he
oOo
yield an inch to go forward a mile.
Monday
night,
Bettty
Knapp,
16
Conscientious canvasses
disclose
that almost nobody on Capitol Hill year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
defends the court, a great advance Don Knapp of Howell, disappeared
As the merchant's business imSt.
along the line of Roosevelt's strat- while on h':r way homo froni
|
Joseph's
hall
in
Howell
where
she
cgv.
Hard-shelled G. 0 . P-ers, with a Had waited on table, to h e r home on
few exceptions, will vote in favor of Clinton street. No trace could be proves, he finds moro and more
a two-man expansion, thereby grant- found of her and the officers w e r e
ing the President's basic premise. notified and her disappearance was
They will support provisions for a broadcast from the state police sta- money passing through lvs hands.
7-2 or 6-3 lineup in holding a law tion at East Lansing. No trace was
found of her until Tuesday noon
unconstitutional. T
when
the Kendrick Kimball family of And as this flow increases so does
Neither) personal nor political apDetroit
telephoned that she was at
peals seem to budge the President,
He smiles at arguments that in either , their home, snie and sound, .having
Philathea Notes
Store
i
\
^,.
Peas Is Best No. 2 Can
2 for 25c
Fig Bars
25c
Gold Dust
Cans I9c
Fels Napth
21c
Pumpkin No. 2 1-2 can
10c
39c
Syrup Red Label 5 lb. Pail
21c
Baking Powder, K. C. 25c Size
Qt, Jar
Salad Dressing
23c
Slab or Sliced
Lb.
29c
Bacon
Lb
25c
Salt Pork
Smoked Ham Half or Whole Lb. 29c
25c
Pork Loin Roast
Lb.
25c
Fresh Perch cie
Lb.
YOU'LL GET BETTER MEATS AT CLARK'S
:%
Phot* 51
f&M
Clark's
THE HOME OF HIGH QUALITY MEATS
PINCKNEY, MICH.
McPherson
State Bank
J
event—victory or def=at_he will1 rob arrivedI ther; j-bout noon, exhausted, i the risk of duplication in paying
hfms«lf of a high place in history, evidently walked and hitch-hiked
F»J*"«
He does not share growing fears that SO-MR distance. The Kimball's have a bills. The old receipt system is not
his move will split the party in 1940., summe. ) om< near
the Howell Sani:
He wants what he wants—"now"
torium. Mr. K mball is o special
__Lansing State Journal | writer for The Detroit News.
infallible, By opening a Commercial
! iitiiiittiiiiiiii;tiiiiiitiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiniiittit
Notice to Stockholders of
Prudential Investing Corp.
The Bdard &t Directors of the Prudential Investing Cerpdr&tibri have declared a dividend of iSc per
share td stockholders of record March 20, payable
April 1, 1637.
During the last ten months and ten days the Directors have declared dividends totaling $282,866.70
to the stockholders.
For further information see
We Deliver
at all Timet
Charles Monroe
Local Agent
409 E. Clinton St.
Phone
Howall, Michigan
16
^^iiMumuiniiiiuiittiiminHittiHiiiiiiiiiimiiitiiiuiiiiuiiiiiuiumiiiimMiuiuH
Account you gain an ally in the form
of a check. Write a check and write
your own receipt,
McPherson State Bank
HOWELL, MICH.
Money to loan at reasonable rates,
interest paid on Savings Accounts
and Time Certificates of Deposit.
Member Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation*
WIN A $10,000 FORTUNE
You still can enter The Detroit
Times $15,000 All-American Puule
Contest, but act now, for soon it
will be too late to participtte in this
great competition- For details on now
to catch up in this curtart sou Tat
gftr^tiTimet. Go tfer tk« 11$,
<,
•»<T
•
¥