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L'JUftL-i.JU 'V'.'VUffll^HUqp <*K MOTTO 13 "ALL THE IWS THAT'S FIT TO PRINT' ffitncfenep Bfepatth OUR SUMCkXFTION r RATE" IS $t.a8 tER YEAR -k V«L47 Piackney, Livingston County, Michigan Wednesday, April 20, 1932 No. 16 Pnckoey Soft BaH League Is Formed Six Team* Are Placed in City Soft Ball L«*gue Which Opened Its Season Monday Night. Lot* of Excitement Looked for - « ' - - . < Already Talk j 01 of Adjourning Taxpayers Hoping For Beneficial Legltlaive Action in Final Days. The Fourth Wheel * JD IIy the end of another week, pos- j Ai . .. u tj * i.1. TV . *. i, sib y before, Michigan taxpayers will At a meeting held at the Dispatch , ' s . , . - , , „,? , . „. Know whether, the special session or Hce last Thursday evening *ix A1 . . , A ' ,, *, , ,„ Office teams' were drawn for the city soft ball league which will start its sec- ond successive year. Murray Ken- i ody, Stanley Dinkel, Leonard Dev- ereaux, Robert-Smith,---Habeyt -I*e4-1 widge and Emmett Roche were se- lected as managers and the names of the players who wish to play were riiawn from a box. Murray Kennedy got the following players in the draft: Marshall Mca- bun, Robert Plasko, Lyman Battle, Dallas Cox, Deai Reason, Norman Miller, Wayne Cnrr, J. P. Doyle, Fri- day Haines, Gerald Henry, Gerald Kennedy. Stanley DinkoPs team will be as follows: George Homshaw, Glenn Slayton, Lloyd Teeple, Rev. Fr. Dion, Harold Doody, Grant Ward, Andy Singer, Clifford Miller, Loren Meab- on, Lee Clark, Merwin Campbell, Clare Swarthout, Rex Harris. Leonard Devereaux secured the following team: Russell Livormore, lioono Amburgey, Vic Roberts, Rol- lie Shehan, Chas. Clinton, Virgil Martin, Rollie Singer, Lucius Wilson, Joe Singer, Virgil Amburgey, Paul Hickey. Robert Smith has all the stars: Ross Read, Desmond Lcdwidge, John Kinney, Harold Maycock, Pete tfas- jencahl, 'Norman Campbell, Leo HJad- es, Ted Singer, Pete Gerycz and Joe Jfogydlo, Walter_Gravgs. Hubert Ledw.idge's aggregaTto7r4r Andy CampbelL_ Bert Daller, Bert VanBlaricum, Maurice Kelly, Percy Fish, Vic Bourbonnais, Mike Blades, C. W. Hooker, C. H. Kennedy. Don Swarthout. Emmett Roche's player* ire: H. C. Vedder, G. Clinton, Arnold Bertiu'ist, the legislature called by Governor Brucker is going to provide them the taxation relief so badly needed. Up to the present time the only measur- es that have been passed and placed befor the governor for his signature providing for reduction in state ex- penses are the bills that cut the ap- propriations provided for Michigan's two great educational institutions, the Michigan State College and the University of Michigan. So far there has been no effort made to curtail in any form the expenses of other state educational institutions. The greatest difficulty, and a pro- blem that a leaderless state legisla- tive is trying to solve, is the division Musical Gems Chorus Here Friday Night """< ( Current C r a u e i t of the weight tax money. Six times Governor Brucker has recalled his measure dealing with this subject in an effort to have it meet some of the demands that are coming from many of the hard-pressed counties. The measure at the last end of last week came out of the senate commit- tee without recomejidations of any kind and amended in many im- portant provisions. One of the amendments provides that Covert and other- mandatory county obligations be met first by the" counties out of the" money that may possible be returned to the counties from that portion of the weightlax IMTTlnVTTew'Te^TsTaTTbn | nroposea to return to the counties. • Underneath the cntirr—cons id era- Four Parishes Will -S [ The Weekly Church Program CATHOLIC CHURCH SERVICE day Divine Sevice at 8:30 and General Committee From Catholic Parishes To Arrange For Event of the Season 10:30 A. M. Cathechism each Saturday morn- Four j m g a t 8:30. Confessions Saturday evening i 1 :30. The four Catholic parishes of St. Patrick, Brighton; St. John, Oreola; St. Joseph, Howell and St Mary, Pinckney are sponsoring a May time dance to be, given at the Blue Lan- tern, Island Lake, Wednesday even- ing, May 25th. A general committee Rev. Lewis M. Dion Pastor BAPTIST CHURCH £ Rev. H. F. Esic_Pastor ' x w< Services each Sunday i Morning Worship i0:'J0j Special and separate service for tht | little folks. Pinckney and community are pro* bably at the present time going j through the biggest crisis of their j existance. Now is the time when all Friday Evening of this Week, April[ private differences should be forgot- the 22nd Beginnnig at 7 p. m. j ten and all people not only of .this I village but surrounding country The Musical Gems Chorus, fifteen j siioald unite for the common good and support Pinckney business insti- tutions:. We know that the closing? of the local bank makes it necessary for us to vi.sit other places to do our banking business. But in as far a* possible we should patronize local merchants and business places. Out- side patronage .»« only . cutting off y>>ur own nose to spite your face. The closing of local institutions ami curtailing of the towns activities will not only affect thum but will also affect you for as the value of their property goes down, yours will do likewise, thus keeping pjice with them step by step. As their stocks of goods decrease so will their tax and this will mean an increase on the tax rate of real estate. There are in- dications that the bank will bo re- fjienrrf srmn and—in the—me untune— (very person should patronize local institutions as far as possiDle and urge others to do likewise. If this ia carried out this village and commun- ity will be able to weather the storm and establish her self on a firmer foundation than before. In this pre- sent crisis your motto should be "IVnanize Pinckney Institutions" nr.d it is up to you to see thr.t it is lived up to. colored singers of Ypsilanti will give ;•. nights prog!-am which will be held in the Conimuniiy Hall. Pinckney, be ginnin;;- at S o'clock and say it will he some program <>i" music- and read- me' ;>..-, only the people can give .in i lii ii- own way and it will cheer your leai-t and you will have many a < ham e to give yourself a good laugh. !t is going to be a knockout when it (dines to a night of good time. The Ladies Aid of the Community Con- gr« gational church are sponsoring (he coming of the gifted singers ap- pearing here and the price of admis- sion is only 2~)c for adults and 10c for children for any seat in the house. Come early so you will not be disappoirit't! in getting a, seat, Fri- day evening of this week, April the S&nd. " _„ ' ;* o- Henry -Shirey^ uiinord Haines, Roy Reason, Rill Jeffreys, On a Campbell, Robert and Fred Read. _ _ -thr tron of this question lies the demand of road Builders "For no interruption of the road building program in Michigan a det -rmined effort is be- in <- made to retain as much money os possible in both state and county funds for highway construction pur- Talk of a-recesr. in road build- of two from each parish, aided by special committees from" each of' trteT$unday "School 11:4.") parishes, will be in charge of the ar- Class for all rangemonte. Thie 4s the first-timA in &- ¥, P. U. -.=.,^ .,.._.^ = Zi)u -the hjstory-of thefour parishes, Rev;i'"thretHng.Worship £:00 Fr. Dion states, that they have join- Thurs. evening praye. servi-c s :00 ^d_t u eir forces fnr a"y ^ - ^ ^ , ,jn ^ '* i- hoped that their joint participation fin tbi*~-Mftyttmc--damn* will result in increased friendship, good-fellowship and understanding for the commun- ities represented. Tickets are f)0e and ;-!re now on sale. CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH —£• J. Berquist, Minister Miss Elly Iseler, Organist Mrs. E. Baughn, Directress of Music Percy Swarthotft Supt. of S.S. Morning Worship 10:30 a. ni Junior Church 10:30 a. m. 10 OPEN THE SEASON MAY l^Sihi^y School ! . . . Ii -30 a. .m EXHIBITED STAMP COLLECTION HERE Charles J. Rochefort of Jackson who has one of the largest private siieiip collections in the state gave a two cNhihition of his collection of (eoi • Washington stamps at the tov n hall here Saturday night. There. : ie. SX stamps in Mr. Rochefort's col- !<'<•* H/' which dat- back ^ ¾ 184-7. Ther!• .ire 34 different profile pictur- es of Wa :hin;^ton on the different f'.-f • of these- stiunps._In the KS cn- e:r.r>ings of Washington appearing on the stamps he is wearing 24 dilv TV." ITiats. ~ l'« id .• tlie .--tamps issued 1 'nit d States tlv-re are issues i taSTs~TmrrrtTy- J wrrf 'fi otl an 'Sii th- n the made in ruiiliul uf The Pinckney Independent bn?re" poses. ing is unppular ,among most of the | ba ^ Rm wil , opt . n . thoir season at legislative group from the northern j r , ^ ^ ^ on _S un d a y, May _1,_ witht tmrt-o-f the statu. - - - - , - - ^ HoweirAll Star* as their-0ppon- Christian Endeavor 0^0 p. n 1—r i principalities. Included in th<'se Cuba, Porto" Rico, (luam and ighai, China stamps all. bearing poidait of Washington. Also a Vivnch .-i:ii>ip is.-ued by that country liming th< American Legion conven- ts •' at Paris. This bears the picture ^—? afayette also. Economy evidently doe? not be- gin at home but somewhere else in- as- mui^h as it affects the house of re- t;t( sentatives as Rep. Hinck- UiV V bill -U»—cut the wages of flfiemb- ers of the house to a flat $1,500 for a two year term, failed to get to first base, figuratively speaking.—^Thp strongest efforts possible were made to kee-p it in committee and prevent it coming to a vote. Mo*t of them evidently are candidates for re-elect- ion and although they were against it they knew that it would have the support of the people back home. The bill if passed would have cut | their pay for the two year term about $700. It would seem that a patriotic [.representative would not- hav* eb-- ^rrTort t n frtvfrTjr-^-4350 per^mar-fox, the benefit of thetaxpaycr?. Thr— vote was not upon the bill but on a resolution la take it from the com- li.ittee \yhere it had been buried. Liv- The"garnes will be played—orr — — —i » village square on Monday, wednes- day and Thursday nights. During April they will start- at C>-3Q p—m. In May at !LM.-P^DL-Xhc following _The legislature—defoated- ents. fnvt game U the schedule N April 18 Smith vs. Dinkel * AprM 2ft-_Konncdy^ vs. Ledwidg(> April 21 Roche vs. Devereaux April 25 Kennedy vs. Roche April 27 Smith vs. Devereaux April 28 Ledwidgc vs. Dinkel "May 2_Kennedy vs. Devereaux May i Roche vs. Dinkel JkLay_5-^m.ith vs. Lcdwidge May t>_Jvc1^t^'"^r~-Smttfr= May ll_Dinkel vs. Devereaux May 12 Roche vs. Lcdwidge. May 16 Smith vs. Roche May 18 Devereaux vs. Lcdwidge May 19—-Kennedy_y s - Dinkel Mfty~23 Smith vs. DThkci- ;May 25-^-Kennedy vs. Lodwidge May 26—Devereaux vs. Roche May 30 Kennedy vs. Roche June 1 Smith vs. Devereaux June 2__Ledwidge vs. Dinkel June 6 Devereaux vs. Kennedy June 8 Dinkel vs. Roche ifanef>__Smith -v*. Ledwidge June 13 Kennedy vs. Smith June 15 Devereaux vs. Dinkel J u n e 16^ Roche vs. Ledwidge June 20 Smith vs. Roche June 22^ Devereaux vs. Lcdwidge It \\ iTMjr-tJH ure which had for its object a slight, Unh t( , ams 0n May ,.- lh(iy reduction in the pay of member^. tint it is giving roTr^denxtTorr to"" im^ other bill which pru\inVs a very Ktrb-' stantial reduction. Any change in the Evening Worship 7:30 p. m. Choir Rehearsals s<lay_fvemng 7:ln )h n. willi .Senior ... 7:45 p. ni. .Tuiiior Mr, Rochefoj-t gave a lecture ex- plaining each stump and also an.-wer- i-t\-^rrmnbrT—af TTtrrstiorre arkrd by_ 44+^—total «tani|> t lub inenihi rs. The form' i « vidently knowns his subject A jiractise session will be held at I OrcTfestrra practtscr Thnry. i Prayer meeting, Thurs. . . 7:30 p. m, j and hi- talk was lou<ily aplauded. The ^-:3^ foltov,-itur iiieinhevs nf thi- Pinckney i th« local diamond next Sunday, April | ""A largTnnnttrwe greetetl the,. Rev,|^| Jln>) club—trt*p—pn^mt^_Ja,ini s( \ at 3:00 p. in. at which all thos.'K". II g>i. pay of legislature must come from al ho wjsh to plav ( ) n t h ( , tr ., ni a] ,. n ,.j,„, \ 4 i ^ c t -voU of- th» people on a const!-i (TUwml - to hv jjy^^t. Lrfty Rt^on. I iMff_Jiu tutional amendment. With many amendments attached which materially change it the ad- ministration bill providing for the' creation of a commission to fix sal-1 CuWvr t;ik( . potiri , ., nnes of state employees in the var-| xv| , (J uj ^ h t ( ) t r y ( ) U t ious governmental branches is on its "way"fVrfegisIative approval. Th<> bill Grant Ward, Harold Maycock, .John Kinney, Gerald Kennedy. Clare Mill- < r, Norman Campbell, Dallas CON, Don Swarthout, Farrell, Hanson and well as Oth'T.- Harger oi Lansing who was siri-« \ -t preachei- last Sunday nior •• I treas , _Jhe_ services _of Community Mr. "Tf as it appeared in the house provided for the creation of one or two new- jobs for secretaries and clerks. Re- presentative Vorn Rrown of Ingham county, saw to it that the bill <Hd iJimia ^ tali; _ i2i ^^ nut p.ovide ihr-nrw jobs it lnt^<iriTf£ ( , 0 , lJns . lt HoW( , n Tllu ,, (la v „ He had the measure amended so that the clerk of the house or the senate. GETS A TERM OF ONE TO THREE YEARS William Patterson. Hamburg' township bootlegger ,va> s'-nt'-nccl to from one to three yar> at the Congregational church am H;;r'.rer brought a very tinvly iv.e-. ;e;e. Many were in attendance for ti,< SUJ day -chool, there b'-ing '»'i young p ( <>pli in their class for study. Mother's day service will be h , tn i.iu. umrniuf-o_f May the sth. Sundav Rojierl Am .|d r- I I ;1 !! - ore-.: ilalph llu^a So]-' nsoTi, Rex IJicliard-on. (jhjarles !!• i-<;ui-L, ("lifford ,] who ha- It en collecting -inc. h" wa mall boy waai , . , ii* ever, so undecided in seems to is to in- id j •'' n present WltJl i inn ;i - w a. Pinckney postma-t< i r, was also an in- i< rested listener, lb also has a large Clinton, ser-'l^ 10 ^ Smith, hl,vo hr>rn CI" tii | stance. First he voted in favor of Mill >v itn k' n £ th4i-bUI from- the committee ' then ho switch* d and voted against it. A motion to reconsider carried, how- the bill may come up again. 1 imp c :<rt Dalhr. W. C. Miller,! Wr Nvomif '' hoW iho ^ m ''" b ^ who vote«l against it will explain their vote at the coining election. \e\t Sunday norninir R>-v. K. •' j stamp collection. P.. rquist will .-]>eak from the subject 0 "The Tonic for Pinrkne-y" so lets all. ACCEPTS CHELSEA POSITION he or* se"t for the service. i Miss Dorothy WiPon who has "O" f taught music in the Pinckney school shall do the secretarial work of this ' Continued on last page. . O STILL IN THE HANPS OF BANKING DEPARTMENT 'The state banking" Tiepartme-TTt - is" still in possession of the Pinckney Suite Rank. People are allowed access to their safety deposit boxes during banking hours but no business is being transacted there. We were infoviYirrH Kv ~\$)s ^y1111nfns- nrVifi i^a t*it_ i rtrrVt Illt^U «J- TTX*. TT I I I IOIII.*—TT IIV In I I. T jTiesenting the state banking depait IM^ w ^ >y _4 w ig^^^-te.;^HQ01 OPFRFTTA A SUCCESS | ^ in^ibej^ast year has accepted a pos- The musical program given Kridav | j, ;,, n U) teac]^ musTc ami art in ihe had ph-aded guiltv to a charge'evening, April fifteenth by the child-j ,,„ r| „ .„.., u!) | i( . School. During! i violating the prohibition laws. Heiren of the Pinckney School was a ( ,, , „.„ t y ,. a r h ,. n; Mi., Wilson -has-] Us-as -arrested April !> at his cottage| success artistically as well as fmanci- . ,.,,„-,„ an j„. pt The wet forces got a lot of public- j >fy out of the refusal of Mayor New- kirk to let them pa.<s through Ann Yrbor's bbsini >s M'ction on their trip to Lansing. This refusal he roconsid- eied in a hours +im" h ut ni^^'H^^ 1 ^^* the at Silver Pake, south of Hamburg; ""V when the place was raided by De- puty Sheriffs Murninghnm, Gentry ;m<l_ Kenne.iy of SheriflT_ Kinh-y's I and suc«essful in- sti-uctfir in lief line arid we predict The main attraction of the evening j f lir | 1( .,. a SUrr ,. ss f u ] year- work in was the._operetta presi-nti-d by th" ^ r m , vv | 0< . ; ,tion. Two musical en- High School (iirls. Evelyn Hendee in j ,.,; nni( . nt , s put «„, by ln-r h re have Htm title role of "Florinda"-filled the-prp^^ r —T^- v ( .y y ^"ireV-Tut ~~ " force. Patterson had a previous cor viction against him, having been . 1 art adequately (;,. 0 J .lack, Clare Ledwidge, and Marjorh and well. Madgi O. it was broadcast to the general world. The Washtenaw Tritium- says that it was hullabado about nothing and further states that if they had \ given the exact number of cars and rot exagcrated the number they h:ul ia their parade, permission—wmtM l.ave been readily granted. According reports, instead of 400 ear* only - t. meat here, that a temporary receiv- er will probably be appointed this week. Then it will be decided.wheth- be appoint* found guilty before Sample at Ann Arbor 30, HWJ and placed pj-obation, ~ O—: Judgf , , , . on N*ovember|Hfndee did excellently in other lead- on five y>a/-' in « rob'S. The chorus cosjrtnried as- witches and ..fa.irie.- -— Mix* principal*, ably Supported ed,or the five year moratorium-plan adopted. The Gregory Rank closed Satur- day morning in order to protect de- positors. TO TAKE OFF GASOLINE TRAIN The* Grand Trunk railroad has giv- <>n notice that beginning on April 24, j the gasoline car^whteh luw b»un. cax^. rying ~paSsenger»F-express and mail! from Pontiac to Jfackaon on the air- line branch of the Grand Trunk for the past five years will be taken off. In its place a combination train will be run f consisting of part freight and part passenger. This action was not entirely unex- pected as for some time>the local read has been carrying few passeng- ers. No mail will be carried by this combination train,_ Instead _ another route will be run by auto out of Jackson. There will still be two mails each way, aday. The tune has not been definitely decided yet but the will probably be one from and to ' c>> of Detroit and on<: sister, Mrs. P. Jackson in the forenoon and one r H. Noonan of Aberdeen, Waxhing- from there and backagaift in the af- ternoon. ~* " o Itni ti Mr. id Mrs. LM Uvey !M iprlf n t §l-l4$Lm ^J^J^. RQ3E H INC HEY I ^^ High _School and—Iwt^rmediaU Ann Rose Hinchey, daughter .ofl»«^ Rave an amusing skit, "Walk Thomas Ross and Jane VanWinkle | Rco^, w»^ born in Marion township OcTorJer la, i s 5 ^ '.-V- passe<l through Ann Arbor and ( r.ly 114 reached Lansing. Wo wonder just what the wet MLT AT CHJRCH The Junior King's Daughters held tUir usual ni'-ting at 'he chruch i ^ ()ups whf> arr advocatin? thc ,^„1 parto.-s. Saturday. April lCth. A potl f . f thft , gth j^on^ent, mcan when +<»* '""''' M ' iM ^•*~< end nam^.j t| -^ ^ y that They would abotlslrth^ ^rTP-rrfnyr-d. A --gm>4-trm*- wair-had ( , ^ am( ; n(]m( , nt ; but do'not oVrfTf*- LOUIS'HARRIS Louis Harris, 31, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Harrisof this place and a World War veteran, died at the Alec. Hospital., at.. Prescott,.. AHz. | or. April 13.of pneumonia. He at- tended-the Pinckney "school and serv r.d overseas for 18 months. Surviving arc his parents, three, brothers, Bert, Sylvuhter uf Pinckney and Fran- On October S, "JS75 she was unit- ed in marriage with Chester Hinchey To this union were bom two sons, Ross and Guy, and one daughter, Dede, all of whom survive. She de- parted this life April 13, 11*32 after a long illness which she bore patient- ly and courageously. Funeral services were held at the late home, April K>. Mr. C. H. Davis First Reader of the Christian Science tam4i-«f-ltowe!l,- officiated, InU^-- ment wa>- in Pinckney cemetery. hv all. the Plank," in pirate costume. ; Special mention should be made of: CEMETERY ,'i/»rti« t?«ilt,.i4s' vinlin snlns "Sni'iuu - . ^»i "O" |JV'iiaaii.Ilubx;i±iL^hiLui„^ojQi. „!'Spi*i«g t Song" and "Traumurei" wilh Mac-! t 1( p JM< . kn ,. y Cwtt-ry Assw. waw Dowell's "To a Wild Ros<:" as an - -\ ; , M ,, t ttl e'h„no of Miss P.alnche core weir welliveeived. ^'Martin .Monday evening. The old of- were i - e-c lect'd for another They are' p. H. Swarthout, the return of the saloon; Their panacea or cure all is states rights. | That is they would let each individ- The Children's Stringed Instrument art in Chorus ami : ' e ' ^ ( f y Class provid. d | , 1( MEETING HELD Tlrrr nnnual basin. >s m*H'ting of I ^ stak , d( . cU]v whothcr it woaW j^ wet or dry. Thus those that vote wot would sell liquor and this would un- doubtedly mean the return of the old time descredited saloon. For a saloon interesting musical groups which! p i ,.,;,(,. n t . Koss Kead, vice president; v. ere enjoyed. The ticket sale was conducted by liianche Martin, secretary-treasurer. It was decided to assess lot ownors the Girl's Glee Club. The prize foriV, AA ., f „, , , t \^ t> i . , , ,,, , , >I.OO per vear for rare of lots, Bids the g rl selling the largest numberi , . e .. • u e ~ * . , , « v.( re asked for the job of cemetery of tickets was won by Constance « T-, ,, »,,/,„,, J 1 sexton. The bid of H. C. Ve<lder was FINDS BURIED TREASURER ton. "The fu'ncral " was held from St. Mary's church, Pinckney, Wednesday tat 10:00 A. M., Rev. Lewis*Dion of- ficiating, liurial was <n St. Mary's ccmetcr)'- While working" in his garden "Mon- day morning, Patrick Dillon dug up ar. old tin can in which was (one* al- ee! a little better than $H>, all in silv- er. Some of the coins wen- of a number of years back. Just who bur- ied this treasure or why is unknown.^ The place whe^e this was found was formerly the Kearney homestC7t4.- Darrow. The receipts were unexpect- edly large. The excess'over expendi- tures which will amount to about eighteen dollars is to be donated to the Senior Class to aid in paying for the graduation excretes. LIVINGSTON MAN NAMED DELEGATE W. W. Knapp of Brighton was- n;.med as one of the delegates to the National Democratic convention to be held at Chicago this summ- er, found to 1)L the lowest and- accord- ir gly the position was given to him. SPECIAL COMMUNICATION Livingston Lodge No. 7'i will go to Mockhridge Friday evening, April 21) to put on thiee third degrees. Kvery member of the Fellowcraft team is asked to be present. ^- R. W. Curbtt, See. wax merely a place where liquor waa sold by the glass. The principle fault found now with prohibition is lack of < nforccment and the legalized sale of liquor would only aggravate the en- forcement problem. SOFT BALL LEAGUE OPENS The Pinckney Soft Ball League opened Monday night. Stanley Dinfe- TT F. V. and K. K. Fish spf-nt Tues- ^day in Lena wee county. Smith by a 10 to 0 score, scorinf two runs in' the last inning. Two tame runs were hit Andy Singer hfttiar for the circuit in the first btaiaf a»i Lyman Battle In thojjxth- - Patteries: DinkeL^M. Campbell A ft. Smitlu_Swarthout & N. XtUer Vmpircs—P«t Lavey and Bill OnHfc^ > • v W 5 * '#U „.,>.,•• »y -^-
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Page 1: ffitncfenep Bfepatthpinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1932-04-20.pdf · L'JUftL-i.JU 'V'.'VUffll^HUqp

L'JUftL-i.JU 'V'.'VUffll HUqp

<*K MOTTO 13 "ALL THE IWS THAT'S FIT TO PRINT' ffitncfenep Bfepatth OUR SUMCkXFTIONr RATE"

IS $t.a8 tER YEAR

-k V«L47 Piackney, Livingston County, Michigan Wednesday, April 20, 1932 No. 16

Pnckoey Soft BaH League Is Formed

Six Team* Are Placed in City Soft Ball L«*gue Which Opened Its

Season Monday Night. Lot* of Excitement Looked for

- « ' • • - - . <

Already Talk j 01 of Adjourning

Taxpayers Hoping For Beneficial Legltlaive Action in

Final Days.

The Fourth Wheel * JD

IIy the end of another week, pos- j

Ai. . . u tj * i.1. TV . *. i, sib y before, Michigan taxpayers will At a meeting held at the Dispatch , ' • s . , . -„ , , „,? , . „. • Know whether, the special session or Hce last Thursday evening *ix A1 . . , A ' ,, *, , ,„ Office

teams' were drawn for the city soft ball league which will start its sec­ond successive year. Murray Ken-i ody, Stanley Dinkel, Leonard Dev­ereaux, Robert-Smith,-- -Habeyt -I*e4-1 widge and Emmett Roche were se­lected as managers and the names of the players who wish to play were riiawn from a box.

Murray Kennedy got the following players in the draft: Marshall Mca-bun, Robert Plasko, Lyman Battle, Dallas Cox, Deai Reason, Norman Miller, Wayne Cnrr, J. P. Doyle, Fri­day Haines, Gerald Henry, Gerald Kennedy.

Stanley DinkoPs team will be as follows: George Homshaw, Glenn Slayton, Lloyd Teeple, Rev. Fr. Dion, Harold Doody, Grant Ward, Andy Singer, Clifford Miller, Loren Meab-on, Lee Clark, Merwin Campbell, Clare Swarthout, Rex Harris.

Leonard Devereaux secured the following team: Russell Livormore, lioono Amburgey, Vic Roberts, Rol-lie Shehan, Chas. Clinton, Virgil Martin, Rollie Singer, Lucius Wilson, Joe Singer, Virgil Amburgey, Paul Hickey.

Robert Smith has all the stars: Ross Read, Desmond Lcdwidge, John Kinney, Harold Maycock, Pete tfas-

jencahl, 'Norman Campbell, Leo HJad-es, Ted Singer, Pete Gerycz and Joe

Jfogydlo, Walter_Gravgs.

Hubert Ledw.idge's aggregaTto7r4r Andy CampbelL_ Bert Daller, Bert VanBlaricum, Maurice Kelly, Percy Fish, Vic Bourbonnais, Mike Blades, C. W. Hooker, C. H. Kennedy. Don Swarthout.

Emmett Roche's player* i re : H. C. Vedder, G. Clinton, Arnold Bertiu'ist,

the legislature called by Governor Brucker is going to provide them the taxation relief so badly needed. Up to the present time the only measur­es that have been passed and placed befor the governor for his signature providing for reduction in state ex­penses are the bills that cut the ap­propriations provided for Michigan's two great educational institutions, the Michigan State College and the University of Michigan. So far there has been no effort made to curtail in any form the expenses of other state educational institutions.

The greatest difficulty, and a pro­blem that a leaderless state legisla­t ive is trying to solve, is the division

Musical Gems Chorus Here Friday Night

"""< ( Current Craue i t

of the weight tax money. Six times Governor Brucker has recalled his measure dealing with this subject in an effort to have it meet some of the demands that are coming from many of the hard-pressed counties. The measure at the last end of last week came out of the senate commit­tee without recomejidations of any kind and amended in many im­portant provisions.

One of the amendments provides that Covert and other- mandatory county obligations be met first by the" counties out of the" money that may possible be returned to the counties from that portion of the weightlax IMTTlnVTTew'Te^TsTaTTbn

| nroposea to return to the counties. • Underneath the cntirr—cons id era-

Four Parishes Will - S

[ The Weekly Church Program CATHOLIC CHURCH SERVICE

day Divine Sevice at 8:30 and

General Committee From Catholic Parishes To Arrange

For Event of the Season

10:30 A. M. Cathechism each Saturday morn-

Four j m g a t 8:30.

Confessions Saturday evening a»

i

1 :30.

The four Catholic parishes of St. Patrick, Brighton; St. John, Oreola; St. Joseph, Howell and S t Mary, Pinckney are sponsoring a May time dance to be, given at the Blue Lan­tern, Island Lake, Wednesday even­ing, May 25th. A general committee

Rev. Lewis M. Dion Pastor

BAPTIST CHURCH £ Rev. H. F. Esic_Pastor ' xw< Services each Sunday i Morning Worship i0:'J0j Special and separate service for tht | little folks.

Pinckney and community are pro* bably at the present time going

j through the biggest crisis of their j existance. Now is the time when all

Friday Evening of this Week, April[ private differences should be forgot-the 22nd Beginnnig at 7 p. m. j ten and all people not only of .this

I village but surrounding country The Musical Gems Chorus, fifteen j siioald unite for the common good

and support Pinckney business insti­tutions:. We know that the closing? of the local bank makes it necessary for us to vi.sit other places to do our banking business. But in as far a* possible we should patronize local merchants and business places. Out­side patronage .»« only . cutting off y>>ur own nose to spite your face.

The closing of local institutions ami curtailing of the towns activities will not only affect thum but will also affect you for as the value of their property goes down, yours will do likewise, thus keeping pjice with them step by step. As their stocks of goods decrease so will their tax and this will mean an increase on the tax rate of real estate. There are in­dications that the bank will bo re-fjienrrf srmn and—in the—me untune— (very person should patronize local institutions as far as possiDle and urge others to do likewise. If this ia carried out this village and commun­ity will be able to weather the storm and establish her self on a firmer foundation than before. In this pre­sent crisis your motto should be "IVnanize Pinckney Institutions" nr.d it is up to you to see thr.t it is lived up to.

colored singers of Ypsilanti will give ;•. nights prog!-am which will be held in the Conimuniiy Hall. Pinckney, be ginnin;;- at S o'clock and say it will he some program <>i" music- and read­me' ;>..-, only the people can give .in i lii ii- own way and it will cheer your leai-t and you will have many a

< ham e to give yourself a good laugh. !t is going to be a knockout when it (dines to a night of good time. The Ladies Aid of the Community Con-gr« gational church are sponsoring (he coming of the gifted singers ap­pearing here and the price of admis­sion is only 2~)c for adults and 10c for children for any seat in the house. Come early so you will not be disappoirit't! in getting a, seat, Fri­day evening of this week, April the S&nd. " _ „

' ;*

o-

Henry -Shirey^ uiinord Haines, Roy Reason, Rill Jeffreys, On a Campbell, Robert and Fred Read. _ _

-thr

tron of this question lies the demand of road Builders "For no interruption of the road building program in Michigan a det -rmined effort is be-in <- made to retain as much money os possible in both state and county funds for highway construction pur-

Talk of a-recesr. in road build-

of two from each parish, aided by special committees from" each of' trteT$unday "School 11:4.") parishes, will be in charge of the ar- Class for all rangemonte. Thie 4s the first-timA in &- ¥, P. U. -.=., .,.._.^=Zi)u -the hjstory-of thefour parishes, Rev;i'"thretHng.Worship £:00 Fr. Dion states, that they have join- Thurs. evening praye. servi-c s :00 ^d_tueir forces fnr a"y ^ - ^ ^ , , j n ^ '* i- hoped that their joint participation

fin tbi*~-Mftyttmc--damn* will result in increased friendship, good-fellowship and understanding for the commun­ities represented. Tickets are f)0e and ;-!re now on sale.

CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH — —£• J. Berquist, Minister

Miss Elly Iseler, Organist Mrs. E. Baughn, Directress of Music

Percy Swarthotft Supt. of S.S. Morning Worship 10:30 a. ni

Junior Church 10:30 a. m.

1 0 OPEN THE SEASON MAY l^Sihi^y School ! . . . Ii -30 a. .m

EXHIBITED STAMP

COLLECTION HERE

Charles J. Rochefort of Jackson who has one of the largest private siieiip collections in the state gave a two cNhihition of his collection of (eoi • Washington stamps at the tov n hall here Saturday night. There. : ie. SX stamps in Mr. Rochefort's col-!<'<•* H/' which dat- back ^ ¾ 184-7. Ther!• .ire 34 different profile pictur­es of Wa :hin;^ton on the different f'.-f • of these- stiunps._In the KS cn-e:r.r>ings of Washington appearing on the stamps he is wearing 24 dilv TV." ITiats. ~

l'« • id .• tlie .--tamps issued 1 'nit d States tlv-re are issues

i taSTs~TmrrrtTy-Jwrrf

'fi

otl

an ' S i i

th-

n the made

in ruiiliul uf

The Pinckney Independent bn?re" poses.

ing is unppular ,among most of the | b a „ ^Rm w i l , o p t . n . t h o i r s e a s o n a t

legislative group from the northern j r , ^ ^ ^ o n _ S u n d a y , May _1,_ witht

tmrt-o-f the statu. - - - - , - - ^ HoweirAll Star* as their-0ppon-

Christian Endeavor 0 ^ 0 p. n 1—r

i principalities. Included in th<'se Cuba, Porto" Rico, (luam and

ighai, China stamps all. bearing poidait of Washington. Also a

Vivnch .-i:ii>ip is.-ued by that country liming th< American Legion conven­ts •' at Paris. This bears the picture ^—? afayette also.

Economy evidently doe? not be­gin at home but somewhere else in-as- mui h as it affects the house of re-t;t( sentatives as Rep. Hinck-UiV V bill -U»—cut the wages of flfiemb-ers of the house to a flat $1,500 for a two year term, failed to get to first base, figuratively speaking.—^Thp strongest efforts possible were made to kee-p it in committee and prevent it coming to a vote. Mo*t of them evidently are candidates for re-elect­ion and although they were against it they knew that it would have the support of the people back home.

The bill if passed would have cut

| their pay for the two year term about $700. It would seem that a patriotic

[.representative would not - hav* eb--^rrTort tn frtvfrTjr-^-4350 per^mar-fox, the benefit of thetaxpaycr?. Thr— vote was not upon the bill but on a resolution la take it from the com-li.ittee \yhere it had been buried. Liv-

The"garnes will be played—orr — — — i + ¾ »

village square on Monday, wednes-day and Thursday nights. During April they will start- a t C>-3Q p—m. In May at !LM.-P^DL-Xhc following

_The legislature—defoated-ents. fnvt game

U the schedule NApril 18 Smith vs. Dinkel * AprM 2ft-_Konncdy^ vs. Ledwidg(> April 21 Roche vs. Devereaux April 25 Kennedy vs. Roche April 27 Smith vs. Devereaux April 28 Ledwidgc vs. Dinkel "May 2_Kennedy vs. Devereaux

May i Roche vs. Dinkel JkLay_5-^m.ith vs. Lcdwidge

May t>_Jvc1^t^'"^r~-Smttfr= May l l_Dinke l vs. Devereaux May 12 Roche vs. Lcdwidge. May 16 Smith vs. Roche May 18 Devereaux vs. Lcdwidge

May 19—-Kennedy_ys- Dinkel Mfty~23 Smith vs. DThkci- — ;May 25-^-Kennedy vs. Lodwidge May 26—Devereaux vs. Roche May 30 Kennedy vs. Roche June 1 Smith vs. Devereaux June 2__Ledwidge vs. Dinkel June 6 Devereaux vs. Kennedy June 8 Dinkel vs. Roche ifanef>__Smith -v*. Ledwidge June 13 Kennedy vs. Smith June 15 Devereaux vs. Dinkel

June 16 Roche vs. Ledwidge June 20 Smith vs. Roche June 22 Devereaux vs. Lcdwidge

It \\ iTMjr-tJH ure which had for its object a slight, Unh t ( , a m s 0 n M a y ,.- l h ( i y

reduction in the pay of member^. tint i t is giving roTr^denxtTorr to"" im^ other bill which pru\inVs a very Ktrb-' stantial reduction. Any change in the

Evening Worship 7:30 p. m. Choir Rehearsals

s<lay_fvemng 7 : l n )h n .

willi .Senior ... 7:45 p. ni. .Tui i ior

Mr, Rochefoj-t gave a lecture ex­plaining each stump and also an.-wer-i-t\-^rrmnbrT—af TTtrrstiorre arkrd by_ 44+^—total «tani|> t lub inenihi • rs. The form' i « vidently knowns his subject

A jiractise session will be held at I OrcTfestrra practtscr Thnry.

i Prayer meeting, Thurs. . . 7:30 p. m, j and hi- talk was lou<ily aplauded. The ^ - : 3 ^ foltov,-itur iiieinhevs nf thi- Pinckney

i th« local diamond next Sunday, April | ""A largTnnnttrwe greetetl the,. Rev, |^ | J l n > ) club—trt*p—pn^mt^_Ja,ini s( \

at 3:00 p. in. at which all thos.'K". II g > i . pay of legislature must come from al h o w j s h t o p l a v ( ) n t h ( , t r . , n i a ] , . n , . j ,„ ,

\ 4 i^c t -voU of- th» people on a const!-i ( T U w m l - t o hv jjy^^t. Lrfty Rt^on. I iMff_Jiu tutional amendment.

With many amendments attached which materially change it the ad­ministration bill providing for the' creation of a commission to fix sal-1 CuWvr t ; i k ( . p o t i r i , ., nnes of state employees in the var-| xv |, ( J u j ^ h t ( ) t r y ( ) U t

ious governmental branches is on its "way"fVrfegisIative approval. Th<> bill

Grant Ward, Harold Maycock, .John Kinney, Gerald Kennedy. Clare Mill-< r, Norman Campbell, Dallas CON, Don Swarthout, Farrell, Hanson and

w e l l as Oth'T.-

Harger oi Lansing who was siri-« \ -t preachei- last Sunday nior •• I treas , _Jhe_ services _of Community

Mr.

"Tf

as it appeared in the house provided for the creation of one or two new-jobs for secretaries and clerks. Re­presentative Vorn Rrown of Ingham

county, saw to it that the bill < H d i J i m i a ^ t a l i ; _ i 2 i ^ ^ nut p.ovide ihr-nrw jobs it lnt^<iriTf£ ( , 0 , l J n s . l t H o W ( , n T l l u , , ( l a v „ He had the measure amended so that the clerk of the house or the senate.

GETS A TERM OF ONE TO THREE YEARS

William Patterson. Hamburg' township bootlegger ,va> s'-nt'-nccl to from one to three yar> at the

Congregational church am H;;r'.rer brought a very tinvly iv.e-. ;e;e. Many were in attendance for ti,< SUJ day -chool, there b'-ing '»'i young p( <>pli in their class for study.

Mother's day service will be h ,tn i.iu. umrniuf-o_f May the sth.

Sundav

Rojierl Am .|d r - I I

;1 !! -

ore-.: ilalph llu^a So]-' nsoTi, Rex IJicliard-on. (jhjarles

!!• i-<;ui-L, ("lifford ,] who ha- It en collecting

-inc. h" wa mall boy waai , . , i i * ever, so

undecided in seems to is

to in-

id

j •'' n present WltJl i inn ;i - w a.

Pinckney postma-t<ir, was also an in-i< rested listener, lb also has a large

Clinton, s e r - ' l ^ 1 0 ^ Smith, h l , v o h r > r n

CI" tii | stance. First he voted in favor of Mill >v i t nk'n£ th4i-bUI from- the committee

' then ho switch* d and voted against it. A motion to reconsider carried, how-

the bill may come up again. 1 imp c

:<rt Dalhr. W. C. Miller,! W r N v o m i f ' ' h o W i h o ^ m ' ' " b ^ w h o

vote«l against it will explain their vote at the coining election.

\ e \ t Sunday norninir R>-v. K. •' j stamp collection. P.. rquist will .-]>eak from the subject 0

"The Tonic for Pinrkne-y" so lets all. ACCEPTS CHELSEA POSITION he or* se"t for the service. i Miss Dorothy WiPon who has

"O" f taught music in the Pinckney school

shall do the secretarial work of this ' Continued on last page.

. O STILL IN THE HANPS OF

BANKING DEPARTMENT 'The state banking" Tiepartme-TTt- is"

still in possession of the Pinckney Suite Rank. People are allowed access to their safety deposit boxes during banking hours but no business is being transacted there. We were infoviYirrH Kv ~\$)s ^y1111nfns- nrVifi i a t*it_ i r t r r V t Illt^U «J- TTX*. TT I I I I O I I I . * — T T I IV In I I. T

jTiesenting the state banking depait

I M ^ w ^ > y _ 4 w i g ^ ^ ^ - t e . ; ^ H Q 0 1 OPFRFTTA A SUCCESS | in^ibej^ast year has accepted a pos-The musical program given Kridav | j , ;,,n U ) teac]^ musTc ami art in

ihe had ph-aded guiltv to a charge'evening, April fifteenth by the child-j ,,„ r | „ .„.., ]»u!)|i(. School. During!

i violating the prohibition laws. Heiren of the Pinckney School was a ( ,, , „.„ t y , . a r h , . n ; Mi., Wilson -has-]

Us-as -arrested April !> at his cottage| success artistically as well as fmanci- . ,.,,„-,„ a n j„.pt

The wet forces got a lot of public-j >fy out of the refusal of Mayor New-

kirk to let them pa.<s through Ann Yrbor's bbsini >s M'ction on their trip to Lansing. This refusal he roconsid-eied in a hours +im" hut ni^^'H^^1^^*

the

at Silver Pake, south of Hamburg; ""V when the place was raided by De­puty Sheriffs Murninghnm, Gentry ;m<l_ Kenne.iy of SheriflT_ Kinh-y's

I

and suc«essful in-sti-uctfir in lief line arid we predict

The main attraction of the evening j flir |1(.,. a SUr r , . s sfu] year- work in was the._operetta presi-nti-d by th" ^ r m , v v |0<.;,tion. Two musical en-High School (iirls. Evelyn Hendee in j , . , ; n n i ( . n t , s p u t «„, by ln-r h re have

Htm title role of "Florinda"-filled the-prp^^ r—T^- v(.yy ^"ireV-Tut ~~ " force. Patterson had a previous cor viction against him, having been . 1 art adequately

(;,.0J .lack, Clare Ledwidge, and Marjorh

and well. Madgi O.

it was broadcast to the general world. The Washtenaw Tritium- says that it was hullabado about nothing and further states that if they had

\ given the exact number of cars and rot exagcrated the number they h:ul ia their parade, permission—wmtM l.ave been readily granted. According

reports, instead of 400 ear* only-t.

meat here, that a temporary receiv­er will probably be appointed this week. Then it will be decided.wheth-

be appoint*

found guilty before Sample at Ann Arbor 30, HWJ and placed pj-obation, ~ O—:

Judgf , , , . on N*ovember|Hfndee did excellently in other lead-on five y>a/- ' i n« rob'S. The chorus cosjrtnried as-

• witches and ..fa.irie.--— • — Mix* principal*,

ably Supported

ed,or the five year moratorium-plan adopted.

The Gregory Rank closed Satur­day morning in order to protect de­positors.

TO TAKE OFF GASOLINE TRAIN The* Grand Trunk railroad has giv-

<>n notice that beginning on April 24, j the gasoline car^whteh luw b»un. cax^. rying ~paSsenger»F-express and mail! from Pontiac to Jfackaon on the air­line branch of the Grand Trunk for the past five years will be taken off. In its place a combination train will be runf consisting of part freight and part passenger.

This action was not entirely unex­pected as for some time>the local read has been carrying few passeng­ers. No mail will be carried by this combination train,_ Instead _ another route will be run by auto out of Jackson. There will still be two mails each way, aday. The tune has not been definitely decided yet but the will probably be one from and to ' c>> of Detroit and on<: sister, Mrs. P. Jackson in the forenoon and one r H. Noonan of Aberdeen, Waxhing-from there and backagaift in the af­ternoon. ~* "

— o Itni ti Mr. id Mrs. LM Uvey !M

iprlf nt §l-l4$Lm

^J^J^. RQ3E H INC HEY I ^ ^ High _School and—Iwt^rmediaU

Ann Rose Hinchey, daughter . o f l » « ^ Rave an amusing skit, "Walk

Thomas Ross and Jane VanWinkle

| Rco^, w»^ born in Marion township

OcTorJer la, i s 5 ^

'.-V- passe<l through Ann Arbor and ( r.ly 114 reached Lansing.

Wo wonder just what the wet

MLT AT CHJRCH The Junior King's Daughters held

tUir usual ni'-ting at 'he chruch i ^ ( ) u p s w h f > a r r a d v o c a t i n ? t h c , ^ „ 1

parto.-s. Saturday. April lCth. A potl f . f thft , g t h j ^ o n ^ e n t , m c a n when

+<»* ' " " ' ' ' M ' iM ^•*~< end n a m ^ . j t | - ^ ^ y that They would abotlslrth^ ^rTP-rrfnyr-d. A --gm>4-trm*- wair-had ( , ^ a m ( ; n ( ] m ( , n t ; b u t do 'not oVrfTf*-

LOUIS'HARRIS Louis Harris, 31, son of Mr. and

Mrs. Henry Harrisof this place and a World War veteran, died at the Alec. Hospital., at.. Prescott,.. AHz.

| or. April 13.of pneumonia. He at-tended-the Pinckney "school and serv r.d overseas for 18 months. Surviving arc his parents, three, brothers, Bert,

Sylvuhter uf Pinckney and Fran-

On October S, "JS75 she was unit­ed in marriage with Chester Hinchey To this union were bom two sons, Ross and Guy, and one daughter, Dede, all of whom survive. She de­parted this life April 13, 11*32 after a long illness which she bore patient­ly and courageously.

Funeral services were held at the late home, April K>. Mr. C. H. Davis First Reader of the Christian Science tam4i-«f-ltowe!l,- officiated, InU^--

ment wa>- in Pinckney cemetery.

hv all. the Plank," in pirate costume. ;

Special mention should be made of: CEMETERY ,'i/»rti« t?«ilt , . i4s' v i n l i n s n l n s " S n i ' i u u - . ^»i

"O"

|JV'iiaaii.Ilubx;i±iL^hiLui„^ojQi. „!'Spi*i«g t Song" and "Traumurei" wilh Mac-! t 1( pJM<.kn,.y Cwtt-ry Assw. waw Dowell's "To a Wild Ros<:" as an - -\ ; , M ,, t t t le'h„no of Miss P.alnche core weir welliveeived. ^'Martin .Monday evening. The old of-

were i-e-c lect'd for another They are' p. H. Swarthout,

the return of the saloon; Their panacea or cure all is states rights.

| That is they would let each individ-

The Children's Stringed Instrument

a r t in Chorus ami : ' e ' ^( f y

Class provid. d | ,1(

MEETING HELD Tlrrr nnnual basin. >s m*H'ting of I ^ s t a k , d(.cU]v w h o t h c r i t w o a W j ^

wet or dry. Thus those that vote wot would sell liquor and this would un­doubtedly mean the return of the old time descredited saloon. For a saloon

interesting musical groups which! p i , . , ; , ( , . n t . Koss Kead, vice president; v. ere enjoyed.

The ticket sale was conducted by liianche Martin, secretary-treasurer. It was decided to assess lot ownors

the Girl's Glee Club. The prize foriV, A A ., „ f„, , , t \^ t> i . , , ,,, , , >I.OO per vear for rare of lots, Bids

the g rl selling the largest numberi , . e .. • u e ~ * „ . , , « v.( re asked for the job of cemetery

of tickets was won by Constance « T-, , , » , , / , „ , , J 1 sexton. The bid of H. C. Ve<lder was

FINDS BURIED TREASURER

ton. "The fu'ncral " was held from St.

Mary's church, Pinckney, Wednesday tat 10:00 A. M., Rev. Lewis*Dion of­ficiating, liurial was <n St. Mary's

ccmetcr)'-

While working" in his garden "Mon­day morning, Patrick Dillon dug up ar. old tin can in which was (one* al­ee! a little better than $H>, all in silv­er. Some of the coins wen- of a number of years back. Just who bur­ied this treasure or why is unknown.^ The place whe^e this was found was formerly the Kearney homestC7t4.-

Darrow. The receipts were unexpect­edly large. The excess'over expendi­tures which will amount to about eighteen dollars is to be donated to the Senior Class to aid in paying for the graduation excretes.

LIVINGSTON MAN NAMED DELEGATE

W. W. Knapp of Brighton was-

n;.med as one of the delegates to

the National Democratic convention

to be held at Chicago this summ­

er,

found to 1)L the lowest and- accord-ir gly the position was given to him.

SPECIAL COMMUNICATION Livingston Lodge No. 7'i will go to

Mockhridge Friday evening, April 21) to put on thiee third degrees. Kvery member of the Fellowcraft team is asked to be present. • ^ -

R. W. Curbtt, See.

wax merely a place where liquor waa sold by the glass. The principle fault found now with prohibition is lack of < nforccment and the legalized sale of liquor would only aggravate the en­forcement problem.

SOFT BALL LEAGUE OPENS The Pinckney Soft Ball League

opened Monday night. Stanley Dinfe-

TT F. V. and K. K. Fish spf-nt Tues-

^day in Lena wee county.

Smith by a 10 to 0 score, scorinf two runs in' the last inning. Two tame runs were h i t Andy Singer hfttiar for the circuit in the first btaiaf a » i Lyman Battle In thojjxth- -Patteries:

DinkeL^M. Campbell A ft. Smitlu_Swarthout & N. XtUer

Vmpircs—P«t Lavey and Bill OnHfc^ > • v W

5 * '#U

„.,>.,•• » y - ^ -

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I MAD LAUGHTER WEEK OF APRIL 17

Temperatures will <fce on the in­crease at the beginning of the weekj of April 17th in the state of Michigan. The barometer will be falling and the sky increasing in cloudiness. We ex­pect marked storminess during t h e i s

A THRILLING MYSTERY STORY • by MILES BURTON

plied Dick. "It was a really ingenious leave ^ < ? J * * ^ * ^ £ J £ trick, you must admit. And look how country at ***^™*> S n S m e d I was recalled from Somersetshire, so in« the ™ ? ^ ™ ^ * * X ^ Z

to be in London when the theft was the pursuit. But he could still uae his as carried out! Our friend, or one of his brains and communicate « V % " £ » agents, sent that telegram, you may, which he might evolve to Sir Edric

And it's that that rather bothers Aa it happens, I told nobody but

This would certainly be the safest plan. Dick was no coward, and would

AlSon-my-aUdfWft. I didn't even tot have eajoyod nnthing tatter than to Jerry Gould know where 1 was going, continue his struggle withi the Funny Alison isnt' likely to have told any- Toff. But thews were o t h a w b e « d e a body, except perhaps her aunt or her himself to be .thought of. The next father; there's no particular reason move on the part of hw advereary why she should. That means that our might well be to strike at him through

Sir Edric picked up the impression) entered last night, and the Mahara-, {riend has got a man following me those he loved. His connection with> d glanced at it curiously. He then! jah's Rubies were taken," said Sir Ed-j a b o u t x w i £ h t o h e a v e n j could.catch Alison was already known, since they

* '* h i m a t j tj» had used her name as a bait to recall.

Perhaps we'll catch him for you,

CHAPTER XXXI Dick saw at once that the only pos-! w»d glanced - - - - - - . . . .

ible course for him to follow was to handed it togetiier wtfh the three j nc^quietty. But during the photographs, to the expert.

I should Dick whistled softly. "Oh, so that's! him. At Lestridge Hall he would not

door farm work accomplished, since showers and rairws, if not actual snow, will be influencing the state until after the middle of the week.

Temperatures during the last half of the week will fall considerably be­low the seasonal norma], a condition that may injure early outdoor truck crops and even winter grains. The moisture of these storms early in the week will probably help winter wheat, meadows and pastures, but will consid­erably delay oats and barley seeding in some sections of the state. This is also a danger time for any early bud­ding fruit trees and local temperatures and wind conditions should be watched

Forecasting Weather by Graph* very clesely.

The general trend of the tempera­ture and the precipitation for the next few months in Michigan is expected to be downward, if past chart movements are any criterion. On this basis we believe that temperatures will remain above the seasonal average for the greater share of the coming months of this year while precipitation will range close to normal.

For the past two or t^iree years, at least, temperatures have been showing a very regular periodic climax about every ten to twelve months. Since la&t year May temperatures have been steadily ciinvbing until the first _of the year; since the readings have beer, getting smaller.

Precipitation reached a maximum monthly amount last September and has since been showing a downward trend that will prooablyc^rrry-thrpugh for several months to come.

-Yesterday afternoon I was in Sam-1 comparing them with the three pohto-ersetshire," he replied. "I had driven1 P * * * * - , * ^ f ™ ^ t i o n in say-down there the day before, and was) i n f *? the 'our prints have been staying at the Anchor and Hope Inn,| ^ f r ° m ^ " " ^ ******' s i r ' h e

I say Conway, are ^ ^ t° understand how the real thief ' ' would prefer to use your car. I think'

About f o u r V d o c k y e e - f - ^ - ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ^ ^ - him and turned staying at near Wells terday afternoon I received a tele­gram, signed with Miss Weatherleigh's name, asking me to return to London at once. I have the telegram with me. Here it is. You will notice that it was handed in at Regent Street at 2:05 p. m. yesterday."

Dick handed the telegram to Sir Edric, who read it, nodded, and put it aside.

"About half an hour later I started to drive back to London," continued Dick.— "It was abuuf u. ijuu-itci' pmA

Herridge. But

"I'm afraid that there's very little doubt about it," replied Sir

Having reached this conclusion, he rose and strolled across the room to

. man to pass before entering the house, the window. Walking up and down

Edric. t r a d there was always the chance of ^ , ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ 5 1 iX ^ i v ~ — ~ ~ , . , , ^ . , the man noticing the number of the ful-looking man, attired in a blue

to Pollard, who was standing tri-; "And it's that which makes the whole ^ t Another use- overcoat and a bowler hat, who ap-umphantly in the background. "Well,", business so awkward. It seems to m e evidence against you, my P*ared to be engaged in counting pav-he said, "admitting, for the moment,, that it 11 want a lot of explaining * s e n d a ^ ^ h f t v e a l o o k ing stones that these were Mr. Fenhampton's1 — " " ! > . . . . . «P«II«,*-»* t*w « 1 ^ 1 » « > » « * ^ finger-marks that you found on the that these were Mr. Fenhampton ,1 a w a y . ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ afc t h a t l o c k . u p , .

door-knob, what is your theory?" ! in my sleep, I can't explain it," said "That Mr. Penhampton's account of, Dick candidly. "The ridiculous thing

his doings last night is not strictly | is that I can't establish an alibi. As it accurate, sir," replied Pollard firmly.) happens nobody that I know of saw "I believe that he returned from Som-1 me go into my rooms, and the mews ersetshire as he has informed us. I was deserted when I put my car away.

I don't suppose that will tell you

'Pollard's first move! Dick. "I wonder if it

muttered would be'

Dinner Stories

nine when I reached my rooms. I im-mediatelygot on the telephone to Miss Weatherleigh's aunt, with whom she had been staying while she was in London. She informed me that it was impossible that Miss Weatherleigh could have sent the telegram herself, since she had left King's Cross at 11:30 that morning for Iiestridge in Lincolnshire. Miss Weatherleigh's aunt had-personally •seen her off.

"I then thought that Miss Weather­leigh must have given the telegram to someone else, who had forgotten about it till two o'clock. I therefore put a trunk-call through to Lestridge Hall, and spoke to Miss Weatherleigh herself. She assured me that she hael sent ho such telegram. She had trav­eled with her father to Lestridge Hall, where they had arrived safely. She had no motive for wishing me to re-

s Fast Worker The old maid called in her lawyer,

and explained to him her last will and testament, '

"I want to give $3,000 U> my church; $1,000 to my nephew, $1,000 to the Y. M. C. A. and 31,000 to the library."

"What about the remaining $600 .'" he asked.

'Tve never had a lover," explained the c4d maid, "and I will that to any-

turn to London. "What time did you speak to Miss

Weatherleigh on the trunk line?" asked Pollard^swiftly

"It was between eleven and half-past when 1 got through," replied Dick.

"And, after that, what did you do?" "I went to bed. I had had a long

day before I started, arwl this and a drive of a hundred and forty miles or FO without sr stop" had - completely fftfgg^l me out I dad not get up till

_u_

"I'M do it," said theTawyer. He hurried home and explained it to his wife. That evening he called at the old maid's home.

At nine o'clock his wife became nervous and called hrm on the phone.

"It's all right, dearies," he ex­plained." • "She has cut off the church and the library and if you will let me stay another hour she'll drop the Y. M. C. A,"

Extraordinary Memory Jones, the suit salesman, was a very

absent-minded man. He had been scolded so much for forgetting things that he was exultant one everting

" when—he—and his wife—come home from the theater. As they reached their door he clutched his wife's arm.

nine o'clock Lhis morning. — "Your servant, of course, was wait­

ing-for you-m-yourrooms?" — "No. As 1 expected to spend some

4-dii fe in Sorm'Tsetghire, I had sent him away for three or four days' holiday."

"What did you do with your car, on your return to London?"

"I have a private lock-up in a mews clo.se to my rooms. I drove the car in there and locked it up."

"What is the number of your car, Mr. Penhampton?"

"LH 3437. It's a Sunbeam saloon, painted blue."

FMardturned to Sir Edric. "A SunhearrTlaTo'ho car. Bearing "The reg^

V T £ r « uis i -Jwi V» etiquette to ask that fellow in and much,' 'replied Dick. "Our_fnend has ^ h i m & d r i n k ? , , too keen an eye for detail to have broken in. He'll have provided himself f

with a key which would open it." "I expect he will," agreed Sir Edric.

"Taking it all round, Dick, it's going to be a devil of a job to persuade Pol-iard uf yum innuo.umw.—I can't very

Dick was fascinated at first sight by Lestridge Hall. It was a square house of the Georgian period, stand­ing in the midet of lawns over which stately trees presided. Beyonri the

ii -i" i»* *- - M „ « oil in/mii-ips: lawns and separated from them by well order him to cease all ^ u r n e s s u n k e n UwJ%££*d a small park, in your direction He wo u d qu te ^ ^ ^ J J J j rightly, consider it unwarrantable in. terference on my part. Besides, he d » - , * - - :«««»- wu,-«u -.v^*^ think that I was in league with you, ~ 7 n ^ J K ^ ^ l S & ^ S l i ^ ' and I wouldn't put it past him to u P ° n **.e windows lighting them up «*mi * 7"UI1" ** . r

T ., with crimson, as though they blazed

subordinat,. You don't know t t a e » $ ^ £ £ £ $ £ ^ h e „ , chapa like I do ^ J ^ ™ ^ Al tan d r o t e ^ t o ^ , i Z the S ? practical fact like that door knob more , . „ * ; , .? . ^ . , , ^ ,. than they do a dozen volumes of the- t l o n - H e f o « n d it impossible to im-

n n ^ ^ , agine even the existence of crime, or

proof that .you didn't. T h j ™ - , j t o t %™££ %& ^SSlE I can do is to give him instructions W A s H _ *,I«W»«*-«H ** i ^ ,, . , . , TT" -.-^+ ,,«„"~^rjt>ion+ a series of nideous- nientmares, to be that he is not to arrest you without ^ f o r ^ t e n ^ ¾ . ^ i n f l u e o C e

my permission." ; o f , ^ 0 - ^ 1 d f l V "Confound the man!" exclaimed o f * ' P 6 8 4 5 ™ . d ^ y ' „, , . , . A .

T^- 1 <<T ~, •ur.'u ^ o ^ r t W YYIO' D o y ° u think you'll be able to find

Dick. I suppose he l l shadow me * ' . 1 1, J ^.1. j w^ii ;* nl,<»Kt {i\ enough to amuse you here, Dick?" prove amusing 7lr1ook* a,^though 1 ^ ™ L o n d Z you know We were already being shadowed by the neor>le- father hates-Funny Toff's people, since they seem £ . see "f 1 1 ? J f ° p ' e ' t a t J € r ^ 8 ^ -

x , J , 1 „« n„f 4„«rt fWint having people m the house, he says it to know whe-rever 1 go. But just tnink u u-of the astute Pollard having had his disturbs him.

And as he refuses to go 01 1 » « M U « x u » « ^ ' X V T h k V ™ out himself unless he's literally forced suspicions of me so early. J ^ was ^ a pretty cute dodge of his g^Ung me , ^ % ^ d , c e n t hunting, tod raw a sketch of the necklace in , , , ,,..,,. , , . . . ^ boa iavv a „rt„vefi \^ „.nf a and old William declares that the hie note-book. Of course, ne got a . , , - ^ . . me w « uwiv. , f£,o.pr poachers have left us a pheasant or beautiful impression of my nnger- *™ r prints. An^ 1 thought he was merely -two.

rather a stupid man, going "I shan't have difficulty in rvvpi* * «»»i& v int** s- Any

md which_had already been ^ ^ J ^ ^ T ^ / ^ J ^ Dick with_a_ eredr davs before!" . s m i l e ^ - F o r one thing, I shall see

"It seems the matter to us in

something of you, which Ilrever-eo«I3: a pity you didn't leave . , . , * flrst place " :n London without a crowd of people

v .• ^ -Qui, I say, are you the

'Look h«r», P*-tyJi thi> another of your amateur »l«uA »tunU?" ; ^ 0 1 ^ ^ ^ a i T w e ^ ¾ ^ ¾ ^ father w » T l B r T « you are the only man we Know wno .* . — . i lias succeeded—in—interviewing the an infernal nuisance? I l l do my best

of-his wayy but still—Tr~~~l

through to Lincolnshire that he forgets that he took his car out again afterwards, in company~with a man dressed as a chauffeur, and drove to Mr, Ibbotson's house in Park Lane."

Dick laughed shortly. "It seems to be very little use my assuring you that I did nothing of the kind, Inspector,"

s4 he -gakh -" Surely-the point istration number LH 3437, is at pre?- settled, without recourse to these

park in 9t,!^o m f'what grimy experiments. I take

IhaTcto'esn't "Oh, you needn't worry!" exclaimed

lot of Alison. "It was father himself who down. He

have no doubt that he put a trunk call And then there's that curious business Funny Toff, but, frankly; But I think 1 about the telegram." I seem to have carried us much further

"I don't, at the moment, see what: while it has led to a devil of a lot ol ^ ^ ^ t ^ c o m i n ^ ^ H e

that has to do with it," remarked Sirj complications. Well, ^ Y a d « r t t e r d o S ? t mind having people if he's not Edric dryly. ! more to be said now J0****™™\ expected to entertain them, and, in

I think I do," replied Dick U*ve ^ ^ ^ ^ / ^ ^ ^ ^ case he seems to have made up . . „ , _ , - - . - ' . . „ f€t m e t r y l ^ to Pollard By the^wa> before y ^

I can't help K ^ ^ 1 ^ - ^ ^ h e l i k e s y o u ^ 1 t h m k , in his funny

"But slowly. to disentangle this mess. feeling that this is another move of London for the P 1 ^ 1 ^ . . ^ . . - , f-jpnH* T nnr numnrniK friend directed mainlv ! fairness, to tell Pollard your plans." o l d w a y , ™ w a n t s to make friends. I our numorou, Inend, ^ c t e d rna nly, ; k n o w t h a t m b e ^ d e ^ mrt ot

ent standing in the car James Square, sir," he said quietly. "It was driven there shortly before one o'clock this morning by a man dresse<i as a chauffeur—Since i

it that if 1 called at Ibbotson's, some one mu^t have let me in? Why not ring up the house and find out?"

{\x nhnnt to rppK >>"»• Sir

r against the ru^iesr bufcincfe-i '***"" Re seems to P™ to^stay m^town, dentally against me.

a gains and now he's

' replied "Dick. ^ imagmaa that-onre we're marriff<l ^ • m ^ a j v _ , 1 1

you'll carry me off and he'll never see me again. He's got curious, old-fash-

Edric silenced him with a gesture. "I think perhaps it will be best if you allow me to interview Mr. Penhamp-

alone, Inspector," he said. "I allotted to Mr. Penhampton." Then,! have no wish to take matters out of before either the Assistant Commis-' your hands, and I will undertake, on

still there at seven.o'clock, which i-against the regulations, the policeman! on duty reported the matter. It hasj

mqumu ?TM }*l{l P'i«!*»A U.->sq ; ton SP \\

. . . c When I rang Alison up last night, she

our interview, and now he's had the J u ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ 1 ^ 1 mio-ht m well <ro ioned ideas about some things. Well, happy idea of enlisting the police on . ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ H X H O T — - — his side. By jove, Conway he s a fe - down a d j r e m a i n e d

IAW worth pitting one's wits against! e v e r> -vuu

here we are. They entered a fine old hall, from

which a fine oak staircase led UP to a

I have mirr:' and your.- as well The woman gazed at him with as­

tonishment. "Idiot!" The exclaimed, "neither of us had one."

An Order MU-*«nt "Miss Curlycu," murmured th-

office manager, "I don't wanna be -har.?h, . Xothin* like that. Really

"Now, who is ab?^nt-minded?" h • cried, triumphantly producing two umbrellas- from under his arm. „ l t . CFW1V;1 „ ^. 'You've forgotten your umbrella, but] s i o n e r o r Dick could answer, he turnedv Mr. Penhampton's part, that he will be

to the latt'T. "How do you accountforj at your disposal whenever you wish to your visit to Mr. Ibbotson's house, 1 see him. _A)so, if he can furnish me soon after midnight, Mr. Penhanrp^l with any -xptairation,-t ^wttt-under-j i0r[y' take to pass it on to you."

"What on earth do you mean?" ex-' "Therrs' no,getting away from the calimed Dick. "I haven't be^n near; finger-print?, «ir», persisted Pollard Ibbotson's p l a ^ for weeks." •' doggedly.

Sir Edric interposed authoritatively. • "No, no, possibly not, "This..has gone far enough, Pollard,", Edric impatiently I!

dor.lt.'! - — "Let's have the answer?"

damsel. "What's biting you now?" . "I just wanna ask you not to write

your boy friends during business

replied Sir "I quite, appreciate

IHTcase'vou have establisheU—Bui 1 - - fhe said sharply , -"! should bejrjadjfj _ ; _ _ .... , aid t h e ; v o u ^ n explain to me what reason I repeat, that in my opinion, the inter-

vou have for supposing that Mr. Pen-! .-sts of justicewill best be served by hampton visited Mr. Ibbotson." leaving me to deal with Mr. Penhamp-

replied Pollard 1 ton for the moment. Why, man, he manager replied.' calmly.

ever, . o~h~the spot,~T~ctffl-put that off — 1 J

"So I have already discovered," re- ^. E|[JV h e s i t a t e < i «<No," he said surrounding gallery. Tea was already marked Sir Edric. "But I fail to un- ^ (<I t h i n k o n t b e w h o i e j that 'aid before a blazing wood fire, and at derstand how even his ingenuity could had better go You can't get into t n e *°nnd o f ^€ir arrival Dr. Weath-enable him to take your hand against 'mixhief t h e r e a t a n events. I'll tell erleigh appeared through a curtained vour will and press it firmly upon the p U a r d a n d h'e c a n ^ k e what meas- door. He welcomed Dick warmly, and door knob of Ibbotson's pantry." he'thinks fit." showed himself a surprisingly affable

"No but what if he took Ibbotson's '" and considerate host. Dick had some-door knob and pressed it against my CHAPTER XXXIII n a w f a n c ied that, in his own house, hand'>" replied Dick. "By jove, man, , , . u;, m;„A tbe antiquary would have been rny teffiW vou of mv adventure in 'ully occupied « , th h*. n e * ^ 1 ^ c l u 3 ion of everything else. Bat, u it S a t empfv"house in" Creek Street? ™™». He UIt conv.nced that lus ex- h d> i t ^ 6 n l y t o w a r d s tte e n d

^ . , e o T p o ^ n t a^out it s t n ^ me P ^ ^ ^ - ¾ ^ t n e f l • / ** « * the h o b b y w a s e v e . men-

r S ^ T L ' ^ t S M . ^ ¾ ¾ • " f J . ' K T P ^ " ^ U „ s me that you have . e e n

S ^ ^ h T E ^ n o t i c e d t o ^ . ^ n ^

f i t was unpleasantly .ticky. , S.e ^ - ^ . / ^ 1 ° , I X S ' *»- ^ " » • ™* ° ™ P " * 6 ' ? " "

"Certainly, sir. f^wo^T~dfa^Tnrr~atteft-j«afl heart of

H*rb|tton--onee-m©** to those -three finger-.^.Scotland Yardl" em a| print photographs. The source of A

liours," the sal. "Lettenr axe apt to get mixed. k, Blurb report we have sent shipment of tove and kisses instead of] \ have already explained to you, sir the axle grease they ordered" j € is taken from the door handle of the

' pantrv at Mr. Ibbotson's. B 1 have

cau that the dodge9 Li,r t.v™- He had prepared it on missioner, he would h a Y e ^ 1 1 j * " ^ is for the eastern counties, perhaps P u r p ^ t h J i t wou^d Lke a ^ f j ? * ™ * * £ ' ^ ^ b e » u e s I was born a.d have a ^ y .

then

Did Hm Lire at Schenectady? A boy ent:red a country -tore and

said to the storekeeper: "Gimme a nick el's worth o' asafoetida."

The storekeeper made up th* pack­age and the bdy said, "Dad wants you to charge it."

44ABrigbtf w4wt'«-your flame?" " Schenoerhorn." The storekeeper scratched his head.

"Trice it for nothin'." be said. _**_! ato\-fotn' ter spell 'asafoetida' and 'Sd»«^r«eri>orn, for no nickel."

Just aa Antique A* Jittie girt ran into the house

wtth a piece of ware which she had picked op m the street, and inquired of her m*ter whaft it was.

He** s»ter looked at it blankly jor a tnomenA. "I don't know,!! she said, 4<YD and aak mother."

"The mother thought hard for some momenta,- bat, ait latt, gave it up. "Go in-i f rv giwuAna," she said.

The Httfe girt S6 as she was bid. Gnmdma teld her. It was a hairpin.

not yet referred to. It is taken "from a pocketbook of mine, in which Mr. Penbamptorw.was kind enough to draw a sketch of the Hardway necklace at my request."

He spoke with such an air of con­viction that even Sir Edric was for tfcn? moment shaken. "But, surely, Pollard, there must be some mistake!" he exclaimed

There was no alternative for Pollard but to go, which he did with a very bad grace. Sir Edric waited until the door had closed behind him, turned once more to Dick.

"I dont' know what the devil been up to," he said in a tone tation. "But it's perfectly thjat Pollard has convinced himself that you're either the Funny Toff, himself or his chief lieutenant."

LA -Kav* ' i v e d in themu_ Whereabouts in_Spm_-impression of my finger-prints. I ex- dence which pect^that he had had designs on lb-1 duced by theT*oHce;~ne~ w v « « ,—._ o w o„i . -u ;_ ^j, , , botson's safe for some time and had: found it almost impossible to establish ersetshire did you stay?

- - his innocence. He could produce no (To be continued)

Street with a knob similar to that on ons' pantry. Then, when I'd

gone, he took off the knob and kept

fitted the door of the room> ,n^ Creek, ^ - ^ - ^ ^ o f t h e substituted Street with a knob similar to that on ™£™^ w o u l d ^ a v e ^ ^ ^ m u c h Ibbotsons p a n ^ . J h e n when I d ^ r ^

tied, sir, if Mr. Peimamptwr-ttetwe* re-

CHAPtER XXXII

( It's going to be deuced awkward The matter can very eaaily be set- j one way and another," continued Sir

:E4 ric, without giving Dick time to re-cover his amazement. "Pollard is a tenacious devil, and it will take a lot to dissuade htm from his opinion. Look here, Dick, is this another of your amateur sleuth stunts?"

"My dea* fellow," replied Dick. "I'm floundering helplessly in the dark. Pollard seems to haye made up his mind that I went to Ibbotson's

that these are his finger-prints, plied the Inspector.

"I do most emphatically deny that I ever touched Ibbotson's pantry door!" exclaimed Dick indignantly.

"May I telephone to the finger-print department, sir?" inquired Pollard.

He received the necessary permis­sion, and in a few minutes an official from the department appeared ,with the- necessary apparatus "" * ~*~" direction, Dick pressed the first two fingers and thumb of his right hand upon an mk'ed pad and then placed them on a sheet of white paper.

But what puzzled him most was why 1 P>. been favored with these warn- j The Funny Toff had undoubtedly;

he time wno 1 was. n . «»-.-, - , - ^ | - - - . ^ ^ h e f f r < m t e r y

discovered that until he c . r c u b W h , , J ^ T f t j t ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ .

levil you've H ^ y him until the Ibbotson coup came | *>*\ one of irri- off. Mind you, I don't think he knew! he naa plain to me I at the time who I was. He can't have j \n&-*

flashlight photograph ' " ^ ^ "I f f . ^ , , « serious a crime in bis eye . precaufon. m case Improved an^vm I W . ^ ^ ^ , ^ b y B r o o t a > o r

house last night. I assure you, on my-tthe imprint. UndeT~hl«i word of honor, that I didn't, and I

know that vou'H believe me. Bat, even if I haddSne^so, I fail to see when all this storm arises."

"Well, the fact is that the place was

satisfactory agent. ~ . r_ satisfactory, and ooeyed ordera, the^-Hen-idger door knob would not have been sub- ' *J —:* stituted. In the alternative event, the pc4i«__wouJd have saved him the bother of getting rid of me."

"I shouldn't wonder if you were right," remarked, Sir Edric, picking up the door knob. "Now 1 look at this thing closely, it looks as though it

^. J fet they had been mur^ dered without the formaility of any warning. It was not, as Dick realized with a thrill of apprehension, that the Funny Toff or Ids agents had lacked opportunity.. They knew.of his jour­ney to the Mendipe. as the telegram

U. W. No. 1042—4-11—1932

Kidneys • , trouble you?

Heed Prompily Kidney and Bladder Irregularities

1 Are y o u bothered with blad-dcr irregularities, getting up at night and nagging backache? Heed promptly these symp-tomt Thty may wmen-cLasgnt

\T

had proved. What could have been easier than to have murdered him on those desolate moors. Especially as he

disordered kidney or bladder condition. Users everywhere rely on Doon's Pi ik Praised for 50 years the country over. Sold

^by all druggists.

^ e n you P»t your hand or, * , * 1 r f * ^ " S S i . reason was that! would account for the perfection of The only poMDie _ . . . ,

• i^3-£^"S£; - - - - * ^ SftS*L?S pmg. If we can marks on the door of **% rom

T ^ y « r ftrieV gerou. to ju* i fy t h . ru,k i™urx«l u, of m r C L o L k kTlUng him. It w a . nrt <*°****r ».

jTHtrtu' w» w» " — 0 1 * ^ * 7 " . «, »«ui«-n*arv thoufzht, but Dick, Street^ your e i p l a r - f o n - 1 ^ 1 . 4 ¾ ^ ¾ ¾ ¾ ^ ^

other .opt ion ," re- tage mifht be taken of ifc He would correct. •T donH see any

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fmtiiH* iiMm i-uiuey

. - . l i f t fttJUi. .rfau.^wjtfiulfe*'- •pppfr^spwipiipiiirwi 14.111m IIJIIIPPII-J&£*'.4.**W.£ • • P U P fi",H"ip w p y

-*v

'T

The Piockney Ditpatgh Wedne»dny, April 20, 1932 w" r a w

MORTGAGE SALE DEFAULT having been made in

th# conditions of a certain mortgage mad* by James B . .Walsh, a single man, mortgagor, to George J . Payne, mortgagee, dated and recorded Octo­ber 16, 1925, in the office of the Re­gister of Peed* for Livingston County Michigan, in Liber 108 of Mortgages a t pages 34$ and 349, on which mort­gage there is claimed to be due and unpaid a t t he date of this notice for principal, interest , taxes and insur­ance the sum of 41228.95 , and an a t torney 's fee of $25, as provided for in said mortgage, and no suit or pro­ceedings at law having been instituted to recover the moneys secured by said mortgage, o r any pa r t thereof,

NOTICE I S H E R E B Y given, that by vir tue of the power of sale con­tained in said mortgage, and the stat­u te in such case made and provided, on Saturday, the 11th day of June , 1932, at ten o'clock in the forenoon in sajd mortgage a s follows: of said day the undersigned will, at the west f ront door of the court house in the city of Howell, Michi­gan ( t ha t being the place where the Circuit Court for the County of Liv­ingston is held) sell a t public auct­

i o n to the highest bidder, the premis­es described in said mortgage, or so much thereof, as may be necessary to pay the amount so as aforesaid due on said mortgage, with six per cent interest, and all legal costs to­gether with said at torney 's fee, to-

-witT —

of' Mortgages on pages 606-7 upon which mortgage default has been made in payment of taxes and inter­est and the whole amount has become and is hereby declared due and pay­able and there is claimed to be due and unpaid on this date for princi­pal, interest and taxes the sum of $4,380.88, and a $35 at torney fee provided in said mor tgage; and * no suit or proceeding at law having been instituted to recover said sum or any part thereof;

Now therefore by virtue of the power of sale contained in said mort­gage and persuant to statute notice is hereby given that said mortgage will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises therein described at pubh'c auction to the highest bidder at the front door of the court house in the

NEIGHBORING NEWS

The Brighton board of education has asked for sealed bids for the pos­ition of jani tor of the school.

The new $50,000 Hall of Musip a t Hart land was dedicated last Sunday It is a gift of J . R. Crouse, former resident of that place.

The Stockbridge base ball team will open the season at the new Jackson prison where they -will play the prison team.

A marriage license has been issued to Robert Juckett , 54, and Mrs. Helen Hubbard Woll, 29, both of Howell.

John Walker Bush, «j year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Bush of Ann

Lemuel Martin visited his sister m Ypsiianti Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. Mylo Kettler and daughters, Yvonne . and Patricia, spent the week end with Pinckncy relatives.

Mrss. Maria Schuler, Mr. and Mrs. Pat Dillon and daughter, Pollie, wore Sunday callers at the home of Miss Jennie McGunnes near Dexter.

Paul Isham returned home last Tuesday, a f t e r ^ e a r l y six weeks . at the University h o s p i t a l '

Mr. and M/s, Curtis Brown and young son were recent visitors at the home of Chaa. Brown.

o~

ONE SWALLOW MAY NOT

MAKE A SUMMER

but One Stove changed my ivhole kitchen!"

city of Howell in said county of L i v - l A r b o r sustained injuries in a cave injston June 17, next, a t ten o'clock^ w h i c h caused his death 2 hours later a. m. ; which premises are described

Land in the Township of Deerfield, Livingston County, Michigan, describ ed a s : East 100 acres of Southwest quarter of Section 26, Town 4 North of Range 5 East, Michigan.

Da t td March 16, 1932 George J. Payne

Mortgagee Shields ft Smith Attorneys for Mortgagee Howell, Michigan

O

IiTATE OF MICHIGAN hi - T W Circuit Court For_th» County

of Lhringtton in Chancery. Helen Phelps, Plaintiff,

VS. Wal ter Phelps, Defendant

East half of Southeast quar ter ; Northwest quarter of Southeast quar ter ; Northeast quar ter South of Creek, Section 7, all being in town­ship 4 north, range 4 east, Michigan, consisting of 230 acres, more or less. Dated: March 1G, 1932

William Kuhn Jennie Kuhn Mortgagees

Shields & Smith Attorney for Mortgagees HowelIr Michigan _

MORTGAGE SALE Default having been made in the

conditions of a mortgage made by Gertrude Lewis Backus to Fred Kuhn dated and recorded March 26, 1928 in the office of the Register of Deeds of Livingston County, Michigan, in Liber 128 of Mortgages on pages 600-1 ; which mortgage was duly as-

last Tuesday. He and a playmate had enlarged a woodchuck hole and he had started to crawl through it when ,it caved in.

The American Legion Posts f Ann Arbor will take a poll of all ex-ser­vice men of the county in a big meeting to be held tonight on the bonus question.

The marriage of Ray Newcomb of Howell to Miss Awilda Howey of Freeport , Ohio, has been announced It took place at Bowling Green, Ohio on Jan. 2, 1932. The latter is a teach f.v in th#> Hf)^pll ^hnftl- ___

The election of the Howell school board from now on will be by'secret ballot.

About 1,000 depositors of the 2.-600 attended a meeting at Monroe last Thursday night to plan for the meeting of the Monroe State Savings Bank under a moratorium agree­ment. A committee of 24 was named to obtain signatures of the depositors It is hoped to open the bank about

PlNCKNEY JHIGH SCHOOL \ LOSES OPENER

The- Pinckncy high school base balli team lost their first game of the sea­son to Howell in a panic played their last Friday. P1inekm,y has a preen ag­gregation this year and was not con-ceeded to have, much of a chance to beat the formidable county scat bunch. The locui boys were weak at the bat, only getting three hits. How­ell got seven hits but were aided mat- | erially by free passes handed out by the Pinckncy pitchers and several fielding misplays.

1 2 3 4 5 T> 7 1J II Pinckncy 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 2 U Howell 0, 7 4 1 0 0 12 7

liattcries-Pinckncy, Meabon, L'd-widge, Battle, and Dinkcl. How-rll- ^trigham, Munsell, Rancour and Rathbun. Umpire Bassett.

Paint Company in the i sular Paint is surpassed

~ " S u i t pending in the Circuit c o u r t for Livingston County, in Chancery, • n the 14th day of March A. D. 1932 a t the City of Howell, in said County ef Livingston.

I t satisfactorily appearing to the (Jouft by affidavit on file that a chan­cery summons has been duly issued out of and under the seal of said

signed by Ar thur E. Cole, E x e c H t ° r J j u n " e 24* of the estate of Fred Kuhn, deceased, D k i J l e d s c v c n t g m ^ flock

u ^ i a m / U r n u n d J e n * 1 C * ? " • of Jerome West who lives two m i l s husband and wife, by assignment d a t - „ Y p s i l a n t i , i a s t Thursday night.

ATTENTION PAINT USERS Manufactured and guaranteed by

the .largest and strongest Financially world. Penin-

passed. by none and equalled by few ami sold at a lower price than any of th<» other Standard brands.

Save money. (Jet prices on Penin­sular paint before you buy.

R. E. Barron, H o w l I

IT'SJTN ELECIKUCHfcr , T—f

• •

ed February 5, 192?, and recorded in said Register's office February 6, 1929 in Liber 122 of Mortgages on page 3 1 5 ;

Upon_which mortgage default ha.s

Court for the appearance of said dp- | a t i tuted to lecuv fendant therein, and tha t the same p a r t thereof;

been made in payment of taxes and interest and the whole amount has become and is hereby declared,. _djie and payable and there is claimed to be due and unpaid on this date for principal and interest the sum of $3-177.">5 and $35 attorney fee stipulat­ed for in said mortgage; and no suit or proceeding at law having been in-

er smu sum oi any

_c_o_uId not_beservjyLon saifLde fendant because that aflerzii inquiry it could not be ascertained in what s tate or_county the said defend a n t z e sk to ,—e*- ihe whereabouts -of j b!TtbrccTdsed~5yasale of the premis

es_thercinjdescribcd at public auction -to-the highest bidder a t th«. fiunt

•aid defendant learned and that said chancerygammon^^hasb^hTrj i iur j ied: by the sheriff of said county with his certificate thereon indorsed and that af ter diligent search andMnquiry- he was unable to find the said defend­ant within the State of Michigan, on or before the re turn day of "Said sum­mons, on motion of J ay P. Sweeney, a t torney for plaintiff, IT I S ORDER­ED, that the said defendant, Walter

Now therefore by virtue of the -e4-*aTe loiitained-tfi s au tmor t

gage and pursuant to statute notice is hereby given that said mortgage will

door of the court house in the city of Howell in said county of Livingston JuTTe 17, next, aT t^n -o'clock a. m.; which premises are described in said mortgage as follows:

MORTGAGE SALE -Default having been made for

more than thirty days in the condi­tion of a certain mortgage executed

_, _ , - — „ — - w j b y Mrs. Susan Spraguc, a widow of tive in Congress f r o T f t - T h T ^ e c o T r t - - g ^ , L y u ; | > M ^ ^ - n t o r T h — F T

Lawrence? C. Leever, Ann Arbor police commissioner, has announced he will be a candidate for the Rep­ublican nomination -for represcnta-

M.ichigan district, opposing Earl Michener, of Adrian, incumbent.

Saturday morning-13 members of the South Lyon Senior class accom­panied by Supt. and Mrs. Thorn left in three atomobiles on a week's trip to Washington, D. C. The class funds will be Jised to pay transportation and room rent. The members wi have to pay for their meals, etc.

It is reported that since-th&jQ rand Rapids board of education issued the ultimatum that n T m a r r i e i P women teachers would be hired next year, five mft-mrd started divorce

teachers-suits.

-h^ve-'

f

<kSincc I've had my new Elcctrochef clcctrk-»«g€Tmy.. kitchen .seems entirely made over It's hard ro believe that anythiti^ could change ic so completely The room is brighter and pi-jasantcr, and actually appears new with my mod. in, snow white range standing in the sunlight by the window "i suppose it s the sheer clean-//m.u or ih;s new cooking method that appeals to me most, hn.igiy.- i stove that supplies only PURIi HMAT from a glowing wi re ! - without snK'ke or soot to blacken utensils or soil my kitchen walls and curtains. Then too, the smooth white porcelain and sparkling crfromeplate finish or. my blectrochet make it so much easier to have ;i really clean stove, Simply wip-

Exoct H«at Control

Ho Smoke, No Soot,

No N i t i n 7

Htot oi CUan at iwAltflht

-ingr-wtth a damp - cloth i-c-STores the original luster; .•ver again he satisfied \vith any°ocher stove!" l\i ne>

ttrotthfut Cook i m|

BUDGET $ PAYMINY PLAN 10 FIRST PAYMENT

' m u l l e d , r ta i l v tt> m u k . Balance small mntuhlx r>a; incnis N.jlo<i undLTtht'Sc c o n -

. I

^S]>rague and Betty N. Sprajruc, his wife, of Detroit, M.ichigaji, to the State Savings Bank of South Lyon, Michigan,a Michigan banking corpora tion, and recorded in the Livingston County Register of Deeds' Office on the, 4th day of March, 1929, in Liber

'M3$+i Mortgagee, pages 184-135, on w&ich mortgage there in claimed to be due at the date thereof the sum of o n p—thousamt - frei>_hiin drcd_sixty dol-

j lars and thirty fight ™*»°; «"'< "n

LOCAL Aim

proceedings haring been instituted eithr-r at law or in equity to recover tn7r—sat?r~-stkm -or—any- par t thereof; NOW THEREFORE, by virtue of

oT wer oi sale mnoV-ed, the undersigned will, Southerly entrance of th< Hotwr-intho-Gttyof-41owell

at the Court

THE DETROIT EDISON co A i tudy of one thousand famlliet u f ing rhe ELECTROQHEF f l ectric r a n g e showed a coolcinq co*r of

Eai i l / Cliar«d

I

WE SERVE OR SELL IN QUANTITY

Hers Ice Cre<

c.

s, cause U s appearance _ to entered in this cau«e within three months af ter the date of this order, end In case of his appearance that he cause his answer to plaintiff's bill of complaint to be filed, and a cocy. thereof served upon plaintiff's attor­ney, within twenty days after ser­vice en him of a copy of said bill and netice of this erder, and that in de­fault thereof said hill be taken as cen.fes£ed by said defendant.

And on like motion, IT IS F U R T H E R ORDERED that with In twenty days after the

East half of Southeast quar te r ; North west quarter of Southeast quar ter ; Northeast quar ter South of Creek, Section 7, all being, in township 4 1 Mr. north, range 4 east, Michigan, con-jSuneTa sisting of 230 acres, more or less. Dated: March 1(5, 1932 |

William Kuhn Jennie Kuhn Assignees —

air. and Mrs. T and son, Holt, were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Will Fisk.

Lee Lavey and wife were in Dext­er Friday.

and Mrs.M.T. (Jraves had as Nyra

Shields & Smith Attorneys for Assignees Howell, Michigan

(11 in .-aid County, on the 13th day of April A. D., 1932.

Tresent : Hon. Willis L. Lyons, Judge of Probate.

In the Matter of the Estate of W i l c o x , Deceased .

mre W. Lo l ig^av tnX filed~^h said court her petition, praying that the administration of said estate be

At a session of said court, held at da t e l e ^ b X the plaintifT cause a n o v f 1 ^ Probate Office i n - t t o r e i t r o £ H < w -ice e f this order to be published in t he PiMctaey Dispatch, a newspaper printed, published and circulating in said County of Livingteton, and that such publication be continued at least

weeks, or tha t he cause a copy of this order to be personally served upon said defendant at least twenty days before the t ime above prescribed for Ids appearance.

And on like motion, IT IS FUR­THER ORDERED that the said plain-tiff cause a cony of this order to be mailed to said defendant a t his last known postofBce address, by register­ed mail, and a re turn receipt demand­ed, * t least twenty days before the date herein prescribed for his ap­pearance.

J . B. Munsell, J r . fc Circuit Court Commissioner,

Livingston County, Michigan J a y P . Sweeney At torney for Plaintiff, Business Address : Howell, Michigan.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

The Probate Court for the County of Livingston.

ftTesTs7; Miss Nyra Graves' and Miss Dorothy Dorrell of Jack­son.

Mrs. (Jlenn VanBuren and daught­er, Helen, of Detroit spent Saturday ^vith Mr. -and—M^:HT-^k-<7

spent last week with R. G. Webb.

C.J. Clinton and wife visited Mrs. Margaret Hankard at North Lake Sunday.

Dr. and Mrs. C. L. Sigler were Monday dinner guests of Dr. and1

Mrs. Hollis Sigler in Howell. Ilev. and Mrs. Win, Simpson of

Brighton were Monday supper guests of Air. and Mrs. M.E . Darrow. -

Mr. and Mrs. Cha.s. Hicks, their daughter, Ruby, and her friend from Jackson were Sunday afternoon call­ers at the home of Mr., and Mrs. W. -€; Hmuk'u-; z~-7:17-;——

Dunwoodie j >ton County, Michigan, at ten o'clock A. M. Eastern Standard Time, on Monday, the 27th day of June, 1932 sell at public auction, to the, highest bidder the promises described in .said mortgage, or as much thereof as may he neces^aTy to pay the, amount dut

—FTTOITSTNtfTS ANfr CONFECTtONART ~

BROOKS AND HENRY BOX CANDIES

3enanas, Oranges, Grape Fruit, AppIes,Lemon*,Etc.

FRUITS IN SEASON

upon said mortgage, together with interest, attorney fees, and all legal cost allowed by law. Said premises hfting in the Township of Green Oak,

Brnkt4r---XCounty of Livingston, State of Mich-Mrs. Nellie Briggs of Howell spent ijfanTdescribed as fol lows!"

Commencing at a point on section line between section twenty one and twenty two, 20&7.5 feet north of the southwest comer of section twenty two, thence north along section line 157 feet, -thence cast eighty rods, thence south 1 -">T1 feet; thenee west 80 rods to the place of begin n i ng7 re so i-vTh g to the grantors, their heirs and as-

JOE GENTILE

STATE MICHIGAN

The Probate Court for the County of Livingston.

At a .-<•»>iu 1) o f s i i d 1 <MI r! h at City of tin- fitli

Mrs. A. VanSyckle, Miss Lucile VanSyckle, Mrs. Beulah Dewey and

, „ , son, Chark*,., were Detroit visitors granted to Anne W. Long, or to some "rU0S(}ay~ olhcr suitable person.

It is Ordered, That the 16th day of May A. D. 11)32 at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at said probate office, be and rs hereby appointed for hearing said petition.

It is Fur ther Ordered^ That public notice thereof be given by publication of a copy of this order for three suc­cessive weeks previous to said day of hearing in the Pinckney Dispatch, a newspaper printed and circulated in *aM county.

Willis L. Lyons, A t rue copy: Judge of Probate.

Cele8tia_ParBhallt _

* * *

MORTGAGE SALE Default having been made in the

conditions of a mortgage made by Ger t rude .Lewis Backus to William Kuhn and Jennie Kuhn dated and recorded ia the office of the "Register ©f Deeds of Livingston-County Michi* • a n , on March 20,.1928, in fiber 12$4

Register of Probate.

PENINSULAR PAINT Good for the pa.st 46 years. Your

father used it with satisfaction. Man­ufactured and guaranteed by the largest Paint Co. in the world and sold at a lower price than any oth­er reliable, or Standard paint.~~~—

R, E. Bsrron, Howell

signs, the right of co-user with the gran l ies herein, their h<ii> and assigns of the well now located on the above described premises, and right ^ f ingreMW and i»gre-Hs to and

the Probat.- OfhYi- in tie-Jiowrll in -aid County, on

• day of April A. I). l'.r.',2. l'tv~+-M: - lUm. Willi 1.. Lyon*,

Judu'c of Probate. In tl:e Matter (,t' | \, I ,-t-,i- ,,f

Tlioliias W. liii'liard.-on, i ). (•.•;!>• d. .\i'.\a Giainu'cv h:.> ;!'._•; !;1. d in .-aid

court her petition, . praying that a

TREAT OATS WITH ANTI-SMUT

l-'or the past 32 years I have sold Anti-Smut for Oats. A careful check -hows I have sold over (1,000 bottles. .Vol one single complaint. Every bot-lle guaranteed or money refunded. 10 0 0 reduction- in price for 1!)32.

11. K. l?.arra.iV-ilowiill__

The Power to Pass

Mr. and Mrs. Guy Blair and fam-ii> of Fowlerville were Sunday din­ner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Dill­ingham.

Mr. and Mrs. J .C .Dinkel had as Thursday guests Mr*. Henry Rucn, and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Vaughan of Detroit.

Mr. and Mrs. Kay Hicks and fam­ily of Lansing, Mrs. Nellie Hriggs nnd aon, Roland, of Howell were Sunday visitors a t the I t G. Webb home.

Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hrown and son of Fowlerville , Staccy Hall and wife oTPlalnfteld and Mrs. Will Brown.

The Misses Katherine and Jean Roche of Lansing were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jiw, ROCJJC.

Mrs. Alvin Mann and son, George, Dated at Pontiac, Michigan, of Detroit were Sunday guest* ~of| th)s 28th day of March 11^2. Mr. and Mrs. N. O. Fryc.

jJaa. Harris of Ann Arbor was a Friday visitor at t i e home of Mr. and iMfs. Lee Lavey.

for"purpose of ob-thcrefrom. This

^rom-rard~wctt" taining water eawement being appurtenant to the parcel adjoinipg said premis­es on the .south and now owned. T>y grantors. Also the undivided half of u piece of land, comi encin/ 117 rods north of southwest cor • cr of section twenty two nfor<

5

p

said, west to the center of high way, north one rod, east to sect- j sil\<\ petition; .ion line, north 140.5 feet, ea<t on<-j [t is Furt!..-» rod, south 157 feet,, west one roil to beginning, with right of co-user with grantors herein, their heirs", and assigns for driveway of sa>d lost parcel, 'expense^ and maintenance of to be borne equal­ly by both parties hereto, their heirs nml assigns

-ewt+w-H—in.1 hin>HHt4r—m—writing,-—p+H1-~p"6Tirhg to he the la.-t will and te. ta-merit of said: decea.sed, r ow on fih in -ai<l coui'l, he admitteri to probate and that the admini-tration of c.-tate he granted to A. IT "Mlirphy or to some ot le r suitable person.

f t i '>r<|et-ed. T h a t the ' f i t h d a y 0

V:w A . f ) . i : i : ;2 at I- n «.VIor'< in th

f o r e n o o n , a t sa id ) i r o h a t e o f l i ce , [)

a n d is h e r e b y a p p o i n t i d f o r h e a d i n g I

r >],

STATE SAVINGS DANK South Lyon, Michigan, a Michigan banking corp. MORTGAGEE

Kinney & Adum*. Attorneys for Mortgagee 415 Pontiac Bank BJdg., Pontlac, Michigan.

e f ' Thai pub-!, lie notice thereof be given by publT-c.ation of a copy of this o r d e r , for three successive weeks previous to said day of hearing, in the Pinckncy Dispatch, a mnvs-paprr printed a m T -

circulated in said county. - . Willis L. Lyons,

A true copy-* — J u d g e -of Probate:

^

Celestia Par.-hall, Register of Probate.

. 0 _ _

Dixie / *T

THE DISPATCH $1.00 PER YEAR DURING APRIL

During the month of April »c will accepL new subscriptions and remvw^" als for tMne to up.

.Sl.Of) per year. Now j , - the g<'t your subscription, fixed

b—.— 1 ^ ' ^

LEE LAVEY GOODYEAR T l S f c l

H C

• • - «

v -X I

* ' j£L * t :

dttyn

Page 4: ffitncfenep Bfepatthpinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1932-04-20.pdf · L'JUftL-i.JU 'V'.'VUffll^HUqp

'"VlirlffftittVlfcirifidM i •: '* ' 'U:H

rs*

F

Howell Theatre H. C Gerkin, Mgr. Howell, Mich.

Wt<L, Thur., Fri., NOT. 20, 21. 22

"BROKEN LULLABY* Taken from the- stage (The Man I Kitted)

"ruly a Great Picture "ZZ See It ZI Comedy zr~ ~NBWJ

Sat , April 23

GEORGE O'BRIEN in

"SAY CABELLERO"

His Latest

Comedy Sport

Rin Tin, Tin in "Lightning Warrior"

Mat. 2P. M. Adm. 10c and 20c'

Sun., Men., April 24, 25

JACK OLSIE and MARION HOPKINS in "DANCERS IN THE DARK"

Comedy "Campirg Out" Talkerton

Two Reel Act "Foot Lights" Mot. Sun. 2 P. M. con. to 11 P. M.

Tues., April 26

EVELYN BRENT in "PAGAN LADY" PAUL LUCAS and BUDDY ROGERS in

"WORKING GIRLS"

*

Wed., Thur., Fri., April 27/28, 29

"ONE HOUR WITH YOU" CHIC SALES in "THE COUNTY SEAT"

'oming__ " T J : "..U:\>- Man" "Shanghai*Express" "Arron Smith" "Si,y ^eviU" "Crowd Roars"

* • " • • * *

ABOUT 1932 b l l t h d a y ? a i u r d a ^ Aprtt IT, rf

Miss Mernavleve Voegts of Cn> | gory visited Irene Smith's one day last week.

Mr. W." H. Dean returned to the home of his daughter, Mrs. H. 0. Gentry last week after spending the past year with hjs daughter at Ak­ron, Ohio.

Gerald Wellman srrent past week in Morristown, New Jersey.

Basil White and family ate Sun­day dinner at Frank White's in How-ell.

\Ernesf Lancr and Miss Alvfna Schjiider of Webberville were mar­ried \ at the Powlervillfi JLutheran. churcK at 7 o'clock Sunday morning.

Lave>ne Roberts, the 1181» son of Mrs. Mary Roberts has been serious­ly ill the past Week with double pneu­monia. He f$ being eared for by Dr. Lloyd Davis of Howell

HAMBURG

Miss Irene Smith and Mrs. Ray Rathbun of Fowlervjlle visited Mrs. Allan Bricahn at Owosso, one day last week.

Postmaster Carl tjottger of Dext-<r and Mrs. Boettger\((Kitoie Harris) aw feiei^lHg-congratuktiong on the

Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Herroux en­tertained at a 7 o'clock dinner Tues­day evening at their home at Bob White Beach in honor of the first birthday anniversary of their little daughter, Audrey Ann. It was also the twentieth wedding amiiversar.; of Mr. and Mrs. Herroux. Guev.s wtre Mr. and Mrs. Bert N. Haight, Mr. and Mrs. Reuben A. Kisby, Mr. and Mrs. Frank VanAntwerp, Mr;. Stella Paine and three daughters. M.iry Catherine,' Betty Ann, and Rita, Mr. and Mrs. Clo Smith, Mr. and Mrs. I William Gray, Hugh Shehan and Dan j TMckersoh.The evening was spent in ' card playing.

Lewis and Miss Evelyn Carter and Mr. and Mrs. Otto Kourt and two

.daughters, Misses Gertrude and Don-|na , were guests of Miss Hckn Con­

stable at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Zeeb at Chilson, Wednesday evening. Other guests were Roy: Young, Miss Dorothy Roberts andl Miss Gertrude Paddock of Brighton, Robert Wilson of Salem and Harley Zeeb. The evening was spent playing

s

S | s 1 i

tor Spring PlanlifiJT

Terry's Rice's i

r.i'th of a daughter, Mary Lee, on ' piogressivo pedro. Dainty refresh

f '

Musical Gems —---Chorus—

15 COLORED PEOPLE 15

April <), 1932. \ Mrs. Cynthia Wellman w^s tner re-

eipent of a card shower Saturday h snoring her birthday anniversary. ?Ii>. WelLi.-ci received 83 card? and other love'y <;ifi;.. Among her visitors v n v Mrs. CUwio Sigler of PinckWy r.nd Mrs. TlnlJi- fipier of Howell A n presented Mis. Wellman with a beau-tiful plant.

Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hadlcy an-noune the birth of a daughter, April 10 1932 at McPherson hospital, How­ell. _ -r PLAINFflELD •

ments were served Members of the Ladies* Guild of St.

Stephen's Episcopal church held a t-'owing bee at the home of Mrs, Wil­liam H. Keedle Thursday afternoon. Those in attendance were Mrs. James W. Ftatherly, Mrs. Henry B. Pryer, Mrs. James H. Hayner, Mrs. Edward J. Sheridan, Mrs. Bert N. Haight, Mrs. Emily J. Kuchar, Mrs. Reuben M\r¥.E. Wray Hinckley, Mrs. Mary A.\Kisby, Mrs. Chas. S. DeWolfe, E. R\oyce, Miss Bessie Zielman ajid M iss JuleAdele Ball. The afternoon was spent working on a quilt.

3

[Flower and Garden Seeds

| A wide Variety to choose from f

I both in bulk and pkg. j

fTeeple Hardware I «>MiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiumiiitiitiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiirii!iiiir

iininiiiiiii!iiitniiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiitiimiiiHiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!Hiiiiiiiiim:iuiii

<

ca

The Musical Gems Colored Chorus of Ypsilanti will give an entertainment at the

Mrs. Ada VanSyckel is helping at house work at hor n«Mces in White Oak while her neice is in the Pinck­ney Sanitarium.

Miss Ada Hazelschwerdt called Sunday on Mr. and Mrs. James Cask-ey.

Mr. and Mrs. James Caskev and

Hamburg Lodge, No. 438, I. O. O. F. gave another of its enjoyable ehmcing parties' Saturday evening. A Mrs. Ada VanSyckel and Marioric P ^ 6 p*mcs & a t u r a a y evening, A

lied Friday on Mrs. E. N. Braler. ^ ° n u m B c r of guest? were present - - - - - - * from Ann Arbpr, Dexter, Brighton,

Pinckney, Whitmore Lake, Lakeland, Northfield, Webster and Hamburg. Music was furnished by Mrs. Bert N. Haight, J. R. Hayner, Joe Collins and Edward Hurley. Another party was announced for Saturday evening, April 23.

I

For thirty-two years Firestone have brought out | | and pioneered important advances in tire building I I —making possible the high speed motoring of to* 3-

guests at Mr. Marshall's at

-PJAGkney-Gommunfty-Hal!

family were Sunday Whittaker\s and.-Mj-.*. Gregory. _ __

Mr. and Mr:-7~TJeoT Millv.ille were Sunday guests ef Mrs. Nc'ttie.Kellogg. - -_

Mr. and Mrs. Elmer DicTfcfsanand JUrg. Mary Holmes of Stnrk^^^pr^

Mr. an(TMrsrWaiter Westfall and two daughters, Mrs. Herbert Kourt and Miss G*ae* Westfall of-Brighton pfifl Mr. nrift TVTi's Will iam neTrnarf

ON i were Sunday guests of Mr,

r •<• Fri. April 22 5'~.

Underthe auspices of the LadiesAid Society" ofthe Pinckney Congregational church.

Solos, Quartettes and Chorus Siinging

- —ALS^READING Don't Miss It It w ill be a treat

Admission—Adults 25c, Children 10c

and Mr*. Allio Holmes.

Mrs. Olin Marshall and Maxine cu 1 led SuTidajTalTA 111<V"Holm cV.

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wright called : I Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Topping's Sun­day.

Dr. X. W. Braley ami family of

fv and daughter, Miss Ruth, and Ed­ward Morgan of Flint were guests of thr4r cottsrrn*, Mr. ami Mrs.~Wiliiam H. Keedle, Saturday. _._

Mr. and Mrs. KUCL J. Conway and daughter, Miss Mary Conway of Ann Arbor spent the wyoek end with Mrs. Conway's mother, Mrs..Elizabeth De-Wolfe.

Mr. and Mrs. jonn Nagle of De­troit have been spending a short time at their home here, "Resthaven."

Mrs. Francis Brock way has gone Highland Park were Sunday guests

Mr. Birney Roberts is moving w i t h h e ] . Bon a m |

buck on the A. D. Roberts farm this

GREGOPiY < W M l J v. a6 a Howell

Mr. and Mrs. Bru. ^ Whittun and Martha Ann of Flint spent the week er,d with Rev. L. S. Slaybaughi

— Mft and Mrs. W.J^Cro;

Sanitarium Friday. Miss Viola PetL-ys*

stopper on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Addijton *Collum who

"have been in St. PeU^rsbyrg, Fla. for the winter here f turned to their home at Strawberry Lioke. ^JFrs^-W+lliani^ V a nX kcC]L_^^ .y l l :

deaih of a neice

it

to her hoioe-m Keading Saturday . Miss Constrjice Osborne of Hov Jell

*pent part n£ \a^ ^ ^ y.\th ^ I a j ^ litte Leach.

Mh. Ruft'/j Bollinger attcnde<l t hr King's maghrters meeting at Lak fc-land Ft'U.iy.

Mr. /and Mrs. • J o h i f Crossha J*s syent Sunday in Jackson.

Mrs. Jennie Boyco of Stookbrid^ ' 8*cnt Sunday with relatives here.

d %

tained a number of friends a t a j r r ; to Leslie by tin 1 ridge party Wed jiesday evening. % Mr;;. Roy Waters.

Mrs. Junia Ra(i Gallup who has! Mrs. Marion Burnett, and daught-bcen visiting rclntivpa hor(> rrfn; tied} crf Lojraj. of. Ann Arbor spent a few

di*y* this v,T. -k in the[r htome here_. T. L. Dourbonrwis and i-on are

building a cottage William Boboa of Detroit.

Mrs. Robert J;jek and daughter, Jtoberta and Mr?. Harry Lee and son Alger, shopped in Ann Arbor Mon­day.

Mrs. Thomas Fiirguson and child­ren of Strawberry Lake spent Sat­urday with Mrs. Furgerson's moth­er, Mrs. Thompson who is ill _in De­troit.

Mr. and Mrs. John Locker of Dc-' troit ypent the week end in their home hero.

Mn. Ida Inms and son, Joe, who were calVd to Chicago, 111. by the fllnen of Mr?. Imus' sister, Mrs.

week. Mr. and Mrs. Vance Miller and

Herbert were Sunday guests of Mr. pnd Mrs. E. E. Hutson's.

Mrs. F. E. Gauss is' on the sick IJsT Mr. and Mrs. Dan Lantis of Stock-

bridge called on Mr, ancTMft. F. E. Gauss.

Church News Church next ..Sunday evening, Top­

ic- "The Fatherhood of Man." C. E. meeting next Sunday at 7,:15

Topic "Putting Purpose into Life." Leader June Taylor.

Mrs. Lelah Groshans teacher" and class No. 5 meet Saturday afternoon with Zcna and M. G. Anderson.

C. E. business meeting will be held "FIxTWednesday evening at Ruv.

Sunday.

>ir. and at Kufli Lake forlMarttia and Mr. and Mrs. Swcn Jen-

and Patrica were Sunday dinner

« # • • « 1 ^ 1

LAKELAND MEWS

with

7b ••

^

George Tiebold spent Sunday s wife at Trenton. TIIOHC fi-om here who attended the

Brighton Circle of Kind's Daughters fit the home of Mi's. Clyde Dunning were Miss Viola Pettys,Mrs. Barbara Tessmer, Mrs. Robert Jacfe Mrs. J, F. Mahler and .Mrs. Harry Lee.

Mw. Arthur Brcnningatall under-1

Wi8t an ofttraticm at the Pinckney I

0*Mare Tiave returned to their home.

r MARION

sen guests of her sister, Mrs. Clark an/1 Mr. Clark at Manchester.

Miss Maude Crofoot U living in the Allison tenant house.

Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Miller were Thursday evening callers f.t Walter Miller's.

George Kirkland entertained a company of friends at his home Fri­day evening.

Mrs. Loroona Ruttman wa« a call­e r -at_Walter Milkr^ Sunday evgte.

daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Rrockway.

Mr. and Mrs. Curtis S. Olsaver of Ann Arbor were guests of Mrs. Mary E Royce Wednesday. —Mrs. Alhfirt-JL Deahl and sonf AL. bert F., Jr., of Goshen, Ind., are vis­iting Mrs. Deahl's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Myron W. Hendrick, at Winan's Lake.

Mr. and Mrs. William Parkinson and two daughters', Misses Maxine and Florine, who have been living foi some time in the residence of Mrs. Annie-Betie, at Hamburg vill­age have moved to Pettysville where they have purchased a residence.

FARM SEEDS All Farm seeds arc for

duced in price about 30 11)32 re-

oo. This is

I day.

s -Fir^tohe~brought out for automobile use — __ _ S

The Straight Side Tire 1 The Rubber Non-Skid Tread — § The Demountable Rim for Commercial Use |

JFheiiujn=tHppmgProcerr ~~ ~ ~ - | -The Balloon Tire s The Patented Construction Giving Two I

Extra Cord Plies Under the Tread. | Firestone orginated the "Ship by Truck" move- |

ment which gave motor truck and bus transporta- | tion its greatest impetus. §

I — Firestone's leadei^hifrTn^ulMmy^tte^ and sa7» l" | er tires giving the car owner more efficient and eco- a S nomical service is greater today than ever bfore. §

| |

rSlaytGn ^c Son ~\ | CHEVROLET SALES & SERVICE OLDS § 'iiiiiiniiiiniiiiiiii i iriiimiiiiiiimmi iiiiiiiiimiiiiiMiiiiniiiitiiiimtiiin

j i > - .

irp- yenr tcTbuy cheap surd. The best may cost a little more, but your re­turns will be 100 o!o or more gain in

IOSCO quality and satisfaction. Badger Brand for 47 years has given the

Sirs*John liutuna»*"aruVH>,,*t *»ti»*fuction. Not <>f>e single com­plaint.

It. E. Barron, Howell

Birthday congratulation* to Pat­rick- Lavey who will celebrate his

ipg. Helen Niles and Shirley Fairbanks

of Ypsilanti spent the wuuk onri with Celia and Ruth Ruttman.

Misa Loreon Carson was in Tpsi-lanti Saturday.

> ' ' r JO ' ' Mr. and Mrs. Fred Jartbs of

Plainfield were Sunday afU-rnoon

Q _ USED TRACTORS

I have several Fordsons, A Case, and an Advance-Rumely Oil Pull. Priced low to sell. Real Bargain's. Come in and see them.

R. E. Barron, Howell

o LYON ELECTRIC.BROODERS The only Electic Brooder recom­

mended by the Edinon Co. (Th*? hgve__tcstcd several makes.) Ask Mrs. Eurl Cornell, Occola Ask Mrs. Ed. Nash, Marion Atk Thos. Karpency, Oceola Ask W. J. Paslnski, Genoa >sk Earl Meyers, Marion Above bought in 1031.

Chicks* grow 25 o'o faster an<l ,.thc dvath lo.-? i? less that* 1 o'o» Order early. Stock is not large.

Announcement

All those Interested in having a Cash Cream Station in Pinckney

ffease Know at once

Groceries HighJradk Meats

We deliver good* at all times

" f

callers of }ir, and Mr* p, G. Tnup< K. C« e-rron, Ho-v ^ ! !?55kn«y P»»P*tcb 11.00 per "yX ' * *

r •

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•-v< ' -^¾ fatoW^ifcatoS^wifc-rt****^.

3 . * " - i - - £ ^

mmmmm l«BfflHIM".l!l.»J s

PV»dkney Db^tpii Wednesday, April 20, 1932

MONEY SAVERS • \

Guest Ivory, 6 bars Black Pepper, lb pk& Teapot Tea Sugar, 10 lbs.

25£ 25c

Polar Bear Flour - i

Oxydol large pkg. Vanilla 12 oz. bottle com

****** nac tifieiiniiiiiiiiiiiiKiiiiiiiiiiiiitnH niiiiuiiiiiiuiiiiiHiiminnitiHiiuiHitunifninim

| SPECIAL!! I Gilberts Chocolates

' /

Coffee, real food, lb. Palmolive Soap, 3 cakes Soap, Flake White or P. G., 3 bars Pancake Fiour 5 lb sack Peanut Butter, 2 lb. jar

y. v .! Mrs. Fred Lake and the iUibii'o A!."••• a: id Katherine !! .T were in Howell Saturday.

Harvey 13 lane hard and Harold De-vine of Dexter were in town on busi­ness Saturday. ^.

Murray Kennedy was in Lansing Saturday and visited the Michigan State College.

Mr. ^nd Mrs. Floyd Reason who have been spending the winter in Lockhart, Florida, arrived home last Friday.

Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Allen and} 2 son, Donald, of Lansing were week 5 end guests of her mother, Mrs. Flora Darrow.

The streets in the business section underwent their annual spring clean­ing Monday.

Gen© Dinkel is now running a truck from this section to tin* Stock-bridge creamery daily with a load of j 51 milk.

J^»:lr^:i^Ztu^i n<™ ten compartment ice cream. ^ i i n ^ K ™ , A. H | container has J>een adde<L-Murphy were in Lansing one day last v eek.

Robert Brown, postmaster <>f Stockbridg'1 was a Ptnckney <-;dl >• Thursday.

Mr.- av><| M.-s. Ceo. Mullucii . . 1 Dorothy Fox of Crar.d llani'ls,

50c lb. Soda Fountain Service

| Starting April 14 our Soda Foun-1 tain will be open for business. A

jatsup, large 14 oz bottle. 2 for 'ink Salmon

Dill Pickles, qt jar w — M m p — — S — ^ — I — — — ' •••" ' • ^ ^ — — ^ ^ —

Chocolates, lb Salted Peanuts, lb Rice, 6 lbs

were ; i:nday guests of Mr. and Mi B a i r n ' Kennedy. ]

Mrs. Margaret Courtney, Mr. and* Mrs. Norman McGillwry and family * of OWDS.10 ond—MPJ nind Mro. Maxj-fc

I BARRY'S DRUG STORE niitiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiMitiiKnniiiiiiitiuiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiuiiiitiHiimiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiimil

; ^^fl*^^fry^^vw^%www^Jw¾vv^^vrfWvvfcvw^^vw^^l

Crackers, sodas, 2 lbs Creamery Butter, lb

" ^ c T l h ~K & IV IV B D V WE DELIVER ANY PLACE, ANY TIME

• • • J i i M i H l W i i n n i a H i i H D Z-ml f Entered at the I'osUfficc a t Tirfckncy^- Mi ch "^xs Second Class* Matter.

:Su in Advance.

PAUL CURLETT

a ycaa

Kelloy and family, Mrs, Lusty cf D troit were Sunday guests al the horn-of Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Devercaux.

Curtis Brown and Larter Brown of Detroit were Sunday callers at t ' e l',onio of Mr. and Mrs. Mark Swnrin-cut.

Mr. and Mrs. W. II. Meyer \\( in Vr-n Arbor Thursday.

Fred Slayton and Earl ,Baug!-m were in Howell Friday .afternoon.

Roy Teopfe and wife of Bright in visited Mrs. Villa Richards and Mi^ I.ilanclu? -ilajitjn Sunday.

Herbert Johnson of Bat t leCT^n* spent tlie week end wth Mr. ami M;\<. Frank Johnson.

J.D.Appleton and wife of Brightm vu-re Sunday callers at the home of

and Mrs. r rcdXal te .~~ Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Bower.-: -and

Mrs. Dupont spent Thursday and Fri day in Detroit.

Mrs. Jennie Kellenbeve.tr was in •I UeweII Saturday.

Born to Mr. and Mrs. YVrn Thorpe • ! (Ella MCluskey) of Big Rapids, v • , f> lb. daughter, Lorutta Norine. April * ' the loth. "

Mr. and Mrs. Will Larkin Of How­ell spent Sunday With Mr. _and Mrs. FTTrf Eake

' ' . A. Stanton and wife of l)e\t< r v:Ui. I Mr. ;>nd Mrs. Mark Swartlumt

ecials < ~

Thursday, Friday, Saturday

CORN FLAKES^ellog lgcsize 2 for 19c . MATCHES, Ohio ftlue Tip, Carton 19c ? CRACKERS, Choice Salted, 2 lb 19c ! COFFEE, Monarch Brand, 3 lb 92c •! SUGAR, 251b _ ... $1.13

I PRUNES, lb. 5c -» »:

SUPER SUDS (Large Pkg.,) 19c SPAGHETTI or MACARONI, per pkg 5c

,- MILK, large size, 3 cans ..." 19c > PORK & BEANS. 16 oz^ize, S cans -v.-. „ .. 19c

i ARGQ STARCH, Closs.-Mtg. 7c KIDNEY BEANS, Red No. 2 can . 9c TOMATOES, No. 2 can, solid pack : 10c RAISINS, seeded or seedless, 15 oz» pkg 10c • "AS, Ohio's best 10c

LES, pt. jar ±e*

Si-euav. t-WHey; Bh" ' i , fltmfhtf-r, Helen, fit'

ALSO SPECIALS ON MEATS

(Tceola visited at tneTTeorTnand a"nTT ''r-'d Burgess homes Sunday. (

Mrs. TT-iude Reason entertained' • • Fiv<•TTunHreiTCIub TtTuTsftay--'H*"-

r — RE ASONSt SONS^ -j

- - - 0 - ^ S Meals and Short Orders, Magazines, Candy Tobaoco • M»-M

. .a . .. _ • - - — - -— ~ • - "Hi.as1 on Special Prices on School Children Lunches

SPinckney Fountain Lunch § (Next to Bank)

-CHXiCT3^WH£LEN7Tr" n.

«••«•••^••£•••••••••6' oiBDiBiiiiaiiiir

Phone 010 Repair Work of All Kinds

GUS RISSMAN Licensed Master Plumber ....

Plumbing arjd Heating

We Do Plumbing and Heating ;:!? AH

Kindi. We Handle Electric Rumps,

Slptic J a n g s — a n 4 Water-JPrMSJire^

Tanks" |

604 Washington Howell MJc!-1

GARDEN SEEDS C !iitin,ii"d Si'tisfaction

i••;•{ r,", yenrs has made Isbell's Gar-,! n Seeds in bulk Famous all over

4hn L. S. _

. . I ternoon. Kay |iiur>iiiA oi Detroit v n , a SUM-| M r . an<l ^^r,. F. F, liovvei, liad

day £ue,st of Mr. and Mi's. Fre'd Bow njan.

Snnfl'iy callers, -John Mor;m and I wife of Webben-ille, Mr. and Mrs. .J.

aine^ \ . 0. Frye and X o n i u u J ^*'rH»». Me^dames \ e s i a Curry. sun aliened" a king 's t^n7.riTt7^-7tTerrfi-4^jiyi.a-s and l)essa Dunn- c»f

• » • • • » • • • • • ! ) * " *aa***-**auBBiiMaHMaMKva a

Daughters meeting at the home of Mrs. C'lydt: Hi-troit, Mrs. Cnrol Dolan and Mi--Dunning; jn North Hamburg Friday I , I , a n c > l t l ' * ' d w a r ( k o f Ann Arbor.

Mr. and Mrss. Louis Clinton \v>re Sunday callers at the home of lvr parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Kuhn in G regory.

i ft * 9 • I Am Going

i afternoon.

Henry ShieiVrstein. (.7, passed away Saturday jit—ihtr-Kahiniazoo State Hospital. The funeral wasTndltr at the home of his brother, John Shieferstein, in Chelsea Tuesday and burial was in the Dexter cemetery. The deceased formerly lived on the

for tiie ) S n i e f c r s t e i n f a i ™ cm the Pinckney-Pexter road.

Martin Uarnowski has sold his • f a r m o n t h , J p i n t ' k " ^ y . p e x t e r road i o Wm. -Eanwdall near Stockbridge.

Tiny are all Northern grown u n ( i J Margari ta Mogra and Alex Casanyi er V.v! most careful inspection. j f , f Dearborn. The sale was made by

l,>u:e your (garden by using Is-! S ; ) m Lapham of Dearborn and the

Dr. and Mrs. Clare Skinner and daughter, Dellhua, of Detroit were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Er­nest Frost.

liorn to Mr. and Mrs. Mark Swar thout, April Ifith, a ten lb.

Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Ulan Sundav callers at the home of Mrs.

daughter. | f l nd were, J/*

i To Close Out I My Business

9

• a i P

b.'U's Seed "-0 o o.

in bulk at a saving 0f!par t i f ;H h a V ( ' t a k (- 'n possession. Mr. ' j Parnowski will move into one of Earl

i Daughn's cottages and work the 3a.ugEn:: tarm. The -Barnowskl fann-"

a •

R. E. Barron, Howell

o_

DLtroit Tuesday. Mary Marion and daughters, w a s better known'as the_ Albert Jack-

^ v

son farm. r

Mr. and Mrs. 'Honry Collins of Vp-a l a n t r - a n d Mtss GracolTuj) joiI]ui . ~Xrin Arbor called on Met Chalker Friday evening.

Miss Hazel Chambers had as her Sunday guests the Misses Helen andf M r - a n ( i M r s > L o u L s c ° y 1 t ; visited Florence Marion.

Edwin Karnard of Ann Arbor spent several days last week with Mr. •IMJ Mrs. Henry Johnson.

Clifford Chambers and Harlow Hain<\s were 'in Pontiac Sunday.

Emmett Roche spent the week end in Lansing with his father, A. Poche. ^

The hot house of Paul Bock at Portagr: Lnkf.' \vi\n destroyed by ft»c

A. M. Roche of Lansing was ii town Monday.

Miss Mary Wilson attended th« Frosh Frolic at Michigan State Col 1- ge last Saturday evening. j

Mr. and Mrs. Lucius E. WHso". M-44'C luncheon guests of Mrr and Mrs. Wilson Howlett in Howell last Thursday.

Mr. and Mrs. J ay Stanton of De­troit called a t the home of Mr. «n<" Mrs7 T r e d Lake Tuesday.

Mrs. Josephine Bcard.slcy was | S home from Jackson for the week end. |

on account of sickness in my family

All Goods at

Wholesale^riees i

•i

Call and See Me

Ann Arbor relatives Sunday Hai ry Palmer and wife of Detroit

were Friday supper quests of Miss Jessie Green.

Mr. and Mrs. John Martin were in Arn Arbor Thursday.

Harriet and Russell Bowman at-iyj tended a birthday party a t the home

of their cousin, Jean Howe in How­ell Saturday. —""

Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Dunwooik

j VV. VV. Barnard

Weekly Trips Made to Detroit

cne day last. Henry Shirey and Wayne Can-

¥-erc in Lansing last Thursday and called on Clare Miller, Cecil Hend •<• and. James Nash.

Rev. Jerome of Dexter was in town one day last week.

Carl Mast, supervisor of TVebsW township ^vas in town one day last

Drs. H.F. & C. L. S1GLER I t0 7«*- befo;c an ' meeting of n-prescntatives, s

~ Hi v. "and Mrs. E. J. Berquist and daughter, Eloyses, were in Ann Ar­bor Tuesday, ,

4 - ,

f BffB*l»»f:ffaHSHa*««*ai2ft«U«M «•«••»= week. .il

A FURNACE BARGAIN . r

1 have (3) Three Furnaces curried fiom 1031 that I wJUjnaJte a Special price for the next days, April 20 to 30th. Buy now. Pay Jan . 1, 10H2. Term* if desired.

B. E, Barron, Uow«ll

PINCKNFY v,

informal

senators,

and ftate officers in the hall of the

i ' ouse of Representatives - at eight *+Vlock Thursdiiy- evening. Tho c»U

CARDtN SEJLIJS A lV'-.-ii and complete >ti)ck ol 1s-

ln l!\- (i;irii n .-.-:d.- in bulk. All new i:i:i2 .'-lock. 1' 1 i. < - low .-ei'i >\ery feed gu:ir:int'•• •<!. Fluy your -<•.. .1-. by lu.lk and s.!^ :"'i00 00 .

Ii. M. B..!-:<>:.. Ito.vell

o W I L L SPEAK AT LANSING

Ml', Luuu.. &. Wiiivu li»* b<.wii in­

fo r the meeting issued by the cultural Club of the State Lc; t u iv. I t was the outgrowth of a tferiea of articles written by Mr. Wiiaon^nd published in the Michigan V*fm \ e w s , in which Mr. Wihwii declares the first step toward curmjr tb*» panic is a complete reforming of tb* mono* tary system so as to provide tffif-%

*

VJ

• 1

I

V.

' ,c • '•'$•'• ' - P ^ ' s • •-* •

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EXQUISITE LINEN DECORATES TABLE

NEW YEAR'S DAY

HAPPY, NEW YEAR, FOLKS

j &

New Year's day is apt to be an arcti climax. After the mad rush of Christ­mas, and the revelry of New Year'.s Eve, there may well be a f i l i n g that the holidays are jjist a bit too much^ for the average person. Yet the cus-| torn of calling on New Year's Day' is still practiced, and the New eYar's dinner should have as large a place in ;

t h e planning of festivities as the Christmas dinner had.

It is doubtful if we will want tur­key again. Something simpler than other holiday meals should be pre­pared. Goose is not expensive""thTs" year, and will make a pleasing change. The usual holiday accompaniments of cranberry sauce, celery and apples and cider will fit in well with almost any-main dish.

But the greatest cheer can be! brought to the New Year's table by dressing it up. Sometimes a bowl of i holly in the center will do it, or some of the winter flowers, such as poinset-t ias and chrysanthemums. Most of it,

Jwweuer^wil l depend upon the table­cloth. ^whlcTT-^hwUdJai^-saotkaa—Juui pretty, and the gleaming silver and sparkling glass with which the table is set.

There are so many lovely linens to choose from nowadays. There a re the heavy damasks, either in white— which is coming back to favor again— or in color. Some of the peach, rose and blue shades this year defy descrip­tion, but linger in the memory as per­fect table decoration. Handkerchief linen is gaining a new vogue, espe­cially for the small table. There are luncheon and bridge-sets shown in this

KELLYGRAMS HAS A BIG FIELD

POLITENESS STILL

THIS PRETTY

Mexican senorita

established a

novel way of ex­

tending well

withes for the

new year. Here

she la having the

greeting painted

on her stocking

by a sister citi­

zen of her fair

city

I went into a drug store for the pur­pose of buying a postage stamp—just a modest little one-cent s tamp. The clerk took my nickel, got four cents In change, and said "Thank you," with as much politeness as if the sale had netted |100 profit. Before leaving the store I got into conversation with the proprietor, and he explained to me that showing such courtesy over the •a!<• of a stamp did not merely hap­pen. It was part of their system.

"Thf only reason we sell stamps at all," siid he, "is to accommodate those who eoroo in here—-to make them want to come again. So long as we are going to accommodate them, why nal lipase them 4ust a s -much- -as—w can and make friends of them?"

It would be silly, wouldn't it, to set out to accommodate somebody and do It , o discourteously as to insult him?

In my native town was a grocer whoso hobby was to be accommodat­ing. One afternoon a woman tele­phoned a hurry order for some arti­cles that she wanted delivered imme­diately, as she was giving a party. She chanced to mention what trouble she was having to get some rich Jersey cream, which she'greatly desired. The grocer did not sell cream r hu{ h^ dis­patched his own automobile to a farm

three or four miles away and got a quar t of the best cream in the county. In less than an hour he had delivered it to the gratified woman. The- profit on it did not pay for the gasoline used in bring it in, but he made not only a lifelong customer but also an en­thusiastic lifelong rooter.

Various public service corporations such as gas and electric light com­panies used to ignore complaints or else regarded them in a "what are you going to do about i t" a t t i tude . Today every such concern has a t least one man on its staff who draws his salary because of his ability to control his temper and maintain a calm, un­ruffled poise in the face of insults. He goes to persons who make complaints or are mad a t his company and at-

e^ t empt s "to educate" them to "the eora^~ pahy's viewpoint.

A public service company I know of has a habit of asking when anyone comes into the office with a complaint, "Would you like to see the general manager?"

I t is surprising what a lot of people will then minimize their complaint. The moment the company regards it seriously—seriously enough to have it taken up not by a subordinate but by the general manager himself—the disgruntled customer has a tendency »r> -(W.1 t h a t tha A™np]a ip^ i t m ^ an i m -

»'

4

portant af ter all.

HASTINGS HIGH IN NEW DEBATE BODY

New Reformed Missions Secretary Starts Duties Household Hints

Hastings High debaters have en-

Miss Hi'len 1*1. Brickman of Holland has assumed bar position as general secretary of the woman's board of do-1 mestic missions in the Reformed Church in America, succeeding Miss

material with fine drawnwork, t h a t . t e r e d a n € W [t>ague, the Grand R i v e r R u t h B. Rule resigned •are exquisite novelties

Of course there will always be a place in our hearts for the figured and decorated table cloths. Some new im­ported ones show striking designs in a modernistic pattern of blocks and

76p^h -squares that challenge~admir«tioiv wtth-4heir bold colors. Black, red,

Valley Debate league,- compose*! of : Miss Brickman since 192S-hasbeen Ionia, Greenville, Belding, Lowell, directing the program of religious edu-Lake Odessa and Hastings. This r i e w " c a t i < > n - i l l - « Q Y - f i E n m e n t - [ n d i a n - ^ 0 0 ^

Recipes French Omelet, Spanish Sauce—

Two cups tomatoes, two onions (chop­ped, one green pepper (diced), three tablespoons fat, one-half teaspoon sugary one-eighth teaspoon pepper. Melt fat, add other ingredients: Cook 10 minutes. Spread half the mixture ever half the omelet, fold, place on platter and garnish with remainder of sauce.

Potatoes Stuffed with Pimentoes

which the various home mission boards league was formed to reduce the ex- p r o m o t e > a n d f o r t h e p a s t e i g h t m o n t h s

ense of debajjng-and - to _sri o rte n the • has been acting as executive of the length of the debate. In all debates council of women for home missions.

and green V a - f a v o r i t e c o m b i n ^ ^ - ^ " ° » ™ b « , ^ - ^ ^ ¾ f * ^ ™ - d " ^ and vpllnw and black are also featured of three and the audience does the- .. ^ , , " , , .,, ., ana yeuow ana uiat.iv »ic OUJV-*t» ^ versity. She was connected with the in many of them. Usually the design • judging in each case. A popular vote n a t i 0 n a l board of the young women's is in the form of a border, and the. j s t a k e n b e f o r v a n d a f t e r t h e debate association and gave five years of center is white. _ -_ to designate public opinion on vital service to the task of organising the Also imported is some of the newj q u e s t i o n s

china that chooses triangles for h a n - , b a t e s dies and knobs. Black is a favorite

ty—be—used—for the w h o l e * * , or in combination with some, ,^ a I t e m a t e d a s t i c s

of the bril l iant. .reds and greens that „ _ . : _ _ . ,___

Each school has two de- association in the new s with each other school. The Estonia and Latvia.

questions of "Unemployment Insur-! o and "Light Wines ahTT

republics of

ance BetiI Pastor Offers Fourth Hastings has won -omrstate league~ ~ & Salary 4o Ml88lOFl8

baking potatoes of uniform size, and wash them well. Put the potatoes in a very hot oven and bake them until they are about half done; then re­move and cu t in halves lengthwise. Hollow out the potatoes a little in the center, making the cavities long and

— shallow r-ather-than- deep. Sprinkle the

How to Achieve Beauty By ^1 ME. HELENA RUBINSTEIN

MAKEUP FOR OPERA, THEATER AND FORMAL AFFAIRS

For the opera, the theater and for­mal occasions, you will want to look your very loveliest. You owe it to your good looks tojtake a beauty t rea t ­ment before you start applying your make-up. Many women make it a regular" practice to go to their favor­ite beauty salon and take a profes­sional t reatment before an important social affair, b u r r~am~^omg-4o—tell you how to get the same benefits in

*d pimon tries with t h e n T T h e T e l s a vogue f01. £™> d o t a ^ Recognizing the present economic f ^ J ^ ° ^ „ . black crystal in combination with £ . ^ P a w P a W ) Grandville and Cak-i depression as a . serious handicap to- t o - Dot sparingly with butter, return whrte, for glassware. Colored glass-: d o n ' . ^ Hast ings-has-a-squad of 15 w a r d maintaining contributions ware has gone to deeper shades. ™ W , | ^ a t f l r s _ a ] ] o f w h o m w M 1 h a V f i n a r J home and foreign needs,

cavities with salt and pepper and fill with a cheese mixture made by mixing __ half ^ f ^ f ^ o v e r l h e m . " If you

is a and entirely new

Silverware,-so -vwkkmg u p t o new-latest knives have a short cutting blade and a long handle that bodes ill to the toughest piece of meat. It it also most decorative and, of course, that is what we look for on the holiday table.

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for to the oven and bake until the pota commen- t o e s a r e ^ ^ ^ - — —

mounts needed for m M. Mart in, - S a u e r k r a u t - a n d T t m a Pish S a l a d -

Helen Weaver Irene Cooner Nelson ! ° ' i S t o r o f ^ ^ 1 Reformed church of Two cups of sauerkraut, two and one Helen W,aver, Irene Cooper, Nelson ^ ^ ^ 1 Q ^ ^ r e c o m m e n ( j e d t o half cups tuna fish, one cup diced eel

- j - e a n ' n ' 8 consistory tha t -h is salary be re o w +^' r t * Q W ~ ™ ^ " » ™<™ < » - - *"• duced $1,000 for the coming year,

n a s g o n e t o a w p e i - - - - \ T 1 ~ ! debaters, all of whom will have par- n<>nic ' a m i ">reigr sapphire blue for sets of fo b ,~ J ticipated in some interschool debate s u r a t e w i t h t h c a r

d p s e r t T J h r t e i r ^ h a t ^ 4 o v e l y . ^ n 4 ^ R e v :

, , . • • Helen Weaver, Irene Cooper, Ionic standardized, u> „ , T>~ u *u u 1 i u u » o « ^ » Gardner, Roy Heath, Helen w rtnsflihihties. 1 ne „ . &_•>! r»....i- c?i. ._• w puwiunuiv Trr--^ Freda—Smith;—Paufrne—Stans,

Cincebeaux, Melvin Jacobs, Homer Erway, Hubert Follick, Irene Jones,. «;quiyalent to a cut^ of Lillian Tolhurst, Herbert Cooper and Vernon Wininger.

0

Interlochen Pupils WlU Have World's Fair Week

Students a t the N:it :onil High School Orchestra camp at Interlochen in 1933 will have a week at_the Worh|_

University Q f e g j * _ Home Study Courses

25 per cent of his present salarv. • Consistory adopted a resolution of appreciation.

Third church is one of the three largest Reformed churches in the syngds^of_j0wa and Chicago.

ery, two tablespoons on JOT tablespoon chopped stuffed Serve on lettuce leaves with

on olives boiled

Plans $1,000,000 Home

"Fair in Chicago and wTTl appear in a series of concerts, Dr. Joseph E. Mad-dy, president of the camp organiza­tion, has announced.

Mr. Maddy will be in charge of the musical education department of the fair and in this position will have op­portunity to show what has been tak-, ing place a t ' ln te r lochen in the past few years. t '

A splendid inquiry for next year s camp is developing, Dr. Maddy states, indicating the camp again will have a large enrollment.

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Prepares Musical Feature —For Sunday-Sehool-Meek

Home study courses by correspond­ence will be offered by the University, shortly after the first of the new of Michigan extension department to V e a r D e t r o i t Salvation Army, Lieut. persons unable to attend the regular C o l > A l b e , r t g_ N o r r i g ( divisional com-•e*t t« i*«»-«©*«rcs-Tm?!^^ t h o j m F , n f i » r | w j l l h r r n k ^ n n n d 4 -^ r - th -

salad dressing made as follows: One teaspoon salt, one teaspoon mustard, three tablespoons lemon juice, one-eighth teaspoon paprika, one and one-half tablespoon^butter (mejtedX, pne__ half "cup milk. Mix diy Thgredienti7 and add the slightly beaten yolk of the eggs, butter, milk and lemon juice very slowly. Cook in double boiler until mixture thickens. Should it cur­dle, place the boiler immediately in a pan of cold water and beat until

Bright, sparkling eyes are among a woman's greatest assets, and you should pay particular attention to your eyes before the affair, so they will keep their freshness, and not become tired and dull looking before the eve­ning is over. —Firs t , bathe your eyes with an eye lotion or with a heated boric acid so­lution. Then lie dpwn_ and— place aT-kin

may prefer a heavier whitener. You can vObtain one tha t is especially ad­herent and will not come off, no mat­ter how much it is brushed against. Many women prefer using this kind of a whitener ins tead of loose pow--der on their arms and shoulders for dancing, because it will not come off on a man's black evening coat.

* » *

You can use all the make-up de­vices- I have told you-sboxrr in my previous talks—eye shadow, the touch of rouge just beneath the eyebrows, and the shading in the hollow of t h e nose just above the inner corner of the eye, darkened eyebrows and lashes —and a little bit more, still retaining a natural appearance.

While we a re on the subject of lashes, I have already told you that the best effect

can, secure one of those ,herbal eye packs, steep it in hot water, like tea,

for evening can be gained by using a Persian eyeblack or

ra that does not break Ihe laahfts, hu t T might add a word about "beading." I do not believe beading is attractive to most women.

aXd then place it oVer your eyes as I However, there a re a few who like it hot as you can bear it. Reheat it a s | a n c j w h 0 can wear it. If you wish it cools, and keep up the application for terT~or fifteen nHnuTes. Then re-

your eyelashes to have the ,ii ray '

"sunset effect, mix a little face cream

move it a n d ^ m your face and throat1 with the Persian eleblack. After you with your favorite cream, A lubrka t - , have darkened your eyebrows, make a ing^-anti-wrinkle ~erea m is especially good if your skin is dry and inclined to fine lines. Of for the relaxed, coarse-textured skin, use an astringent cream,

* • •

t

C. A. Fisher, assistant dT^ the department, has an-

university, rector of nounced.

Course.-: ready for distribution 'n-clude English literature, sociology, mechanical drawing and trignometry. Courses in short story drawing and the social development of the child are being prepared. These courses

erection of the first three units of its new home at Second Boulevard and Henry .street, for which $1,000,000 vo., made available in 1929.

0

Scotch and Water ' "My wife's sae thrifty she made me

a fine tie oot of her old bathing sui t ." "That 's naught, mon, mine made

will be given at cost and no credit is hersel' a fine bathing suit oot of ma o 1)L' granted toward a degrei old t ie!"

* . -

&

Although the 1932 meet of the Ot­tawa County Sunday School associa­tion is ten months distant, former "Mayor John Vantterslui?, H veteran music director, Is sponsoring plans for the musical feature of the convention, which will be held in Hol­land in October. Vandersluis pro ' poses to organize a male chorus of more - than 100 voices. Vandersluis his directed" choirs and . choruses for more than &0 yefcre.

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School $oup Kettle Popular in Cadillac

The city school soup kettle moved outaide t o ^ n e of the country schools recently. Several hundred pupils are gwttjnfr their noon-dai^bowl of soup.

"Tile "committee irr charge of the af-f^ir i« asking for more im ate rials, lakger capacity kettles and more help.

Not Overcrowded Asked by a n administration official

-wliywfee wanted to enter the United S ts tes , an Irishman, whip "was being examined at EUis Island, replied that ne simply wanted to earn an honest living.

smooth. * * *

Suggestion*

If, instead of a light soup or a fruit or fish cocktail you prefer to serve canapes for a first course and"appe­tizer for your formal dinner, follow these directions:

Canapes are made from two-day-old white bread, cut into one-fourth inch slices, then cut into circles, diamonds, squares or long "fingers," or for the strictly informal home gathering the tiniest of sandwiches may be used— cutting and preparing the bread as di­rected below.

Aftei%»y«u—have shaped &, either

very—shortr-line with the craydTT^ouT from the corners of your eyes toward the temples. j

You can use the still lighter pow­ders and the/br ighter rouges for for­mal affairs, .especially with pastel

Rest as long as you can, then re- gowns. Then- there are certain new move the cream with cleansing t is- t S T ^ P S nf powder thnt nrft-mtprntrfrr suesT Bathe your face and neck withi for evening use. There is the mauve an astringent, skin-toning lotion. Then! powder which can be used to great begin your make-up. To give your! advantage by a certain type of blonde, skin an especially soft finish, apply a It imparts a fascinating, ethereal look, little snow lotion in liquid powder but it must never be worn in the day ' form over your face and throat. Forj time. Then there is green powder to

-arjaaa-^md-^nojjWers. you tonp down the ruddy, flushed akin. -

/•"C

*n

m

'Oh, that ' s all r ight / then ," said the official. " I guess that 's not one of the

Overcrowded occupations."

The Fruits of Life * By Frank K. Glew

We struggle, each day with stubborn-clad will, As we gather some dollars and fame,

And years from today may find many folk still. Playing harder this tricky old game;

With our backs to the wall we plunge into the fight, And our bank balance tallies the score.

In our quest of success we work into the night, As over our problems we pore. '

How commercial we get as we taste more success, Home and loved ones we so seldom see,

'Til a t last days and nights -seem just one tangled mess] How we yearn from it all to be free.

We've forgotten to play, yes, to love and to smile,— And we learn that cold dollars can't bring

The joys after all that are so much worth while And that make many folk want to sing!

Yes, perhaps we have gathered some dollars and fame, But what value is all of this power?

It is empty achievement we have to admit As wo add it up some quiet hour.

Thc Fruits of this Life to the worthy all go, "To the folks who can "l ive" as they work, -

Who enjoy flowers and music, rain, suna/hine and *now» And their loved ones a t home never shirk.

I Have Said in My Heart By IDAH McGLONE GIBSON

butter it lightly and toast in the quick oven until golden or drop into hot butter and brown delicately, or toast on^ side of the bread until golden —butter the other side and brown ju*t the tiniest -brt.- - - ~~ ~

The secret of a canape is to have the bread hot—a light brown color and soft enough to cut with your fork, if large enough to be eaten with a fork squares, one is supposed to lift th« morsel in one's fingers.

Sardines, anchovies, caviar, pate de foie gras (or chicken livers cooked and prepared) , cheese, or whatever your larder supplies, may be utilised

i for fillers. One that is especially tasty is to

take* three" t a t t e rpoons of anchovy paste (either the paste that you pur-hase .ready prepared or anchovies

NOISE AND SPEED A few years ago one of the largest

stage producers in America put on in

New York an all-star cast in "Mid­

summer Night's Dream." Unlike many of these advertised

up of well-known artists whose names stood high on the scroll of fame.

The director was well known in his business and the rehearsals went for-

^ward smoothly and -every one wps happy. the combination of cheap jafejjr

The last week before the opening of a " l t h e s ^ t i c . U m i s s e<i- &

his time but presage its taste for many years to come.

Every day the people of America seem to be living in an atmosphere of greater speed while the a t tendant and diverse noises that prevail everywhere seems almost to split the sensitive ear­drum.

'• I

Since every home today is not con­sidered complete without a radio, which goes all day and usually all night, and to whose raucous noise no

t i o n ^ £ x o e p U o b e uncomfortable wireir

the play, the great producer visited the theater where the rehearsals were

If cut into small "fingers" orj^oing on. He entered after the lights llfcre turned down and those on the

did not know, they were

Every family must have ai motor car, and the younger dancing e

i

mashed to a pas te ) , season with a teaspoon of lemon juice and spread on the hot pieces of bread, toasted and cut to ' su i t your fancy.

For each canape allow thin str ipe of whole anchovies—two of then*— crossed over the paste, and where they join mound a wee pile of grated yolk yolk of hard cooked egg.

Petal shaped pieces of the white of egg may radia te from the center

t in flower fashion, or curve a large

L

qu""have not the faintest~concep^ t ien ef how a comedy should be acted. Wfcat I want in this play is noise and •peed."

He got it, and the great success of the Shakesperian revival proved that ried couples to serve hohey to

sion service a t Iowa covers that it developed from • centuries old. Many years says, it was tradition for new!

1 6

the popular producer, if he could not understand the peculiar measure in ^ . w ^ ^ w i M

anch^vV around a alice of hard boiled' which the English dramatist wrote, moon" anoTthe use o T ' ?oney"~ i»*a egg for the docoratzoa. I could not only gauge the public of word of endearment grew up.

for a period immediately lollowing their marriage. So the te rm "honey-

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U. OF M. SUMMER SESSION PLANS

ARE ANNOUNCED Dan Edward H. Kraus of the Uni­

versity of Michigan summer session, is an exponent of efficiency and believes that if work is planned well in advance the result will be satisfactory for all concerned. So months ahead he is able to announce the exact time and place of social and educational events in connection, with the summer session.

One of the attractions of the Mich­igan summer session is a series of pub­lic lectures on scientific topics at 5 o'clock each day in natural science auditorium. Professors who will de­liver the lectures are appointed during the winter, and capable substitutes ghoaen in c&s* of illness or other fac­tors which might interfere.

The Michigan summer session was predominantly undergraduate a few years ago, but courses for teachers and other advanced students have at-tracted larger numbers of candidates for higher degrees until the graduate school has become the largest unit. More than half of the students en­rolled already hold college, degrees.

The total enrollment of the summer session haa shown steady growth. In 1931, 4,657 students were registered, representing practically all the states and 25 foreigrT~c7Juntie»i—St,nri>ntft from 250 other colleges and universi­ties came to Ann Arbor for summer study. This year the Michigan sum­mer facility will include 46 teachers from other educational institutions.

Since the enrollment in summer is approximately half that of the regular school year the demand for all courses in the curriculujm has grown until the majority of subjects taught in the first and second semesters are offered during the short term.

0 P o o r P o p p a

Minister (calling at the Aronoffs): "Well, my Httle fellow, do-you_a4ways do as your mamma tells you?"

Ldtte Joe. "You--bet I dot_and so does papa."

m i m i M 1 1 m |

Cut icura **»*•»*** S h a v i n g Cream

., At dta lw' i or i«nt on r*e*ipt of »6c ^ Addrcsa: "Ostle«^»,,, Dipt MB, Bv m Ma)**, Mam • ^ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ^

iwetaasea

Dirigible Macon Gets Her Sixth Rib in Construction Work Being Pushed

On U. of M. Building Work on Hutchins Hall, law class­

room and last unit in the law quad­rangle of the University of Michigan, will be pushed rapidly in the next two months, according to officials of the university.

Work on the new building, although never completely curtailed, has been slowed up since the suit against the university was brought by the divorced wife of the late W. W. Cook for her share in the estate. This entanglement, along with the fact that a large num­ber of investments which comprise the estate are not paying dividends, will postpone the date of completion in­definitely, it was said.

As a reult, Hutchins Hall will not bo ready for occupancy next fail. John C. Christensen, controller of the uni­versity, said ii was impossible to say when the building will be finished.

0

Prison Is Faced By Fund Shortage

STATE OIL MEN HAIL BAN ON

" G i F F SELLING

The skeleton of the U. S. Sv Macon, sister ship of the U. S. S. Akron, world's largest lighter-than-air ship, is seen in its hangar at Akron, 0., after the sixth main frame had been hoisted into place.

HOME RULE IS BENEFIT FOR

MICHIGAN CITIES

G. R. Man Is Renamed Great Lakes Traffic

Advisory Board Head

h. M. MacPherson, traffic manager of the American Seating company,

SUPPERS HEAR OF BANK DEPOSIT

UPTURN FACTOR man of the executive committee of the

Members of the stat*' prison com­mission decided at their meeting at l>ansing recently to defer considera­tion of the financial emergency of their department until the next meet­ing, according to John W. Miner of Jackson, chairman. This action was taken due to the fact that Gov. Wil-ber M. Brucker was unable to be present.

The prisons are faced with a pos­sible fund shortage for payroll and oonotruetion cooto before the end of

By the grace of the legislature and G r e a t I*k«s regional advisory board, Mounting public confidence in Mich-I the wisdom of the courts, Michigan composed of representatives of both igan banks, as expressed, by increases! cities have enioved untold benefits ^ c o m m o n carriers and the leading in savings deposits, was the foremost April 26 in"order that the members

the year, according to Miner. This problem will be studied a t the

next meeting. It will be held at Ionia

. shippers, at a meeting in Cleveland favorable development in the economic of the recently. * , situation reported to 300 railway ex-1 from the home rule clauses

state constitution of 1908, writes | The board jvoted unanimously as ecutives and shippers in attendance at j Professoi Arthur W. Bromage of the favoring repeal of the recapture the annual meeting of the Great Lakes j political science department of t h e ' c l a u s e i n t n e transportation act in Regional Advisory Board in Toledo.! University of Michigan in the March 1920 governing the excess earnings, John H . H a r t vice p r e s e n t First

* _6 . . . of railroads. It was pointed out that, Wayne National Bank, Detroit, and number of the "National Municipal t h e ^ ^ w o u ] d ^move a contingent| chairman of the board's bankers' corn-Review." I liability of $378,000 against rail car- j mittee, reported that savings deposits

Although the courts have held that riers and do much to improve their, in the Detroit district now totaled the state legislature is the- origin of_ financial status. | W O B ^ 0 ' 0 0 , 0 as compared with $302,-oii 1 ^ . 1 ^ : , ^ «„,„„ „« i ;*; • a, ' s resolution also was-unanimously, 000,000 on January 1, thus evidencing all legislative power and cit.es have a d o p t e d c o n d e m n i n g t h e & u g g e s t i o n ! that the downward trend of 1931 has -©nly--*u«h powers ^as a r e "expressly I recently made by Service Director! been reversed,. granted, necessarily implied in those I Bartel to the interstate commerce

commission that the prerogative of routi ng freight- be taken—from-^tfrg HarVreflecting a decrease in business shipper and vested with the original! activity at this-time. Demand dopocitc carr ier .

o

o f the c o m m i s s i o n m a y i n s p e c t t h e n e w u n i t s o f the r e f o r m a t o r y a t t h e s a m e t i m e .

o

Stolen Cars

granted or those essential to the de­clared objects and pTrrposes~oTffie-cor^ poration," the cities incorporated un-der the constitution of 1908 and the home rule amendments of 1909, have been very liberally treated by the leg­islature, which recognizes that it is acting in accord with the underlying body of public opinion in Michigan, Professor Bromage states. - .Actually in the^growjjig opinion of twenty-three years home rule has critical financial condition indicated come to be understood to mean that I by a report some time ago, according

"While Detroit savings deposits are up, demand deposits are- off," said Mr.

Charlotte Plant's Showing Is Better

The Charlotte municipal works department is no longer in the

now stand at $255,000,000 as com­pared with $310,000,000 on January J, and with $370,000,000 a year ago."

Reports from chairmen of other committees representing all lines of

What is the proper procedure- to follow when the metor number of an automobile has been filed off or changed by thieves?

This is one of the questions that was answered at the "school" held re­cently in Lansing for all investigators of-th^departmen t„

Michigan laws provide that where the motor has no number or where it has been defaced, theowne_r_m_ay__ap^_. ply to the department for a special Michigan motor number. When thieves have changed or altered a number, the owner, after recovering his car, may have the original numbers of the mo­tor and chassis restored after furnish-

Decision by the state attorney-gen­eral that the distribution of gifts by gasoline service stations through lucky numbers constituted a violation of the lottery laws was hailed with enthusiasm by the several hundred1

delegates to the recent Better Busi­ness Conference of the Michigan Oil Men's Association in Detroit. The as­sociation previously had gone on rec­ord as condemning the use of pre­miums in the sale of gasoline and oil.

Taxation, legislation, governmental costs and price-cutting were the fa­vored topics for discussion during the three-day meeting. F. V. Martinet, vice president of the Standard Oil Company of Indiana, declared that unless the legislators of the nation cease their efforts to tax the automo­bile industry expensively, the nation's foremost industry will be fatally throttled. He also pointed out that 7,000,000 antiquated automobiles, each over six years old, today ware giving dubious service on the nation's highways. Eventually these cars are going to collapse, said Mr. Martinek, and muyt be replaced.

"When tin* state of Oregon » 1 9 1 9 imposed tax of one cent a gallon on gasolim-, few realized the lengths to which thi» practice—would—extend,-* said Mr. Martinek. "Today only three states^.and the District of Columbia are under a two-cent-a-gallon figure, and the gasoline taxes in the oither states range upward to seven cents a gallon and, including county and city tax, have reached a new high of 8Va cents a gallon in Oklahoma.

o Could Hear Tfcam Drop

Guest: "I asked you for a quiet room and you said that this room v u 'so quiet after eight o'clock you could hear a pin drop. Now I find it's over a bowling alley."

Hotel Celrk: "Well, can't you hear em dr'op""

f J

*>>>

4 ~

business indicated that car loadings . . ,, ^ , , . waterj w i l l ^ generally 2 per cent less d v r . ^ n g proof that the change* weix, made ,« , , ., , ., I by thieves in an «'ffort to conceal the

ing the next quarter than during the ' . . . c° , __, . . . -„, , , , „,,,,,),, •' l Q rn real identity of the vehicle. "Same muiiUut ill 1 9 3 1 . j = - tl * "? . , . -s~Hrm

the cities shall he-allowed- to -their own problems and exercise gov-

CHILD n**±-REGULATING?

CASTORIA WILL ~ ~ Cro-

When your child needs regulating, remember this: the organs of babies and children are delicate. Little bowels must be gently urged—never forced. That's why Castoria is used

-by-so many doctors and mothers. ft" is specially made for children's ail­ments; contains no harsh, harmful drugs, no narcotics. You can s&fely give it to young infants for colic pains. Yet it is an equally effective regulator for older children. The next time your child has a little cold or fever, or a digestive upset, give him the help of Castoria, the children's own remedy. Genuine Castoria al­ways has the name:

^kS"F R4A C H I L D R E N C P Y f O R I T

=GiANT^AZTEe-BEArf —;

ernmental powers in the broadest way reasonable, says Professor Bromage. Under these conditions the cities have made great use of their powers to frame, adopt and amend charters. Some sixty per "cent"of~Michigan cities now operate under home rule charters. Of these home rula cities approxImateTy~^rle^uitf liave adopted the city manager plan. The develop­ment of home rule in Michigan has played a large part in making-this one of the leading states in the number of manager municipalities.

L. B.- Erace, water clerk. The semi

Annual election of officers result**! citv clerk and c i tv , i n t h e r e n a m i n & o f t h e following: £ity_cierK and C11L| j> r e&kAef t t j _ w__ Montigney, CLeve-

-annual receipts i , „ , . fc—^-from water users are being rec by the clerk, who anticipates a collec tion of $7,000. *

In explaining the condition" of the department Fraoe presented the fol-lowtng~frgu"fesTTfre operating expensr-of the plant from April 1, 1931, to Jan. 1, 19S2, was $0,688.17. Thf; wate r rentals collected April 1, 1031, to Jan. 1, 1932, totaled $7,171.31. j

There also is the usual transfer toj the water fund of $5,000 from the! fire, park, street and sewer funds. This will make the annual collections about' $19,000. The city council recently!

' c e ^ | Toledo; g e n e r t l ^ f g t a r y , Frank H.; J™ king certin

The "school" also brought out^th fact that many automobil-e dealers do not know that they must transfer

regular way and secure cate.s befhnT^utomob&g

j Baer, Cleveland, and •chairman of the j .executive .committee,. 1 >. M. Mac Ph e r-| son, Grand Rapids. ~ • .—o

can be scrapped.

Plans Are Approved —-- For Disposal Plant

The state stream control commis­sion approved the Jackson city com­mission's sewage disposal program re­cently after a final hearing at Lan­sing. The plans call for the submis-

DIABETES Symptoms, such as Thirst. Hunger, Nervouanea*. Itchiivjr, and Tired Feel­ing, can be absolutely freed by taking Di Bit-Ex. Itewmmeinlwl by Di .Sr^r

Van ValkenburR, M. D. T r i a l P a c k a g e $ 1 . 0 0

R e g u l a r P a c k a g e $ 2 . 0 0 Don't Wait. Write Today for a Free

Sample

The Di Bit-Ex Co. 3 1 3 5 M o n t r o i e A v e .

C h i c a g o , 111.

Radiator Lodge Emblems

Show your colors—<sarry your Lodge Emblem on your car radiator. jtea_atlfally Lodge Emblem s - Sh~rTn.e. ason ic, Elkg, K. C . Moose. Woodmen, etc.. tent postpaid for only

THE GLOBE CO., Hayftdd, Minnesota $2

authorised , t.h-fr t r a n a f p j ni SXn.OQ!l-tarr^nt - ^ p r ^ ^ j i . j ^ n ±n tbn vntprs no t the water fund for the two years of ]atc-r than the primary next^opt 1930 and 1931.

The total operating expen.se for the year should not exceed $11,000, ac­cording to Frace. This indicates the department should show a profit of about $8,000 foT-tne-year: " —

KEVERSLIP PULLEY Tran»mTts more power, more capacity. Le*H belt wear; un­affected by weather; no pulley coverint? ever required. Replace your troubTeson*e~palleys with NEVERSLIP. AJ1 lize* 125.00 and up. Money back guaran­tee. Ask for NEVERSLIP pul­leys on All Power Machinery you buy. Write for free deacriptive folder and prices.

ROSENTHAL CORN HUSKER CO. Milwaukee, Wisconsin

City of Allegan Has Balance of $48,396

The annual financial report, read and adopted by the Allegan city coun­cil, showed a balance on hand in all funds of $48,396^.18. -Last years' bal­ance in the treasury was $38,790.59

The report also showed the amount paid Clare E. Hoffman's law office in the last six years in defending the city in the several suits heard in

ber. if the voters will adopt a financing

plan at the September primary the group was told that the city could have a plant in operation by Jan. 1, 7TT3^.---Ailing_City Manager W. H. Cruse told the~~commission that the city has about $140,000 remaining from a previous sewer system bond issue which may be u.sed to finance work on the plant. Engineers em­ployed by the city will start a study at one*- on plans suitable for Jackson.

o

Berrien Tax Rate Is Above State Average

PSYLLIUM SEED. Triple cleaned; extra sifted; Blonde (white): superior grade bet­ter than black; highly mucUarinoua. Nat-ural laxative supplying bulk and lubrication. Promotes normal intestinal elimination with­out iH effects. Safe, effective; non-habit forming: easy to take. A non-drujr remedy. Sixty "ents pound, Five pounds, $2.50, pout-paid. Hilare»t. Box 4231. Takoma Park, D. C.

The Citizens'Mutual Automobile

Insurance Company of Howell, Michigan

-4ri a fUiU'.... wid<> romftany w r i t i n g automobile par: of th<

insurance state.

-Thb company has a^rotxl^op'eJi. ing for a live agent. It will pay you fra~ write-tho home office .A. you an; in a posdtion to write automobile insurance.

ha.s -The company yyar; of experience

had sixteen and has

paid over $8,000,000 in cJaima in Michigan and is in fine shape to continue to give service, aa claim adjustments are looked after carefully by this success­ful Michigan company.

" WRITE-TO

WM. E. ROBB, Secretary

Howell, Mich.

Taxes against real estate in Mich-circuit; j u a n totaled $254,180,250 in 1931, as

and supreme courts was $3,140. A re*'compared with $266,777,083 in 1930, port had been in circulation that Clare ! according to a report completed by the and "Leo Hoffman had been paid more

go/ng, anyway

than $16,000 for services. o

state tax commission. The reduction" of more than $12,000,000 was effected by governmental economies, the report stated. Because of reduced valuations,;

I HK- modern -Miss.- -needs no time out" for the time of month.

Tk« ftbor* lllaatratloa wat r«prodoe«4 froa • a actual photocrapk. to abow tke eomyar* •tire »isa of the G l u t Artec B«ai witk that • f tb* < o » » « 0 field or navy Wan. I

LARGEST OF ALL BEANS It 1« a real bean: looka lika a flak) or ma.tr*

baan except that It la 8 or a tame* aa larte. 1» or 1% Qlant Aatec baana w i u f t weigh aa eoaee, while U takes from )•« to 17f lo i tb« eonimon.flald beana to welirb aa ounea. It U a buab b*aa; will tto»4 *e«r* A/eacht thaa fDoat varieties; very hardy: aad prababl* the moat productive beaa gtowa. One plant* er reports that two year* aso he secured Your beans, the product of wWeh he replant* ed last spriOT, ~ss& 1n t h r ^aJKharvested 34» pounds of dry beans. The quality of th« Giant Aitec Bean is uaeaeetled both aa » arten and dry shell beaa. Our soppfc/ ••• aead is limited, and the price la high, but ne« la the time to tat started with this woadar-ful baan. 8 heana. 2Scv i<> beaa». $1.00 •••• fourth lb.. »2.00, postpaid.

NOVELTY GARDEN CLUB M M*rke* AT*V ft. W.

Cmmi Rapi-*, Mi«ki#M

Resurrection Plant T h e G e n u in • " R o s o o f J a r i c h o "

Theae peculiar plants are found among the pea is and eadars of Paleatlna. When yoo tat the plant It will have the appearance of a ban of tt«ktry folded leaflets, dry- and dead. Put It in water and It will open up Its handsome fern-Tike foliage, turn green and begin to grow in about twenty irinutes. Take it out of the water and it cuvls up. turns browii aiid boeumaa dead again.—K-4s-

Install Flood Lights Over Self ridge Field ^ ^ * v e T ^ ^ r a t e JT h igVr

.——___— v_ ^ m 1931 than in the preceding year.

capable of apparently dying and coming to life again repeatedly, and wH! keep in Its lead or dormant state for years and re* •waken directly upon being placed in- water, (t is an interesting, curious and most beau­tiful house plant with fine fern-like leaves »#—very agreeable fragrance. If you want t "table fern" that will prove satisfactory isder all conditions, don't fail to get one >f these marvels of plant life. Grown and thrives in a shallow bowl of water, and Is {neatly admired by everyone-

10c aack, 3 for 25c, Postpaid

NOVELTY GARDEN CLUB SS Mark** A**., ft. W.

Grand Rapt*, Mink.

On« o<f the final phases of a $3,-000,000 construction program at Sel-fridge Field, a $50,000 electrical sys­tem, has been dedicated by M'aj. George H. Brett, commandant, who threw the switch to illuminate the poet with powerful flood lighting for the first time in its history. The elec­trical system is entirely underground, and includes street lighting and ail service connections to' the buildings on the post.

Q-,

Benefited Isabella By $41 £85 Amount

IsaibeHa county through the sever­ance tax has benefited approximately $41,&85 since the opening up of the oil and gas fields in this county three years ago.

The tax is levied by the state and 40 per cent is retained by the state, 40 per cent is returned to townships and 20 per cent to the counties.

^%e payment to Isabella county for 1931 totaled approximately $41,-970. J h » k ftgwe includes both the county and to*vnship appropriation.

I

start May 1 and will employ 35. The concern is the Cadillac Can Company, a Michigan corporation which was founded in Detroit and operated there for five, years, but which, for the past 14 years,' has been located in Cincin­nati.

D. A. Walker of New Baltimore i& president of the corporation. His brother, H. 0. Walker,, us secretary-treasurer. CadiH&c Can manufactures tin containers and special metal stampings for cigars.

If you've ever taken Bayer Aspirin for a headache, you know how soon the pain subsides. It is just as effective in the relief of those pains peculiar to womenL_

~ Dorrt dcdteate"nrertain~days of every month to sufTerinR. It's old-fashioned. It's unnecessary. Aspirin will always enable you to carry on in comfort. Take enough to assure your complete comfort. If it is genuine aspirin it cannot possibly

urt you. Bayer Aspirin does not depress the heart. It does not up­set the stomach. It does nothing but stop the pain.

Headaches come at inconvenient times. So do colds. But a little Bayer Aspirin will always save the day. A throat so sore you can hard­ly swallow is made comfortable with one good gargle made from

r-Gfemens. " It will 1 th—e tablets, Neuralgia Neuritis. Rheumatism. Pains that once kept

f t wan tttSii -per fl QOO- of AiaJ u ation in 1931; $31.53 in 1930.

Berrien county's rate per $1,000 of real property was $37.29, or $4.93 hig-her than the state average.

The average tax rates for other j counties in this section of the state are: Allegan, $27.05; Barry, $29.04; Cass, $33.30; Kalamazoo, $30.74; Ot­tawa, $30.29; St. Joseph, $32.49; Van Buren, $37.11.

o

Mt. Clemens Gets Plant

Another factory with an established market has completed arrangements

?

> -.

*

people home are forgotten half an hour after taking a few of tftttfee remarkable tablets. So are tfct)rlttle nagging aches that bring fi "nerves" by day, or a

Genuine Bayer Aspirin tablets eaet so very* little after all, that it deejrt p«y to experiment with intfUtkrtir

'•'i

zy.

i

V

Page 8: ffitncfenep Bfepatthpinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1932-04-20.pdf · L'JUftL-i.JU 'V'.'VUffll^HUqp

'7W?

J " - ' . , . ' .>?

.L

^ - Th* Piadbwy PbpaUfc Wedncday, April 20, 1932 " ~-*0

R f. NEW LOW PRICES! Goodyear builds millions mora tires than any other company— < u that's the reason you get beat' values here. Plus our Service.

Now—New Low Prices.

I Cootiauea' froa ftrtft p«gA

ALREAD Y TALK ADJOURMENT

commission without additional com­pensation. This one amendment will save the taxpayers the salaries of two or three persons, possibly more.

It has been early one month since

7

I'

« »

V EACH

2*4.40-21

• V B A C H Jn Pairs

Lifetime Guaranteed

GOODYEAR PATHFINDER

Super twist Cord Tires CASH PRICES

Too late lor l**t weak. Mr. and Mrs. A. Fincher and fam­

ily, and Mr. and Mrs. George Crane, oi Detroit spent the week end here.

Mrs. L. L. Walker of Detroit, Miss

Full Oversize

TRADE YOUR OLD TIRES for new 1932 Goodyear

All-Weathers'

TUNE IN Goodyear Radio Pro*-

Wed. Sat. ma

29x4.50-20 30x4.50-21 28x4.75-19 29x4.75-20 29x5.00-19 30x5.00-20 28x5.25-18 30x5.25-20 31x5.25-21 30x3 30*3>a Rg.Cl.

31x4 32x4

Price of I'jicfa

Each la Paira

7.SS 7 . M

Tuba

Other sizes equally low

s L,BB L A Y B Y

DIXIE OIL STATION

ion. There is talk of adjourning next week or the week after. Some memb­ers say it will be longer than that before they con get any really bene­ficial' legislation enacted. The tax­payers will not know until the work of the legislature is entirely finish­ed whether there is to be any sub­stantial benefit coming from i t Meanwhile there seems to be a gen­eral tendency not to pass judgement upon the question of whether the special legislative session has been a success or a failure.

r ANDERSON J the legislature wag called into toss- j Catherine Walsh of Dexter, Mtv-and.

Mrs, Charles Frost and family of Wayne, Mr. and Mrs. Chris Brogan, and Paul Brogan of Chilson, Mrs. Mary Ledwidge and daughter, Ger-maine, of Detroit and Nellie Euler were Sunday callers at the Max Led-widge home.

Miss Mary Landis, of Unadilla, spent Sunday with her sister, Helen.

Ben White has a fine new team of horses.

Justine Ledwidge was in Ypsilanti Monday.

Henry Shirey and Irving Richard­son were in Anderson one day last week*

!

,1

f

iiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiniitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiriiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiuiiinuHNiyi

- - ANNOUNC4NG- ~ ——-#

Cash & Carry Day in the Downstairs Store

SATURDAY, APRIL 23 Everyone was so satisfied with the excellent bar­gains offered last week, Mack's are again having a great One Day Sale this Saturday! New and differ­ent items from the entire store will be sold at almost cost prices! Come in a°d look around. Your SAV­INS will make it worthwhile.

PJNCKNEY LOSES SECOND ~ - -GAME-TOtfOWEtt Pinckney lost its second game to

Howell Tuesday evening by a score of 7 to.2. Inability to hit and loose fk.ding was the cause of the local de­feat. Pinckney meets Dexter here Friday night at 4:00 p. m, and is de­termined to win.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 K H E Pinckney 0 0 0 0 0 0 , 2 2 5 6 Howell 1 0 9 3 0 1)0 7 6 2 Batteries: ^""iney- Meabon, Lcdwidge& Plnkel

IN THE MEMORY The importance of tfte funeral lies chiefly iu-ihe

memory picture that remains with those left behind. Through the long years they will recall . *

this hour as the final parting with a /

—loved one. For that reason, yre do alt— /N

Pi

that we can to make this sacred rite impressive and sublime.

PJHfSWARTHOWT 5yNERAL*H<

^HONEiNO k

10, ff>

dtt.

WANT*, rO* 3 A I * ETC

2 ^ \ FOR SALE Eating and seed po-totoes.

Frank Mowers

Howell-Rancour, Kathbun, Brigham, Munsell, Daniels and McKiiffionk

MALT SALE Gold Medal—Frankenmuth, Blue

Star—Jackson and I^ne leading brands or amall cans. Malt all recom­mended for cooking and home use. Price reduced for Friday and Satur­day this week.

R. E. Barron, Howell O

MACK&CO ANN ARBOR, MlCH. PHONEr4T6f s

flHIIHIIIIUIIIUIIIIitllltlillllttlltllStttlimittllltlltlt — — — H " a*

i

M I C H I G A N BELL TELEPHONE COT

'

E m p l o y e r s o f t en s u m m o n additional help by telephone

When applicant* apply for work today, they trauaUy are asked to leave their telephone Munbcm, For the easiest and quickest way to summon additional help is by telephone*

In. many1 instances,* other things being equal, the "V Ito canbe rcc\ched bytelephone gets the job.

Your tc&ephonc is ones-of your m o s t important businea» and social as sets . And, i n emergencies , •Oeh an firc» accident or sudden s ickness , your tdephOTew.PRIGELEi iS PROTECTION.

FIRST PRIZE FOR BOYS Pat Dillon, Jr. won first prize for

the best boy's letter in the Detroit Free Press last Sunday. It Is as fol­lows:

I first started to collect stamps about two years ago. At first I got my stamps from ar. old trunk in the attic where I found enoungh to start my collection. In the summer I do not do much with my stamps as there are a great many summer sport I en­joy. In Lin- wl itefTinmths I do most of my work on stamps. The most fun and excitment I had was when a friend and I went into an old house in ser.rch of stamps. It was an old frame ouildi.ig with five rooms up­stairs and three rooms downstairs. We started upstairs and went through an old trunk, a barrel, and an old waste papeif basket. We had 32 stamps each when we came out. After six months I had all I could get here in town so I seut away for 1,000 stamps for 25 cents. I found 450 in this bunch that Ldid not have. I have read and found "The Boy

j Scout Stamp Collecting Merit Badge

WANTED-Ashes Gruel and dirt to haul. H. C. Vedder MOTOR REPAIRING—: am prepar­ed to do all kinds of motor repairing and rewinding. Prices right.

Marvin Shirey.

LAKELAND CIRCLE OF s KING'S DAUGHTERS

_ The regular meeting of Lakeland Circle of King's Daughters was held

a h * L O. O. F. hall at Hamburg v»lage | ^"ttV, """'* " " T U S J T V L ^ I T i g ^-- -~r~ ,. - ~— -=,-_— __°__.:rr-*5 ' pamplet" v m mterestjngr-At-iirstrt 3 Tuesday afternoon. The president, .. _ Mrs. Edward G. Houghton, presided g_|_andthe -meeting opened with wringing

"Sunshine in the Soul" and repeat-fhe LordTsPrayer. Officers and i n g

collected stamps from all over the world, but now I collect mostly Bra­zil, Belgium, and French starr.pa.I have made watermark detector, I use

j carbon tetrachloride which can be committee reports were read by Mrs. i_ j t j * .. T«. n ^, . _ ^ * ' purchased at any drug stsore. It will Clayton Carpenter, - Mrs. Robt G. «. » . *u * *u i «.u

back of the stamp. It will show the Jack, Mrs. Mildred Whitlock and Mrs. Barbara Tessmer. Sewing done for the U. of M. hospital w»s brought in.» Plans for the county convention tc be held in May were discassed. Miss Viola Petteys condaeted! a T»«ssing_ contest, in which the prize w a s w o n b y Mrs Frflnk W t e l l a o c - A t t -

Mrsr

eluded in my collection. I think that stamp collecting is the greatest hob-•y I know of. —

- ¾ Parkinson April 26, to hold the next meeting,

ar--hf•-r-Jiom_«> at Pettysvi 11 was._ac.-_ (''•j;tc'(l. A Bohemian luncheon was Si_ve__ _ _ - -

ITEMS OF 25 YEARS AGO

Earl Gallop, Pinckney

WANT KB—Washings to do. JHrs, Wm. Darrow

From the Di.tpatch of Apr. 25, 1907 Chas. HofT has been hiro.! as sup­

erintendent of the Howell Sanator­ium Farm. -

Miss Lelia Monks gave \\ house party to ^he Chancc Club last Sab-u.-tjay, they remained over night.

In the case of Crumb vs. Alex. M.intyrc in the Circuit Court hist v,(<-k, Alex. Melntyrc won out, the jury bringing in a verdict of no cause for action.

MORTGAGE SALE WANTED—Wood to._bu_£Z.. .75r. per DEFAULT "Having ^e..n""madeTn - hour. Also tree trimmnig and graft-

thc conditions of a mortgage madejing at reasonable rates. ;by~"T. S. Buhn .mdRuby L^n_uhh~to~ Robert F. Burden and Myi'tie Burd­en, husband and wife, and to the sur-

-rtvor of them, dated and recorded April 13, 1028, in the office of the Register of Deed., of Livingston County, Michigan, in Liber. 131 of Mortgages at page 522, upon which mortgage default has been made in payment of principal, interest and taxtt* and the wliulp lui.otmt has tJ.>-

The section men on the Ann Ar­bor railroad struck la*t week for an increase in pay.

The contract has been let to the Washtenaw Dredging Co. to dig a canal between Baso and Portage lak­es. The work is to be completed July •4 th.

Married at Dexter in St. Joseph's church on April 23, Edward Spears of Pinckney to Miss Rose Murray of Dexter.

Dr. W. T. Wright of Ann Arbor has purchased the dental equipment of the late "Dr. E. L. MUOTI! aml-writt

.

I Norman Reason * ESTATE BROKKR

Property «nr _*toe a Speciality

«tty property to trad* MWIt FhooaJKo. IT

CARD OF THANKS To aU who so kindly aided ua by

tkoiicht* word and deed, during our >te*at bereavement wc extend sin-t m t f c i n j u .

• CLARENCE J. KEIFER Clarence J. Keifer, 30, died at his

home near the Putnam-Marion town line April 13. This was known as the Murningham farm. He was born in Ontario, August 18, -1U0O -. _

by his widow, He is survived by his widow, a "—•il bride of two months. Funeral servic­

es were held at St. Mary's church In Pinckney Friday at 10:00 A. M.,

', Rev. Lewis Dion officiating. Burial \"vi\f in St. Mary's cemetery.

shortly, open an offce at Pinckney. William Going has moved to Ponti­

ne where he has secured work. Many farmers drilled in their oats

last week. ____^_ ng|r^,Van^in"k^> Wales Leland

and H. B. Gardacr attended a Mas­onic banquet at Brighton Monday night.

Chris Brogan is building a new house.

Rev. A. G. Gates has been hired as pastor of the Congregational church.

The Putnapi-Hambu rg Farmers Club will meet with Mr. and Mrs. Will Cady Saturday. The following is

f o m e i y | t l i e P r ° g r a m :

Reading _ Mrs. Nash Recitation Mrs. A. Flintoft Song Howard Harris Reading ..:...,. Mrs. S. E. SwatthOut

liries as dark marks instead of light marks. 1 have 1,650 stamps, and there are 91 different countries in-

T>F»^nm»ii7—^y> 1 , Pmrinvfcy>, Kii+kz

FOR SALE—Seed and eating potato-i . es from certified seed. !^

WTJ. flash I

CHICKS CHICKS 16 breeds of pure-bred bloodtest^d checks. Bred to lay. "It pays to buy Arrowhead chicks." Visitors WCIT

come. Arrowhead Poultry Farms

Howell, Mich.

FOR SALE—Sparton Improved Bar­ley. A'so seed corn.

George Greiner

A

WANTED—A situation for geleral housework. Have had experience.

Julia Aron 1--2 mi. S. E. of Pinckney

FOR SALJL-Cement blocks, 6, 8 and 12 inches in thickness^ At my farm near State Sanatorium.

Geo. E. Dailey, Howell, Mich.

FOR SALB; Bantum and Evergreen seed corn, strawberry plants, light wagon, "lcctric pump.

W. C. Hendee

WANTED House cleaning and

Mrs. Ralph Phunmer Pinckney, Mich.

FOR SALE. .Eating Potatoes. Russell Uokros

FOR SALE! Fordson tractor. Also Bronze turkey torn and early , Ohio pot&toes (3 miles north Plnekney)

CeciT Roberts, Howell Road

3ABY CHICKS Purebred Whita Leghorns, White

and Barred Rocks* Wyandotte Re_ds and Orphingtons, $8.00 per hundred.

Custom hatching $2.50 pe* hund-"t?oreggs, goosey duck and turkey hatching $6.00 per hundred eggs.

FOR SALE—28 sheep—26 ewes apd 2 bucks. Also 2 yr. old brood sow, due_April_18_ and one turkey„gobler.i Brooders^(t^per ^ent jliscosii^

Geo. Parker, R. 3, Pinckney ~-».»—.• •»*«-«-..•*

FOR SALE.-Two doors, 5 feet by eight feet; 1 stairway; two by fours; shlplap; six iron frame windows; 1 6 ft. bathtub; 1 front apron wash stand. Telephone 35F24

Frank Plawko.

FOR SALE—Young turkey gobblers. Also some No. 1 timothy hay. — — - IL-Barkovitz-

come and is hereby declared duo and payable and/ there is claimed to be 'lue and unpaid on this date for principal, interest and taxes the sum of $7,317.50 and $35 attorney fee pTpvided for in said -mortgag-ej—and no suit or proceeding at law having been instituted to recover said sum of any part thereof;

Now therefore by virtue of the power of sale contained in said mort­gage and pursuant to statute notice is hereby given that said mortgage will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises therein described at public auction to the highest bidder at the west/front door of the court house in the tity of Howell, Livingston Coun­ty, Michigan, on July 16, 1932, at t en . o ' c lock in t h e fnrennnn o f saif}

i-A' and family i ^-wi- <fay. Hto«*"T and famUy

\ W.II.Moycr was in Detroit Mon-

Recitation Leigh VanHorn Inst. Duet Fern Hendee

Fannie fiwarthout Reading Mrs. H. F.-Kicc Rec -/ Be mice-Cady Solo Addic Kice Ktcitation Sadie Swarthout Song Florence Kice Question Box

day, which premises are described in said mortgage a follows:

Land in Marion Township, Living­ston County, Michigan, described as: North part of Northwest fract-ianalnqUarter^which lic» South' of

PercrMarqrieUe^RaiTroad fight of way except C acres in Southwest corner thereof deeded to J, A. Batcheler and except Skilbeck's Addition to the Village of Howclt, and excepting 22.38 acres sold to Jacobl-Jaszcwski and wife, and ex­cept kr piece sold to Henry Alger and wife, and excepting one piece sold to Anna E. Harrington, and

one piece sold \p James Larue, as ap­pears from the records in the Re gister's office for Livingston County, Michigan; all being in

Michigan, containing 55 acres, more or less, all on section 1 of

Oakland Hills Poultry j-'arm, Pairoifigton, Mi-h.~ ~

LIVINGSTON BABY BURNED TO DEATH

Max, three year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Bohm, living nine miles northeast of Fowlerville, at a he nlet known as Strungtown,—was borwed to death, Monday afternoon, while playing with his 7 year old brother, Bernard:' — •—=-

P

TRR body ot Max was tound in the ashes of a straw stack which had been fired with matches, it is believ­ed, bf Bernard. Max went downthe road to meet Bernard as the latter cam? from school. Wi.'hin a few Jiuh-utes the straw was discovered afire.

Survivrmg relatives are the parent*-Mid~the older brother!

niiniiiitiiiiiiHwiiit miHiiiiiiiimniiimimnniintiinnniiimuiniifininfn I For a Mere S

$1.98 You Can Have a STUNNING SPRING MAT

You'll be enthused about the new straws we've just received ... cro­chet, shiny or rough .... that are fashioned in such flatteringlv brim­med, turban or tarn styles! Black, tan or blues.

Inexpensive New Sport Oxfords | Combinations of Dark Elk and Camel Elk, Black and Wl ite

Medium or Low Heels, Composition Soles. Sizes 3 to *

New arrivals $3.95

in NOVELTY FOOTWEAR.... Sandal Straps. Black or brown kid. Sizes 3 to 8

$2.95 and $3.95

Pumps and S

! or plain Come in

3 S

LOVELY SPRING FROCKS of smart silk prints crepes with all the fashion details of higher priced frocks!

and see them! Sizes 14 to 46

$5.00 i NEW COATS

If you don't get a new spring coat this year, you're going to feel ^ dowdy and outmoded—and there isn't a reason on earth for n it hav- X one, when they are so inexpensive., New bright colors, pastels, blacks without fur, polo and dress styles! Sizes 14 to 46.

$9,95

i

s a PHONE 41§J ANN ARSOR

iiiiiuimntiinniiHiuiiiHiHiiiutiiiuuuiiiMiiiinuiHtiiiwHmiiiiiifniuiiiri

said township. Dated: April 15 1032

Robert F. Burden Myrtic Burden Mortgagees

Shields A Smith Attorney* for Mort^tiafcc? — _ Howell, Iftcafgan

ATTENTION FARMERS Wheat, Beans, and Pigs are cheap. Come to R. E. Barron, Howell and

you will find new and used Farm Im­plements cheap.

R. E^Barrojw Howell

ssae

LAWN GRASS SEED

seed why not buy the best? Badger Brand stands at the head and is in­dorsed by both the U. S, and Michi­gan Department of Agriculture. It js used on the City Parks in Detroit, Chicago and other large cities? -

Buy the best. The 1032 Price is the lowest in 20 year*.

ft. & Barron, Howell

CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank our fri t*nds and

neighbors for their many acts of kindness shown us during our ber­eavement Their sympathy and aid will linger long in our hc:irt« and mejnory^

,. Mr. and Mrs. Hchry Harris^ ' and familyT

O

J

FOR SALE_Gold Mcdal^Franken-niuth, Blue Star_Jackson, and Nine leading brands of small cans. Malt all recommended for cooking or home use. Prices reduced for Friday and Saturday this week,

R. E. Barron, Howell |

0

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