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George Walsh Speaks Q[ No Let-Up in Production Here ] D |...

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Vol. 47 Pinckney, Livingston County, Michigan Wednesday, August 17, 1932. No. 33 Pncbey Wiis the Decidiag Game Fred Read Shut* Out Dexter Giving Pinckn«y Two Victories Out Of Three Pr i\ The Pinckney diamond ball team made it two victories out of three games played with the Dexter team when they won from that team at Dexter last Wednesday night by a score of 3 to 0. The scores of the first two games were 9 to 1, Dexter and 16 to 11, Pinckney. Fred Read backed up by good support handed the Dexter boys a row of nine goose eggs. The Pinckney team accorded him nice support only making two misplays.. Dexter threw a scare into the Pinckney bunch a couple of times but two fast double plays aided greatly in helping them out of their difficulties. The first came in the 7th after"Meaboirrhad thrown OtTout a first, Shields singled, Chase lined to Shieks who doubled Shields at first. In the ninth Dexter made their strongest threat. Scott was safe on Dinkel's error, H. Shieks walked, Gilland beat out a hit to the box fill- ing the bases. Ott flied out to Shieks. Shields hit a line drive to short left. Bob Smith made a great catch of it and doubled Scott at third ending the game. Pinckney got a run in the 2nd on . hjts by Battle, Dinkel' and Haines. George Walsh Speaks At Pinckney Aug. 25 Republican Candidate for Governor j Will Speak at Pinckney at 11:00 ' A. M. Thursday, August 25. Q[ No Let-Up in Production Here Mr. George W. Welsh of Grand Rapids, one of the leading candidates for the Republican nomination for governor will deliver a speech in Pinckney next Thursday, August 25. at 11:00 A. M., as part of a day's ] D | Howell Makes Front I Page of City Dailies j $25,000 Alienation of Affection Suit of Krieeel vs Brown Makes Front ! Page. Also is Broadcast Over Radio Detroit Edison Co. Sees Local Bank The Weekly Church Program ' CATHOLIC CHLKLH SERVICE _ Another came -in the 6th on Shieks hit and a Dexter misplay, and the last run was scored in the 0th on ijngles by Haines and Meabon. Pinckney failed to hit Boettger, Dexter pitcher very hard, getting nothing bigger than a single. Pinckney Smith, If F. Read, p. Shieks, 8b Battle, c Dinkel, Is A. Singer, lb Haines, cf R. Singer. 2b Clark, rf C. Miller, rs Meabon, rs Gilland, 3b Ott, 2b Shields. Is Chase, rs Hanselman, Clark, lb Coy, cf Boettger, p _&-oik_lf . 3 4 4 4 4 -r 4 4 4 2 2 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 6 o Dexter AB R 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 JL 0 0 1 2 1 TT 2 0 0_ "o~ 1 H 1 0 2 0 1 2 0 0 __0_ 1 0 6 2 2 TO" .> 1 _0_ 0 0 po 4 1 8 0 4 8 1 1 O 1 4 4 0 3 IT 0 0 0 "6~ r A 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 2 tour of this county. ' He will arrive in Lapsing Wednes- day aft^rrr^cTi, August 24th, ami wH spend several hours at the Ingham County headquarters in the Hotjl Kerns, at which time he desires to meet personally as many of his friends as possible. The same even- ing at eight P. M. he will be the prin- cipal speaker at the Ingham County AB R 1L-2Q—JL- KI Fair at Mason. The morning of the Sunday Masses a t 8, o'clock. 10, and 12 Seek to Have Edison Money in Bank ( Confessions, Saturday evening at At Time of Clotnig Made ' 1 :30. Preferred Claim J R^v. Levis M. Dion • —- ; Pastor Receiver, Charles Monroe, and j 0 0 1 0 1 ^0 0 0 0 0 K 2 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 following day, Thursday, August 24, hundred* cf Mr. Welch's friends will fonnur Cashier, A.H. Murpny, of the Pinckney State Bank were in nuw- ell Monday attending the suit of the oit EdiaonJSo^ against the Pinck^ _ ney State Bank which closed on April 6, 1932. It seems at this time the Detroit Edison Co. had in the Pinckney Bank about $863 which re- presented money which the bank had collected for light and power -bills due the Edison Co. This it is claimed was not a commercial or savings de- posit as it was supposed t o bft turru E4PTIST CHURCH B. Rev. B. F. Esic.-Pastor Services each Sunday Morning Worship 10:30 SpiectaT^and separate. smtcTfoir lt>e little folks. ' Sunday School 11:45 Class for all B. Y. P. U 7:00 The city of Howell is getting all kinds of publicity at the present time whether it desires it or not. The cause of it is a $25,000 suit for al- ienation of the affections of his wife filed against Dr. A. Brown of Howell by one Kenneth Kreisel who operates an oil station out Cohoctah way. Kreisel and his wife came to Howell from Indiana four years ago. Mrs. Kreisel "is a nurse and found work in the McPherson Hospital, being at t t h e present time superintendent. On April 15, 1932, she and her husband seperated and she began suit for di- vorce. Kreisel filed a cross bill. About two weeks ago he claims he bToke into Dr. Brown's office~~lrm+ found his wife there with the doctor at 8:00 a. m. The suit for damages followed. Later the son of the doctor Browning Brown, visited the Kreisel oil station and, it is alleged, smashed windows, etc. He was arrested, taken before a Cohoctah justice, fined $50 and 30 days in jail. He appealed the sentenee. All Detroit papers featured^ Current Cunmest i The wise ones professed to see in i the announcement that Ed Sheilds of Lansing would manage the campaign of Claude Carney for governor an indication that that candidate would have the inside track in the thre. cornered contest for governor on the Pemocj-atk ticket at the- jmmark>*» This has since been strengthened by the announcement that R. E. Barron of Howell has atso accepted a place on the state committee of the Carney for governor organization. Mr. Bar- ron was unusually active in the two successful campaigns of Woodbridge Ferris for governor and was reward- ed by being appointed state oil in- spector. Of late years he has not been particularly active in politics. Local politicians cannot imagine either he or Shields embarking on any forlorn hopes. Judge Sample turned down the re- quest of the 76 citizens of Ypsilanti for a grand jury investigation into the affair last week and it was broad- cast over WJR last Saturday. Dr. Brown says the charges are all madness and wthoirt foundation and that on the day Mrs. Kreisel was in his office she was undergoing treat- ment for a cold. The doctor is 65 wars old, a member of the State *>-ir 't.'U'inm bo;i»v) and nromjnent Evening Worship 8:00 , ., ,, , . , ° r both socially and in a b Thurs. evening prayer Lervire 8:00 ed over to the company when collect- ed. The Edison Co. has gone into accompany him on an all day tour of , court to have this declared a prefer- Ingham, Livingston, Shiawassee and d claim a m J t he C ompan».>paid in, Clinton Counties, in the course of f u n_ /u JudgeJrifmph CrtllinV^f thi° which he wiir speak in about twelve | c j rcu jt , s a stockholder in the Edison towns. j Co. ho has called in Judge Doty of Mr. Welch's principal speech for, Oakland county to hear the case.Don Read, ,_Zj_ hy ^g£Hc^. .'. , ' .' ' " , j or.ica Devereaux, sister of the bride balls off Read 1 ^fft^m^-_ii^LiiJit':iiimt dovrrnnr nnde- , -—. P —:—-•» r . Dans on R<au i, on brides*-..pid and Francis M ,Hus ,1« ~ W c Sfcfnlrc tn A. J. (rvorsheek. and three years as | ' . ^ H. Shieks, rf 2 0 0 0 0 0 Struck out bv Read, 2j by Bnett. srer, 4. Bases on BoettgeT 1. Double plays—Shieks to A. Singer; Smith to Shieks. Left on ba es Pinckney 10, Dexter 4. Umpires—Rev. Jerome and Henry J«*ell. ' » . J Central Michiganr_*vill be_at Central- Park in Lansing, Thursday afternoon Augus-t 2-4th, at .-pight- l-\ M, Hi* local committee is making plan* for thousands to hear this popular cand- idate on that occassion. Mr. Welsh, in carrying his cam- paign to the people for their approv- al, is stressing the necessity of low- Van Winkle—^--attorrw^y for the bank. The case was completed Monday and the judge will render his decision later. - CONCHESATIONAL- CHURCH— £. J. BerquUt MiiiU~er Mi»» Elly lseler Organ!\t Mrs. EaH Baugbn~_Direct of Mutic -Percy—','tw erfhniiL^^VMPt of S. S. a Business way in Howell for years. Mrs. Kreisel Ui 29. At present she is away on a vac- ation." o DEVEREAUX-McCLUSKEY j The marriage of Miss Gertunic j Devereaux, the daughter of Mrs. D,| Ella 1 IVlorning Worship 10:30 a~m. Junior Church 10:30 a.m. Sunday School 11:30 a.m. Christian "Endeavor : .. 6:30 p.m. Orchestra Practice Tuesday Evening at the church Thursday Evening Prayer Meeting at E. J. Benjujst will Sunday morning. •hut •ch the preach next o MASONIC AND O. E. S. PICNC Livingston Lodge, No. 76, F. and A. M. and O. E. S. No 145 will hold iheir annual picnic at Cedar Lake on Thursday, August 25. There will b<' sports of all kinds and a soft ball game between the married and single men, A pot luck dinner will '>e ser- ved at noon. AH Ma-sons, Sta4^.jind families are invited. The ball game ought to lie ji Tiard one. Fred Read the affairs of the city. They charged that the city government was buying supplies of city officials in violation of a state law. Judge Sample stated that his action was the result of pro- mises made to him by the accused city officials that they would ceasj doing business with the city or re- sign. John Gault, park commissioner, at once -resigned. He has a contract - to supply the city hospitals with milk It is said that if all the city official who have been doing business with the-eity would resign only three offic- ials and the city clerk would be left. Following the denial of this peti- tion another one was filed with the attorney general asking for a grand jury investigation of the school board. It was alleged that a $25000 shortage in accounts exists there. A state audit of the scho_ol!fl account was also asked. Superintended Arthur Erickson of the Ypsilanti schools has protested against a state audit. An investigation will be made by the, attorney- general 1 * office. I wil lead th< married th. -<y iTh omas Devereaux of Howell to ering taxes to an appreciable degree, , .• .v I-.- tt. Gerald McCluskey, son of Mrs. including the elimination of the en-1 **v V * ,, Mr Welsh ' McCluskey of Pinckney took~pta"ce at tire state property tax. has served, as a m cruller House of Representatives, of the House of Representatives, two St. Joseph's church at Howell Tues- day, Rev. KV llionof f iciatinfr-T-hf couple were attended by Miss Ver- SOFT BALL GAMES A T T H E HOWELL FAIR There are three soft ball games scheduled for the Howell Fuir—tbi* week. The four Howell league teams will play. They are the Consumers Power, K. of C , Newcomb Shoes, and Rissman Plumbers. Wednesday night at 6:30 p.m., the Consumers Power and K. of C. play in front of the grand stand. Thursday night tht "^Issmah "Plumbers and the NewconirT Shoe* meet. Most of these teams have been loaded for the occasion. The Newcomb Shoes have drafted city manager of Grand Rapids, whore his administration of city affairs was outstanding, including wiping out of a deficit of S 1.200,000 in his first twelve months in office. The greater part o. tin.- ualunce of the campaign Mr. Welsh will spend working in, around and about ])at- roit. PINCKNEY CREAMERY OPENS The I'ihckney Creamery opened for business last Thursday after hav- ing been clo.-ed down since las-t Oct- f)bcr. M00-.HP-ULUki of m i l k _we.rjLL_tak r j , ^ , ^ - . ^ and G. W. Hooker, The other sports wi race, woman's rare, relay nice, run- ning broad jump, stamiir.- broad jump, centiped" laces and horse "shoe pitching. The entertainment commit- tee consists of (\ W. Hooker, Vrrd Read rru.au en in the first day. This is of course { aIlf j |> \y. Curlett President Hoover has been notified that Re has been renominated, about a month ago, for the presidency an4 probabally was only mildly startled by the hews. Anyway he seems to have had his speech of acceptance all team ! ,,,>}l< ly- There are a number of inter- nien. I '"^i' 1 ^ points in it which would bear i fat men's! s, " r ' ous <°nsideration. The prohibi- tion issue is stressed in particular After reading it over it is hard to sec where the wets can derive any satis- faction from it. Ho repeats that the benefits derived from prohibition must be retained and that in certain" sections m e n .-. single im- committee is Din mi KfLs The - (y .Snvm Glen S1a\tor__ George We are informed by Mr. Welsh's campaign committee that the two principal points he will .stress in his remarks at Pinckney are the Michi- gan Securities Commission and the State Banking Department. key, brother of the groom as best man. Little Madeline Nanry, acted as ring bearer. After a wedding trip the couple will be at home at Grafid Ledge where the groom is a practis- ing dentist. In behalf of their many, friends the Dispatch extends con- gratulations. Wo umll , m . lT1 inat in O ~"' i of being taken to Adria a ,>mall amount compared to tlv mense volume oi miiK received herej C)ark> N 0 Frye and Walt up to the time the creamery closed down. On account of no market 1 many farmers were forced to sell! their COA'S and others have found a| market eNewhere. Monday the atn-l ount of milk had increased to 4 1001 pounds and it is thought that the in- crease"'will be steady from now on.| We understand that the milk instead n goes to| WILD DEER HERD REPORTED BARROW ~ MtLLARD^F, Millard F. Darrow, son of the late W. P. and Flora Bullis Darrow, was bom in DexterrMtclTT.-Sepl, 12, lflOl Many farmers have reporter .-e« ing wild deer in the townships Unadilla in Livingston and in Dex- ter and Lyndon in Washtenaw coun- ty. According to Postmaster W. C. Miller these are probably decendant- Waseon, Ohio. Samuel Quigley of | Adrian is in charge of the creamery j-|now ami Walter .Frost is his helper. Ben White at the present time b bringing in the largest loud of milk }\c has some twentv cans. and passed away at his home in Red- of the deer owned by trTe"late Thom- as Birkett of Portage Lake some thirty years ago. He maintained a there large deer herd on his estatf for years. A disease broke out among lands, Calif., August 14, 11*32. When j thom som<> twenty . fiv y ,. ars . l?JO am i a small lad, Millard moved with his I a]1 feut ^.^ or ejpht of thpm fIiwL - Pete Gerycz, Pettysville crack pitch- er, and Gus Rissman has most of the Pinckney stars on his list. They are Lyman Battle, Stanley Dinkel, Lefty Bea,on,Murray Kennedy, Don Swar thom% F r e d Read and Leonard Dev-jto Cincinnati, Ohio. There he engajf- northern Michigan. However many ereaux. - % .'' JRjed in landscape gardening and tree of thftm stayrfj jn th -. >( , ( , t jnn. Mr ^O j surgery, and while there he married M i i w statos that a nalr 0 f them BARN BURNS j Miss Ethel Schmid, who with one son ^ ^ n n f h p A]hort j ark « ori f arm WEDNESDAY NIGHT Pa^l, now 16, survives him. for ^ ^ timP and that h e a n d M r , The large bair, on the Hause farm InVlQiO, on tl^-advice of hisr on the Pinckney—Howell road physician', Millard moved to Calif- f parents to Pinckney where he resided | Th<>gfl Mr Birk , >tt ^ t f rcr in hope* - ( until early manhood when he went that thpy woul(J makfi th ,, fr way tn to Cincinnati, Ohio. There he enga*- northern Mirh igan. H ed in landscape gardening and tree of thcm stayrfj jn t] ^ caught fire from unknown sources 0^¾ \ n the hope that the western late \&»t Wednesday evening and c ii ma te would restore him to health, burned to the ground. In it were a' a hope whkh was finally defeated. Marmon sedan and a quantity of Other immediate relatives surviv- larm tools and hay. The farm is j n g him are his mother; seven broth- owned by Mrs. Anna Samborski whoj ers: jy^ 0 f Austin Lake, resides there with her sons, William C j y(ie of Walled Lake, Kenneth and Cajmir. Several years ago^ the of Thrce Rivers, William and house was destroyed by fire and a M aur j ce 0 f Pinckney, and Glenn and rew one built. The buildings were in- Haro id of Detroit; also two sisters: ,ured in the UvUlgston County Mut-^ Doroth>% at home . and MrSi Fi< j na Al- V«L j . . . x len, of Laniin*. .Tackson made a practice of feeding them. Finally both deer were found dead in the woods shot by hunter*. Some years later a doe was j»een re- peatedly by Deerfield township farm- ers. They applied to the conservnti'•• department and obtained a buck which they liberated in Deerfield. The deer there have multiplied ra- pidly and they are now estimated to number all the way from 50 to 100. It is thought that on account of the numbers some of them have been forced to seek new ranges. o P1NCKNEY SPLITS EVEN _. FN D O U B L E HF.ADE' Th" J'inekney independent base ball team played a double header at the local diamond last Sunday. They won the first game/ defeating the Lima Center Wildcats by a score o 10 to '*. John Kenny pilJvd f.• Pinckney "and should have mr^ much bigger margin as most of I'^ri opposing teams runs were due t Pinrkney vrror?. Tn the second game Pinckney lo-it 12 to lo. Harlow Haines started in the box bu" '-rVed control and was removed, Mhoilw p*)- ing in. HaineK"hrteT relievprf—SWek» and allowed no runs. d. NVxt Sunday Pinckney plays the Lima Center Wildcats it Fa:tli Field, Chelsea. of this country where th » law has been enforced it has been : *p-c-t£>n.M, notabi— the large industrial centers, it hu- not succeeded so well. Howevc he slates that the remedy is n o t a r e - turn to pre-prohibition conditio . ¾ but that the question should be r • fered back to the people of the state , in the manner provided by the con- stitution, that is to constitutional conventions. We fail, to see whcr« his manifesto on the subject differs to any great extent from the ideas set forth in the republican party platform. A^- r VILLAGE TAX NOTICE The Village Taxes are now due and payable at my home on Wednes- days. The tux payer? are requested to pay at the earliest convenience, as there are bills to be taken care of." (Signed) Blanche Martin, Village Treasurer WILL EXHIBIT THEIR SHEEf* W. C. Hen dee and Sons will ex- hibit their fine wool sheep St the Ionia fair this week. Cecil Hendee will have charge of the exhibit. Oth- er fairs at which they will have their sheep are Marshall, Northville, State Fair at Detroit, Jackson and North- ville.- Wm. Keffer and wife of Detroit spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs Rex Smith. un ounuu^, August 2i,\ne Ato>u.«i inu&iiis, oi ^ominous wui noiu tu^.r nr.-aai uasKet picnic "arKoUo"s~Gi-o""»" a*. i^aKc eneinung. iue picnic \. U atari AI 1Z:UU o clock wiln lunclieo.i. A nere w m b e a program—ui spm',» >uh races and contests lor tne cliiiJ- :en and two suit ball games, 'l j ain game will be between pick d team* from Howell and Pincki y nd there will be a preliminary ga. <J whose players will be chosen fro a, those attending the picnic. While the picnic i* sponsered bjr the Jtoights of Columbus, everyono is w a k p o e and invited to attend. . . O NOTICE The Ladies' Aid of the Cqngltt tfonat Church will hold a bake t*k., W. W. Barnard's store Satni August 20, commencing at 11:0^ m. O PRINTERS ATTENTION! Can any of you use a 12x18 don job press? I ha\*e one fear in A - l condition. The Pinckney Dispatch* m "N * » 1 •* Mi mtmh
Transcript

Vol. 47 Pinckney, Livingston County, Michigan Wednesday, August 17, 1932. No. 33

Pncbey Wiis the Decidiag Game

F r e d Read Shut* O u t Dexter Giving

Pinckn«y Two Victor ies O u t

Of T h r e e

Pr

i\

The P inckney diamond ball t eam

m a d e it two victories ou t of th ree

games p layed with the Dex te r t e a m

when they won from t h a t t e a m a t

Dex te r last Wednesday n ight by a

score of 3 to 0. The scores of t h e

first two games were 9 to 1, D e x t e r

a n d 16 to 1 1 , P inckney. F r e d Read

backed up by good suppor t handed

the Dexter boys a row of nine goose

eggs. The P inckney t eam accorded

him nice s u p p o r t only m a k i n g two

misplays. . Dex te r t h r e w a scare into

the P inckney bunch a couple of

times bu t two fast double p lays aided

grea t ly in he lp ing t hem ou t of the i r

difficulties. The first came in the 7th

a f t e r "Meaboi r rhad t h r o w n O t T o u t a

first, Shields singled, Chase lined to

Shieks who doubled Shields a t first .

In the n in th D e x t e r made the i r

s t ronges t t h r e a t . Scot t was safe on

Dinkel 's e r ro r , H. Shieks walked ,

Gilland bea t ou t a h i t to the box fill­

ing the bases. O t t flied out to Shieks.

Shields hit a line dr ive to shor t left.

Bob Smith made a g r e a t ca tch of it

and doubled Sco t t a t th i rd end ing

the game.

P inckney got a r u n in the 2nd on

. hj ts by Bat t l e , Dinkel ' and Haines .

George Walsh Speaks At Pinckney Aug. 25

Republ ican C a n d i d a t e for Gove rno r j

Will Speak a t P inckney a t 11 :00 '

A. M. T h u r s d a y , A u g u s t 2 5 .

Q[ No Let-Up in Production Here

Mr. George W. Welsh of G r a n d

Rapids , one of the lead ing cand ida tes

for the Repub l ican nomina t ion for

gove rnor will del iver a speech in

P inckney n e x t T h u r s d a y , A u g u s t 2 5 .

a t 11 :00 A. M., a s p a r t of a day ' s

] D | Howell Makes Front I Page of City Dailies j $ 2 5 , 0 0 0 A l i e n a t i o n of Affection Su i t

• of Krieeel vs Brown Makes F r o n t

! P a g e . Also is B r o a d c a s t O v e r

Radio

Detroit Edison Co. Sees Local Bank

The Weekly Church Program ' C A T H O L I C C H L K L H S E R V I C E

_ A n o t h e r c a m e -in t h e 6 t h on Sh ieks

hit and a D e x t e r misplay, and the

las t run was scored in the 0 th on

ijngles by H a i n e s and Meabon.

P inckney failed to hit Boet tger ,

Dex te r p i t che r ve ry hard , ge t t i ng

no th ing b igge r than a single.

P i n c k n e y

Smi th , If

F . Read, p.

Shieks , 8b

Bat t l e , c

Dinkel , Is

A. Singer, l b

Haines, cf

R. Singer . 2b

Cla rk , rf

C. Miller, rs

Meabon , r s

Gilland, 3b

Ott , 2b

Shields. Is

Chase, rs

Hanse lman ,

Clark, l b

Coy, cf

Boet tger , p

_&-oik_lf .

3 4 4 4 4

-r 4 4 4 2 2

0

0

1

1

0

1

0

0

6 o

Dex te r A B R

4

4 4 3 3 3 3 3

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

J L

0

0

1

2

1

T T

2

0

0_

"o~ 1

H 1

0 2

0 1 2 0 0

__0_

1

0

6

2

2

TO"

. >

1 _ 0 _

0 0

po 4

1

8

0

4

8

1

1

O

1

4

4

0

3 I T

0 0 0

"6~ r A 0 0

1

1

0 0 0 2

t ou r of this county .

' He will a r r i ve in Laps ing Wednes ­

day aft^rrr^cTi, A u g u s t 24 th , a m i wH

spend several hours a t the Ingham

Coun ty h e a d q u a r t e r s in the Hot j l

K e r n s , a t which t ime he des i res to

m e e t pe r sona l ly a s m a n y of his

f r iends as poss ib le . T h e same even­

ing a t e ight P . M. h e will be the prin­

cipal speake r a t t h e I n g h a m Coun ty

A B R 1L-2Q—JL- KI F a i r a t Mason. T h e m o r n i n g of the

S u n d a y Masses a t 8,

o'clock.

10, a n d 12

Seek to Have Edison Money in Bank ( Confessions, S a t u r d a y even ing a t

At T ime of Clotnig Made ' 1 :30.

P r e f e r r e d Claim J R^v. L e v i s M. Dion

• • —- ; P a s t o r

Receiver , C h a r l e s Monroe , and j

0

0

1

0

1

^0

0

0

0

0

K 2 1

1

0

0

0

1

0

following day , T h u r s d a y , A u g u s t 24,

hundred* cf Mr. Welch ' s f r i ends will

f o n n u r Cashier , A .H. Murpny , of the

P inckney S t a t e Bank were in n u w -

ell Monday a t t e n d i n g the sui t of the

oit E d i a o n J S o ^ a g a i n s t t he P inck^ _

n e y S ta t e Bank which closed on

Apr i l 6, 1932. I t seems a t this t ime

the Det ro i t Edison Co. had in the

P inckney Bank a b o u t $863 which re­

presen ted money which the b a n k had

collected fo r l ight and power -bills

due the Edison Co. This it is c la imed

was no t a commerc ia l or savings de-

posi t as it w a s supposed t o bft tu r ru

E 4 P T I S T C H U R C H B. Rev. B. F . E s i c . - P a s t o r

Serv ices each S u n d a y

M o r n i n g W o r s h i p 10 :30

SpiectaT^and s e p a r a t e . s m t c T f o i r lt>e

l i t t le folks. '

S u n d a y School 11 :45

Class fo r all

B. Y. P. U 7:00

The city of Howel l is g e t t i n g all

k inds of publ ic i ty a t t h e p r e s e n t

t i m e w h e t h e r it des i res it o r not . T h e

cause of it is a $25 ,000 sui t f o r al­

i ena t ion of t h e affections of his wife

filed aga ins t Dr . A. Brown of Howell

by one K e n n e t h Kreisel who o p e r a t e s

an oil s ta t ion ou t Cohoc tah way .

Kreise l and his wife c a m e to Howell

f rom I n d i a n a f o u r yea r s ago . Mrs .

Kre ise l "is a n u r s e a n d found work

in t he M c P h e r s o n Hospi ta l , be ing a t

t t h e p re sen t t i m e s u p e r i n t e n d e n t . On

Apr i l 15, 1932 , she and h e r h u s b a n d

sepe ra t ed and she began sui t fo r di­

vorce . Kreisel filed a cross bill.

A b o u t two weeks ago he claims he

bToke into Dr . B r o w n ' s office~~lrm+

found his wife t h e r e with the doc to r

a t 8:00 a. m. The sui t f o r d a m a g e s

followed. L a t e r the son of the doc to r

B rown ing Brown, visi ted t h e Kreise l

oil s ta t ion a n d , it is a l leged, smashed

windows , e tc . He was a r r e s t e d , t aken

be fo re a Cohoc tah jus t i ce , fined $50

and 30 days in jai l . He appea l ed t he

sentenee . All De t ro i t pape r s featured^

Current Cunmest i T h e wise ones professed t o see in

i t h e a n n o u n c e m e n t tha t Ed Shei lds of

L a n s i n g w o u l d m a n a g e t h e c a m p a i g n

of C laude C a r n e y for g o v e r n o r an

ind ica t ion t h a t t ha t c and ida t e would

have t h e ins ide t r ack in the t h r e .

co rne red con t e s t for g o v e r n o r on the

P e m o c j - a t k t i cke t a t t h e - jmmark>*»

This has s ince been s t r e n g t h e n e d by

t h e a n n o u n c e m e n t tha t R. E . B a r r o n

of Howell has atso accep ted a place

on the s t a te commit tee of t h e C a r n e y

for g o v e r n o r organiza t ion . Mr. Bar­

ron w a s u n u s u a l l y act ive in the t w o

successfu l c a m p a i g n s of W o o d b r i d g e

F e r r i s for g o v e r n o r and was r e w a r d ­

ed by b e i n g appoin ted s t a t e oil in­

spector . Of late yea r s he has not

been p a r t i c u l a r l y act ive in pol i t ics .

Local pol i t ic ians canno t imag ine

e i t he r he o r Shields e m b a r k i n g on

a n y for lorn hopes .

J u d g e Sample t u r n e d d o w n t h e re ­

ques t of the 76 cit izens of Yps i l an t i

fo r a g r a n d j u r y inves t iga t ion in to

the affair last week and it was b road­

cast over W J R last S a t u r d a y .

Dr. Brown says the cha rges a r e all

madnes s a n d w t h o i r t founda t ion and

t h a t on the day Mrs. Kreisel w a s in

his office she was u n d e r g o i n g t r e a t ­

m e n t for a cold. The doc to r is 65

w a r s old, a m e m b e r of the S t a t e

*>-ir 't.'U'inm bo;i»v) and nromjnen t Even ing W o r s h i p 8:00 , ., ,, , . ,

° r both socially and in a b Thurs . even ing p r a y e r Lervire 8:00

ed over to the c o m p a n y when collect­

ed. The Edison Co. has gone into accompany him on an all day t o u r of , c o u r t to have th is dec lared a pre fe r -

Ingham, Liv ings ton , Shiawassee and d c l a i m a m J t h e Compan».>paid in,

Clinton Count ies , in the course of fun_ / u JudgeJ r i fmph Crt l l inV^f thi°

which he w i i r speak in abou t twelve | c j r c u j t , s a s tockholder in the Edison

towns . j Co. ho has called in J u d g e Doty of

Mr. Welch ' s pr incipal speech fo r , Oakland c o u n t y to hear the case.Don

Read, ,_Zj_ hy ^ g £ H c ^ . . ' . , ' .' ' " , j or.ica Deve reaux , s is ter of the br ide balls off Read 1 ^ f f t ^ m ^ - _ i i ^ L i i J i t ' : i i i m t d o v r r n n r n n d e - , • - — . P —:—-•» r . Dans on R<au i , on brides*-..pid and F ranc i s M , H u s ,1« ~ W c Sfcfnlrc tn A. J. (rvorsheek. and th ree years as | ' . ^

H. Shieks, r f 2 0 0 0 0 0

Struck o u t bv Read, 2 j by Bnet t .

srer, 4. Bases on

BoettgeT 1. Double p l ays—Shieks to

A. S i n g e r ; Smi th to Shieks. Lef t on

ba es P i n c k n e y 10, Dex te r 4.

U m p i r e s — R e v . J e r o m e and H e n r y

J«*ell. ' » . J

Cen t r a l Michiganr_*vill b e _ a t C e n t r a l -

Park in Lansing , T h u r s d a y a f te rnoon

Augus-t 2-4th, a t .-pight- l-\ M, Hi*

local commi t t ee is mak ing plan* for

thousands to hear this popu la r cand­

idate on t h a t occassion.

Mr. Welsh, in c a r r y i n g his cam­

paign to the people for the i r approv­

al, is s t ress ing the necessity of low-

V a n Winkle—^--attorrw^y for the bank .

The case was completed Monday and

the j udge will r e n d e r h is decision

la te r .

- C O N C H E S A T I O N A L - C H U R C H —

£ . J . B e r q u U t MiiiU~er

Mi»» Elly lse ler Organ ! \ t

Mrs . E a H B a u g b n ~ _ D i r e c t of Mut ic

-Percy—','tw erfhniiL^^VMPt of S. S.

a Business w a y

in Howell for yea r s . Mrs . Kre i s e l Ui

29. At presen t she is away on a vac­

a t i o n . " —

o D E V E R E A U X - M c C L U S K E Y

j The m a r r i a g e of Miss G e r t u n i c

j Deve reaux , t h e d a u g h t e r of Mrs. D , |

El la1

IVlorning Worsh ip 10 :30 a~m.

J u n i o r Chu rch 10 :30 a.m.

Sunday School 11 :30 a.m.

Chr is t ian "Endeavo r : .. 6 :30 p.m.

O r c h e s t r a P rac t i ce Tuesday Even ing a t the church

T h u r s d a y Even ing P r a y e r Meet ing a t

E. J . Benjujs t will

Sunday morn ing .

•hut •ch the preach next

o M A S O N I C A N D O. E. S. P I C N C

Livingston Lodge , No. 76, F . and

A. M. and O. E. S. No 145 will hold

ihe i r annua l picnic a t Ceda r Lake on

T h u r s d a y , A u g u s t 25 . T h e r e will b<'

spor ts of all k inds and a soft ball

game between the m a r r i e d and single

men, A pot luck d inne r will '>e ser­

ved at noon. AH Ma-sons, S ta4^ . j ind

families a re invited. The ball game

ought to lie ji Tiard one. F red Read

the affairs of the city. They c h a r g e d

tha t the c i ty g o v e r n m e n t was b u y i n g

suppl ies of ci ty officials in viola t ion

of a s t a t e law. J u d g e S a m p l e s t a t e d

tha t his ac t ion was the r e s u l t of pro­

mises m a d e to him by t h e accused

ci ty officials t h a t they wou ld c e a s j

do ing bus iness wi th t he ci ty o r re ­

sign. J o h n Gau l t , park commiss ione r ,

a t once - res igned . He h a s a c o n t r a c t -

to supply t h e city hospi tals w i t h milk

I t is said t h a t if all the c i ty official •

who have been doing bus ines s w i th

t h e - e i t y wou ld resign on ly t h r e e offic­

ials and the c i ty clerk would b e lef t .

Fol lowing t h e denial of th i s pe t i ­

tion a n o t h e r one was filed w i t h t h e

a t t o r n e y g e n e r a l a sk ing fo r a g r a n d

j u r y inves t iga t ion of the school

board. I t was alleged t h a t a $ 2 5 0 0 0

shor tage in accoun t s ex i s t s t h e r e . A

s ta t e aud i t of the scho_ol!fl a c c o u n t

w a s also asked. S u p e r i n t e n d e d

A r t h u r Er ickson of the Yps i l an t i

schools has p ro tes ted a g a i n s t a s t a t e

aud i t . An invest igat ion will be m a d e

by the, a t t o r n e y - genera l 1 * office.

I w i l lead th< married th.

-<y i T h omas D e v e r e a u x of Howell to

er ing taxes to an apprec iab le deg ree , , .• .v I - . - t t . Gera ld McCluskey, son of Mrs.

including the el iminat ion of t h e en-1 **vV* , , Mr Welsh ' McCluskey of P inckney took~pta"ce a t t i re s ta te p r o p e r t y tax.

has served, as a m cruller House of Represen ta t ives ,

of the House of Represen ta t ives , two

St. Jo seph ' s church a t Howell T u e s ­

day, Rev. KV l l i o n o f f i c i a t i n f r - T - h f

couple were a t t e n d e d by Miss Ver-

S O F T B A L L G A M E S

A T T H E H O W E L L F A I R

T h e r e a r e th ree soft ball games

scheduled fo r the Howell F u i r — t b i *

week. The fou r Howell league t eams

will play. T h e y a r e the Consumers

Power , K. of C , Newcomb Shoes,

and Rissman P lumber s . Wednesday

night a t 6 :30 p.m., the Consumers

P o w e r and K. of C. p lay in f ron t of

t h e g rand s tand . T h u r s d a y n igh t t h t

" ^ I s s m a h "P lumber s a n d the NewconirT

Shoe* mee t . Mos t of these t e a m s

have been loaded for the occasion.

The N e w c o m b Shoes have dra f ted

city m a n a g e r of Grand Rapids , whore

his admin is t ra t ion of city affairs was

ou t s t and ing , including wiping out of

a deficit of S 1.200,000 in his first

twelve months in office.

The g r e a t e r pa r t o . tin.- ualunce of

the campaign Mr. Welsh will spend

work ing in, a r o u n d and abou t ])at-

roit.

P I N C K N E Y C R E A M E R Y O P E N S

The I ' ihckney C r e a m e r y opened

for business last T h u r s d a y a f t e r hav-

ing been clo.-ed down since las-t Oct-

f)bcr. M00-.HP-ULUki of mi lk _we.rjLL_takr j , ^ , ^ - . ^

and G. W. Hooker ,

The o the r spor t s wi

race, w o m a n ' s r a r e , relay nice , run­

ning broad j u m p , s tamii r . - broad

j u m p , cen t iped" laces and horse "shoe

pi tching. The e n t e r t a i n m e n t commit ­

tee consists of (\ W. Hooker , Vrrd

Read rru.au en in the first day. This is of course { a I l f j |> \y. Cur le t t

P res iden t Hoover has been notified

tha t Re has been r e n o m i n a t e d , a b o u t

a mon th ago , for the p r e s i d e n c y a n 4

p robaba l ly was only mildly s t a r t l e d

by the hews. Anyway he s e e m s t o

have had his speech of a c c e p t a n c e all

t eam ! ,,,>}l<ly- T h e r e a re a n u m b e r of in t e r -

nien. I ' " ^ i ' 1 ^ points in it which w o u l d b e a r

i fat m e n ' s ! s , " r ' o u s <°ns idera t ion . T h e p roh ib i ­

tion issue is s t ressed in p a r t i c u l a r

Af te r r e a d i n g it over it is h a r d to s e c

where the wet s can der ive a n y s a t i s ­

faction f rom it. Ho r e p e a t s t h a t t h e

benefits de r ived from p r o h i b i t i o n

must be re t a ined and t h a t in certain"

sect ions

men .-.

single

im- commi t tee is

Din mi KfLs

The - (y . S n v m

Glen S1a\tor__ George

We are informed by Mr. Welsh ' s

campaign commi t t ee t h a t the two

principal points he will .stress in his

remarks a t P inckney a re the Michi­

gan Secur i t ies Commission and the

Sta te Bank ing D e p a r t m e n t .

key, b r o t h e r of the groom as bes t

man . Li t t le Madel ine N a n r y , ac ted

as r ing bea re r . Af t e r a wedd ing t r i p

the couple will be a t home a t Grafid

Ledge whe re the groom is a prac t i s ­

ing dent is t . In behalf of the i r m a n y ,

f r iends the Dispatch ex tends con­

g ra tu l a t i ons . W o u m l l , m . l T 1 „ i n a t i n „

O ~"' i of being t aken to Adria

a ,>mall a m o u n t compared to tlv

mense volume oi miiK received h e r e j C ) a r k > N 0 F r y e and Wal t

up to the t ime the c r e a m e r y closed

down. On accoun t of no m a r k e t 1

many fa rmers were forced to sell!

thei r COA'S and o the r s have found a|

m a r k e t eNewhere . Monday the atn-l

oun t of milk had increased to 4 1001

pounds and it is thought tha t the in­

crease"'will be s teady from now on. |

We u n d e r s t a n d t h a t the milk instead

n goes t o |

W I L D D E E R H E R D R E P O R T E D

B A R R O W ~ M t L L A R D ^ F ,

Millard F . Dar row, son of the late

W. P . and F lo ra Bullis D a r r o w , was

b o m in DexterrMtclTT.-Sepl, 12, lflOl

Many f a r m e r s have r e p o r t e r .-e«

ing wild d e e r in the townships

Unadi l la in Livingston and in Dex­

t e r a n d L y n d o n in Wash tenaw coun­

ty . A c c o r d i n g to P o s t m a s t e r W. C.

Miller these a r e p robably d e c e n d a n t -

Waseon , Ohio. Samuel Quigley of

| Adrian is in charge of the c r eamery

j - | n o w ami W a l t e r .F ros t is his helper.

Ben White a t the present t ime b

br inging in the largest loud of milk

}\c has some twen tv cans.

and passed away a t his home in Red-

of the deer owned by trTe"late T h o m ­

as B i rke t t of P o r t a g e Lake some

t h i r t y years ago. He mainta ined a

the re la rge deer he rd on his estatf for years . A disease broke out a m o n g

lands, Calif., A u g u s t 14, 11*32. When j t h o m s o m < > t w e n t y . f i v „ y , . a r s . l ? JO a m i

a small lad, Millard moved wi th his I a ] 1 feut ^ . ^ o r e j p h t o f t h p m f I i w L -

Pe te Gerycz , Pet tysvi l le c rack pitch­

er, and Gus Rissman has most of the

P i n c k n e y s t a r s on his list. T h e y a re

L y m a n Ba t t l e , S tan ley Dinkel , Lef ty

B e a , o n , M u r r a y Kennedy , Don S w a r

thom% F r e d Read and Leonard D e v - j t o Cinc inna t i , Ohio. T h e r e he engajf- n o r t h e r n Michigan. However many

ereaux . - % . ' ' J R j e d in landscape g a r d e n i n g a n d t r e e o f t h f t m s t a y r f j j n th-. >(, (, tjnn. Mr

O j su rgery , a n d while t h e r e he m a r r i e d M i i w s t a t o s t h a t a n a l r 0 f them B A R N B U R N S j Miss E the l Schmid, who wi th one son ^ ^ n n f h p A ] h o r t j a r k « o r i farm

W E D N E S D A Y N I G H T P a ^ l , now 16, survives him. f o r ^ ^ t i m P a n d t h a t h e a n d M r ,

T h e l a r g e bai r , on t h e H a u s e f a r m InVlQiO, on t l ^ - a d v i c e of hisr

on t he P i n c k n e y — H o w e l l road physician', Mil lard moved to Calif-

f pa ren t s to P inckney where he resided | T h < > g f l M r B i r k , > t t ^ t frcr in hope*

- ( unt i l ear ly m a n h o o d when he w e n t t h a t t h p y w o u l ( J m a k f i t h , , f r w a y t n

to Cinc inna t i , Ohio. T h e r e he enga*- n o r t h e r n M i r h i g a n . H

ed in landscape g a r d e n i n g a n d t r e e o f t h c m s t a y r f j j n t]^

c a u g h t fire f rom u n k n o w n sources 0 ^ ¾ \n t he hope t h a t t h e wes t e rn

la te \&»t W e d n e s d a y even ing and c i i m a t e would r e s t o r e him to heal th ,

b u r n e d t o t h e g r o u n d . In i t w e r e a ' a hope w h k h w a s finally defea ted .

Marmon sedan and a q u a n t i t y of Othe r i m m e d i a t e re la t ives surviv-

l a r m tools and hay . The f a r m is j n g him a r e his m o t h e r ; seven b r o t h -

o w n e d by Mrs . A n n a Samborsk i w h o j e r s : jy^ 0 f Aust in Lake ,

r e s ides t h e r e wi th her sons, Wil l iam C j y ( i e o f Wa l l ed Lake , Kenne th

a n d C a j m i r . Severa l y e a r s ago^ the o f T h r c e Rivers , Wil l iam a n d

house w a s des t royed by f i re a n d a M a u r j c e 0 f P inckney , and Glenn and

r e w one bu i l t . T h e bui ldings were in- H a r o i d of D e t r o i t ; also t w o s i s t e r s :

, u r e d in t h e UvUlgs ton Coun ty M u t - ^ D o r o t h > % a t h o m e . a n d M r S i F i < j n a Al-

V«L j . . . x len, of L a n i i n * .

.Tackson made a pract ice of feeding

them. F ina l ly both deer were found

dead in t h e woods shot by hunter* .

Some yea r s l a t e r a doe was j»een re­

pea ted ly by Deerfield township farm­

ers. They appl ied to t h e conservnti '••

d e p a r t m e n t and obta ined a buck

which they l ibe ra ted in Deerfield.

The deer t h e r e h a v e mult ipl ied ra­

pidly and t h e y a r e now es t imated to

n u m b e r all t he w a y from 50 t o 100.

I t is t h o u g h t t h a t on account of the

n u m b e r s some of them have been

forced to seek new ranges.

o P1NCKNEY S P L I T S E V E N _ .

FN D O U B L E HF.ADE'

Th" J ' inekney independent base

ball team played a double h e a d e r a t

the local d iamond last Sunday . T h e y

won the first g a m e / de f ea t i ng the

Lima Cen te r Wi ldca ts by a score o

10 to '*. J o h n Kenny p i l J v d f.•

Pinckney "and should have mr^

much b igger m a r g i n as most of I'^ri

opposing t e a m s r u n s were due t

P in rkney vrror?. Tn the second g a m e

Pinckney lo-it 12 to l o . H a r l o w

Haines s t a r t ed in the box bu" ' - rVed

control and was removed, Mhoilw p*)-

ing in. HaineK"hrteT relievprf—SWek»

and allowed no r u n s . d.

NVxt S u n d a y P i n c k n e y plays t he

Lima C e n t e r Wi ldca t s it Fa : t l i

Field, Chelsea.

of this c o u n t r y w h e r e th »

law has been enforced it has been :

*p-c-t£>n.M, n o t a b i —

the l a rge indus t r ia l c e n t e r s , it hu-

not succeeded so well. H o w e v c h e

s la tes t h a t the remedy is n o t a r e ­

tu rn t o pre-prohib i t ion cond i t i o .¾

b u t t h a t t h e quest ion should be r •

fered back to the people of t h e state ,

in the m a n n e r provided by t h e con­

s t i tu t ion , t h a t is to c o n s t i t u t i o n a l

conven t ions . We fail, to see w h c r «

his man i f e s to on the s u b j e c t differs

to a n y g r e a t ex ten t from t h e i d e a s

set for th in the repub l i can p a r t y

p l a t f o r m .

A^-

r

V I L L A G E T A X N O T I C E

The Vil lage T a x e s a r e n o w due

and payable a t m y home on W e d n e s ­

days. The tux p a y e r ? a r e r eques t ed

to pay at t h e ear l ies t convenience , as

t h e r e a re bills to be taken care of."

( S i g n e d ) Blanche Mar t in ,

Vi l lage T r e a s u r e r

W I L L E X H I B I T T H E I R SHEEf*

W . C. Hen dee a n d Sons wi l l ex­

hibi t the i r fine wool sheep S t t h e

Ionia fa i r th is week . Ceci l H e n d e e

will have c h a r g e of the exh ib i t . Oth­

e r fairs a t which t h e y will h a v e t h e i r

sheep a re Marsha l l , Nor thv i l l e , S t a t e

Fa i r at Det ro i t , J a c k s o n a n d N o r t h -

ville.-

Wm. Keffer and wife of Det ro i t

spent the w e e k end with Mr. a n d Mrs

Rex Smith.

u n o u n u u ^ , A u g u s t 2 i , \ n e Ato>u.«i

inu&iiis, oi ^ o m i n o u s wui n o i u t u ^ . r

nr.-aai uasKet picnic "arKoUo"s~Gi-o""»"

a*. i^aKc e n e i n u n g . i u e picnic \. U

a t a r i AI 1Z:UU o clock wiln luncl ieo. i .

A ne re w m be a p r o g r a m — u i spm' ,»

>uh r aces a n d contes ts l o r t n e cl i i iJ-

:en and t w o s u i t ball g a m e s , 'l j

a in g a m e will be be tween pick d

t e a m * f rom Howell a n d P inck i y

nd t h e r e will be a p re l imina ry ga. <J

whose p l aye r s will be chosen fro a,

those a t t e n d i n g the picnic.

While t he picnic i* sponse red bjr

the J t o i g h t s of Columbus , e v e r y o n o

is w a k p o e a n d invited to a t t e n d .

. . O

N O T I C E

T h e Lad ie s ' Aid of the C q n g l t t

tfonat C h u r c h will hold a b a k e t *k . ,

W. W. B a r n a r d ' s s t o r e S a t n i

Augus t 20, commenc ing a t 11:0^

m.

O P R I N T E R S A T T E N T I O N !

Can any of you use a 1 2 x 1 8

don j o b p ress? I ha\*e o n e fear

in A - l condi t ion.

T h e P inckney Dispatch* m

"N * » 1

• *

Mi mtmh

.-',*

A-

Q l l m i l l I Mil III l l l l l l l l l l t l l l l l l k l l l l l l l l M I H I

e

n n i u t i n m , MIIII m i u i M M I i i . i n i l l i n i u m . i , , , , ^ , , , , , , , , „ i i i , , , , i n , , , , , . , , , , , 1 , , , , , , I I I I I . I I i i i i i i i i i i n u n 0

"The Wife & By Lyle Hamilton

Co." "You mean she ' sHead?" Molly . a : look ^ r ™ ' ™ 0 * ^ " ^ - -

down as she sa:d this and, tried ;o'( Th- office j ™ **£ ^ 3 " look into his eye.. ' \ went on his daily round, was more

' t h a n a m i ie from the place where she Apparently he did not hear. "1 was. ^. ] f u o r k e d ( but before she rea l -

poor and she was poor when we w e r e i . _ ; .f ^ h a d c q v e r e d the distance, married. We worked hard. Both of ized it

Warmer weather begins with the ;

week of July 24th in Michigan with a promise of showers, some of them ' more or less severe and damaging. De­structive wind storms are almost sure ' to put in an appearance under the in­fluence of this storm area.

The.-e conditions will cover the sta:e during the first half of the week. , The-re will be a marked change to cooler temperatures "by" in*- middle"1

part of the week. During the las: haif we expect the weather to be more /settled; that is, we are not expecting any marked stormines^, but a more or le.-s even tenor of pleasant weather. Weather Ignorance Hurting Michigan

"Agriculture, if it is to be continu-' ousiy profitable," »ays Ar thur M. Hyde, secretary of agriculture, "must be adjusted to long time trend.:. This fundamental requirement is far more important than the need to vary farm ' output with temporary market j changes." Mr. Hyde is thinking in! terms of markets ; weather trends! have much to do with the markets. ;

A wise farmer will plant crops suit- j able to his soil that will produce a fa­vorable crop as regards the weather ' expected the coming growing season. This means h s s money loss to each a r W r so regulating h*is vVork". ~~"

The ability to predict seasonal weather changes i- taking much chance out of farming. From li'OS to 1923 government statistics showed with potatoes alone nearly .'-SO per cent of the reduction from a full crop was caused by adverse weather, plant disease and insects. In capitali tic business this loss would be ruinous.

In the 10 year following 1918 there was a decrease of 267,000 acres of

E 1111*14114' j i i i r 4 j i i i i i j * i | i i i H i u i i r i i | i m i i i 4 t t : ' * ' " " " U I 1 " ' " ' "• i i i i m i i ,ii „ „ , , „ , „ , I M I 1 U „ A "Too bad!" echoed Molly aghast, this last word, and had to raUe her- you've got something besides fuzz in Brown ell nodded. "And that self upon her arms to cough. ; your head. Suppose you go down

wasn't all. He told me that he had The landlady came and sat on the! and see this boss, and talk to him. thought of promoting me—sending edge of the divan. "You're a fool ,"(Even a smart boss doesn't mind chat-me out on the road at a bigger she said, calmly. "Any girl's a fool, I ting with a pretty gir], and if he sees salary, and maybe giving me charge so you're no different from the rest) you've got a trifle of sense, maybe of one of the branches later on. But of 'em. But when you've r eached 'he won't gfve your sweetie the swift - - he r 'V exactly what he says, 'I've my age, you'll know one thing—; kick he ought to have!" had more good men ruined by marry- there's no sonse spilling your tears ; She went out and closed the door, ing foot "wiws than any other way. o r e r - ^ n y rrrsrr irrive." -I'm looking for single men in this Molly was growing indignant. "I 'd bu-iness. " rather cry over my Bob than live—

"But Bobsie," wailed the girl, "I in—a palace with any other man,"! however, for at nine o'clock the girl thought that employers; always liked she said, bringing her feet to the brushed her hair again, dressed, put married m.-n, because they're floor and slowly sitting up. "He 's a on her hat and went out for a late

. . . , had gone up in the elevator and waa us did. She kept my h o u s e - t h r e e i < ^ . w i d e h e r o w n d e 6 k . rooms over a grocery store—and |- I n d e f ; d g t e h a d automatically t d w a washed my clothes, and mended them, j ff h h t a m , c o a t a n d p i a c e < i them and took care of the babies, and was, f i ) i a r w h € n s h e r e m e m . waiting for me when I came home J h h £ d c o m e t 0 d o > S h e

leaving Molly in a reverie on t h e edge of the couch. Her words had something in them that was cheering,

Nice youngsters, both of them. S h e ) — - ] a t e r s h e W M w her

brought them up carefully It was aj .<•» ™ e , 6 r ^ S h e h a d

mighty happy home, and because i t P f u

s tead ier :" •'[ <;u'd that very thing to him. And

h»- .-ays: 'The men are all right, but the coverlet. their wive* are all wrong, ninety per cent of the time! They're selfish, and they whine, and they kick, and the men are .so worried they can' t keep their minds on thr-ir work. Mar­riage used to be all right, when w o ­men did their share.', but they don' do it any more. They're grafters. ' That's jus t what he .said, Molly. 'They're grafters. ' "

The young man's head sank miser­ably to his chest. Molly's I'psTwere quivering. —iJRflhsip darl ing," gflid sh

prince. That 's what he, is—a prince.", dinner. She wiped her face with a corner of Next morning the .sought her own

i employer, asked to be- excused until

was happy, I went out in t h e morning ready to look the world in the eys and lick it."

"Of course, I didn't really lick tho; ;<eei,np:

world. Nobody ever does that. But I did well, in a sense—I'm rich, and the kid? are married, with enough money to support their husbands on.

resigned, and three days' wages were In her handbag. Still with her jaw set and her charcoal grey eyes un-

she made her way first to the bank'where she had stored her sav­ings, and then to Mrs. Potter 's flat.

Working *with frantic hast© she cleared out the dresser drawers, laid

ing a brave effort toward compo.c

"shall we call it off? Shall we not get married?"

back CHAPTER II

The- young man drew blinked at her.

"Do you want to call it off, Mol­ly?" he a~-ked. There was no emo­tion in his tone.

ill asJced—_yjoji_ first, she wheat land in Michigan and nearly! "Shall^ we—ehall we stop being en-twice that much of corn. In 1920 and Sa£f>(J •' 1H25 there were about the same num- Browne! 1 got up and walked to the b ^ r - ^ M a r m s - in this s tate, yet farm! window-. "I guei* it isn t much use land averaged a decrease of-nearlyi marrying" a lellow wherxan t g e t pro-

»/^^^ II.. • AL_^ ±1 I moted.' he 200,000 acres annually in that time. When th«.vweather bucks crops, taxes cannot be paid.

Loss to the individual farmer and to the farming interest of this state is menaced by the lack of interest of agriculturists in preparing land and crops to correspond to known weather fhangft? Jthat are going to happen in the season just ahead.

o

Plan Features for K M. S. C. Farmers' Day

moted," he said, his back to her. growing; Molly gave a quick gasp. She still

i was on the floor where she had knelt beside him.

"No girl wants to be tied up to a failure," he went on.

No answer came from Molly, and there was a long pause. Finally he looked over his shoulder, she was

•with her head- on. the arm of the chair, her arms hiding her face, and her slender body, was shaking with sobs.

In one leap Brownell was across the room, and he stooped to life her

A pageartt, depicting ~itep~r improvement of equipment to

"My svr^>^wH«t!" he said.

aid he sank into the chair with Molly farm and home life during nearly a| upon hi® lap. "Poor little sweet kid!" century of Michigan rural develop-1 "I thought—I thought you were ment, will be an outsUndin^jfeature going to—to .say—we wouldn't see of the annual Farmers Day at M. S. C. each other—any more,'* she gasped, on Friday, July 2d* 4 »* soon as she was able to speak at

From the days when the squirrel ^ -rifle was the chief bit of "harvesting", " B u t i t w a * y ° u w h o suege*t*d machinery at the Michigan home- it." h e returned, smoothing her hair stead, and the ox cart was the height! ™ t h t h e ^ P 6 o f h i s f i n S e r s -of luxury in "transportation, down to! Her wet face was pressed against

the latest; n i s c o l l a r - "l on]V d l d n l w a n t ~ t o

He made a wry mouth. "Anvwav, I ' t h e contents in her trunk, packed her suitcase, surveyed the room to see if live alone now, and most of my fun is

in giving young chaps like this Brown-ell of yours as good a chance as I had. ."

Molly's eyes had become wot as she spoke, and observing it he stopped be­fore her. "Brownell is a nice boy," he said, kindly, "and I don't blame you for wanting to marrv him. But child, child!"

He stepped back to the desk and picked up a little redbound book. "Here 's a list of employes of my outfit—it tells what they get, and -when they got theii last niH^v^aild a memorandum as to the things that drag them back, a n d — " he shook the book at Molly—"and after the name of nearly every fellow who is making a failure, the reason is written in just one word—'wi fe ! ' "

The man tossed the book aside. "When we hire a married man, we dont ' just hire the man. We hire the woman, too, whether we like it or not. We pay for her tempers, and her furs, and her silver-gilt slippers", and her notions of where she'll live and where she w o n t ; we pay for the hours she spends raising the devil

Molly was left standing while' Mrs. Potter leisurely retired to her bed­room and filled out one of the blanks that rested on the mantel shelf.

"There it is," said the woman, re­turning. She watched while Molly put the slip of paper into her bag. "Hope vou have a nice t r ip."

"Goodbye," said the girl. "I'll call an expressman now."

She was on her way down the stepa-when Mrs. Potter called after her. "I won't rent that room for a few days. I'll have it cleaned and ready

with him at highT when he ought to [when yott-come back." — be astaep; we pay f o r h e r cruelty andf- Molly leaned wearily against the cussedness and meanness to the man she ought t'o help. We pay our share in wages to a man who's discouraged and blue and unfit to work. He pays, too, poor mu t t ! "

Molly's lips were twitching piti­fully.

I wouldn't be that kind of a wife," s h e s a i d . " I l o v e - B o b ^ " — _

The boss sat down again. "Then if you love him," said he, "for pity's sake give him a chance to get some­where before you marry him. Let him work into a better job, and get j i iat a hit o f rApifcaJ togAthAy, a.nH t r y

"1 wouldn't be that kind of a wife." *he said, " I . love Bob." Molly* eye* had become wet as she spoke, and her lips were twitching pitifully.

"You must be hard hit ," observed noon, and then went calling on the Mrs. Potter. "But if he's got his job, boss who had so low a regard for and isn't drunk, and h a s n t thrown wives. you over, and is a prince, what a r e The secretary who took in her you squalling about? I could hear n a m e cast a curious glance at her aw you in my bedroom." he entered the private office—an of-

L u l u l l k „ „ Molly judged it best to tell this fke which had the words "President the modern combine and the latest, ™ fl ( ) r a p . o n yo£» s h e ^ . «1 persistent woman what was the mat- and G: neral Manager" painted'm gold

I t n o u c h t if marrying you—meant r t* r. and rather disconnectedly, she and back upon the frosted glass of you couldn't be 'promoted maybe did so. "And to think," she con- the door. vouM—vou'd want me. to go away." eluded, " that his horrid old. mean Molly was nervous, as she stood

'"A fresh burst of weeping followed, bos? said that wives are ' g r a f t e r s ! ' " twisting her fingers, and shifting and he held her closer. "Do you She drew back to watch the effect f r 0 m onv foot to the other. Also she

himself against other men so he can find out just how good he is ."

The girl beat her hands together. "But^ I can help him," she declared.

' 'How ? ~By go-Ing out and working, fs leepyyouth there took Moby's ord

* rn the present

fhe' ni'ive-: }n

ii

4

i

ft

thing in gasoline buggies, floats in the pageant will show briefly but graphic­ally the tremendous progress made in the equipment of the farm.

The housewife will not be forgot­ten. The story of her emancipation from the water bucket and "the pump will be told, with a modern indoor water system shown as day running mate of farm machinery.

While the float- will not be elabu ate. college officials pn-dict that t will prove intere.-ting in focusing tention upon the surprising chan 01 a relatively short period of st hi-tory. The pageant will be h during the'afternoon general meet or. the M, S. C. campus.

Special demonstrations planned department of the < ollege agr

want t w In, -go away •>'>

presently. "Of course I don't ," he reassured

her. "Tlit: -boss can _ga to thunder!

she, asked, Jjpen her companion. MisT~T*ottf*r—^-jwHlded. "His

was exceedingly restful to look upon. boss Her demure _lips_ were scarlet—with?

_th._ _ ^ tural "divi.-ion w.',i ! ! < • • chT'dul

has brains, anvwav,.!' said she. " W h y — " gaspeVl Molly, "why—"

If you're willing to marry me,"we'll She was unable to-go any further, do it tomorrow! And I'll go down "Most women are grafters, now-

dm adays," tho older woman continued. "They're grafters be-fore they get to

"'I be> wives, and keep right on at it after ?t- they're marr i 'd . Haven't you heard

the- girls here at the house, talking'.' It's always: 'I met a swell fellow last night—he's got a roll that 'd choke :\ cow.' or 'I wish I kn^w where 1 could catch me n nidlionair' .' That'.-the vay they talk all the time. The

t

th" morning of Farmers ' Day, al with the u-ual inspection of ih" v

fr Id- and barn.-. 0

i*k ^M. 1_ ' -^- c v i . n i n

Dinner Stories

Y o u n g A n g u s h a d been_<>L - t

yon

*

J

ev• • n 1 ng~wlth highest girl. —Wrier a r r i v d home he found his father s t r ing up. The old man shook head.

"Hae ye been oot wi aga in?" he asked.

"Aye, dad," replied young A "Why do ye look sae worried?'

"I_was just wondering how the evening cost."

"No more than half a croon, "Aye. That was not sae much " I t was a' she had," said An

Buncrust: "Yesterday I refu poor woman a request for a, cum of money, and in consequent my act I passed a sleepless night, tones of her voice kept ringing in ear* t he whole time.'*

••^-trrrry-tb-mfr-t^^ is* W v - m ucli —*n

out the aid of a lipstick. Her cheeks were pink, and her dark-grey eyes

-w^re wide and lovely.

Brown ell's boss got up as she was ushered before him.

"I 'm the girl tha t Mr. Browmell is going to marry ," she said, all in a breath.

"His eyesight is good, at any ra te ," commented the man. "Sit down." H^ dropped back into his own revolving chair, and placed tho tips of his fin­gers together. "Does he know you've come> to see me

too? That means he won' t have any home—a home that amounts to a rap, anyhow. If you don't intend to make a home for him, why in thunder do you marry h im?" The questions were harshly asked, and Molly wept.

" I haven't cried so much in years ," she told him, dabbing at her eyes and nose with her tiny handkerchief, "as I have since you—since you—"

"Were so mean," he finished. "Sure I'm mean, and getting meaner every year. But I have hopes for B r o w n e l l , and. I rifln't w a n t , h i m

she had left any of her belongings, and when this was done she sought Mrs. Potter.

"I owe you half a month's r e n t , " she- said, abruptly, when the land-lath" opened the door of the small, dark kitchen at the end of the hall. "I'm leaving."

Mrs. Potter's face was impassive. "My rates are by the month," she •said. "Par t of a month costs the same as a whole one."

Molly opened her handbag and pro­duced twenty dollars in bills. "A re~

she said.——

stair wall. "I'm not coming back." Mrs. Potter 's door was closing.

"Keep your key," said the landlady. "I'll try to get some new curtains in the room for you. I've been making them today, but they're a bother t o sew—I never had much luck with curtains. I can't make 'em hang

The door closed. The girl waited, but Mrs. Potter did not reappear. Then Molly went on down to the door, and softly opened it, as if t o keep her movements secret. She even t i p t o e d o n -tho. o u t e r «tep«, and w h t n

she reached the pavement, she fairly ran until she was around the comer .

A little express office had its red and yellow sign in the next block. A

o>»

a n a n can give them to spend. Whor. they get a husband, they won't kr"-p hoivse: they loaf around all day; spend all he's got and rais> N<d with him because he doesn't bring home more."

"^Thv. Po ' ' . . r ." -•• youV* horrible!"

-no f" said sh^ .

Molly, "I think

"I judged not." He smiled dryly. "Ho still has a certain amount of ba,ckivcwx--k.ft. Wei], what did you want to s a y ? "

"I love Mr. Krown* !! and he—I think he loves me," she said, work­ing forward to the edge of her chair.

The man nodded. "I'll agree that ~TTfe~~WOTnari WMS u n d i s t u r b e d . ^ ^ ^ ^ : ^ m^rryinp; him fnr mnrvpy,"

wa^ n grafter myself," she =aid. com- Ho. crossed his legs and transferred fortably. "when mv husband was his elbows to the adfee of the desk, alive. That's why I'm half starving his fingers still touching at the tips.

ap-

"Go on." "I 'm not a grafter ," she pur­

sued, gulping. "I want to help him every way I can."

He interrupted. "You mean you'll help him any way except-giving him a chance to get forward without a

door Mol-

now. I spent every nickel ho made —spent it on myself." She laughed shortly. "He hardly had a decent suit of clothes."

^ " the evening cost." ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ M be M o l ] y d r e w a w a v f r o m h r > r

U • "No more than half a croon. d ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ H t d f a p ^ d -"Stare at me if you want t o , " said

the landlady, "I 'm telling the truth, weight around his neck." Tlie poor fish didn't get a new pair Molly leaped to her feet, and flung of shoes once in two years, and when out her hands. "Weren ' t you ever in he died I didn't have a red cent ." love? Why don' t you want young

"Didn'* you love h im?" asked the people to be happy?" girl, wide-eyed. Her voice had risen so high tha t

, ., "Not as much as .J loved me," said the secretary cautiously opened the lying n e e oownward on the M l v P t > t t e r h p r m < ) u t b ^ f o r b k ] _ d o o r a n d p e ^ p e d ^

— P i e c m s f "Who WA* •!, . ^ . ^ . . c.0UC,h' i 1 *! s l i e S " 1 ! ? i T u • *° ^ " t f y - " 0 h . TVe *fc*ed myself f o r "Get-out !" shouted the boss. 5 S S - "Mv w7f?» *A?dy t h * w a y T ^ - k i c k e d and cussed' The door ck»ed instantly, and aft-

y stained face. for fifteen years, and took fool girls or a moment 's patjse, the man' began

, The M d e g r ^ T w L in a poetic' m a n ^ £ £ £ & ' * * ^ ' ^ ^ ? Z T r o c e ^ J l & # * ^ * ° ^ _ .

^ ^ ^ ^ t ^ S a n d d S . ' ^ ~ I d M ° l l y - " P l e a £ * «° c ^ ^ l J S S r ^ S i S i S ^ T b e ^ CHAPTER III ^ J T ' . w J n Su> £ ? 1 ^ ? 5 • ? k ^ ! , , , , „ ™i* t© B i l l ^ o t t e r r If I had been! "Yea, I've been in love," he *M, -

ln« ocean, roll, he r e c t e d to h * "Did he come u p here drUnk?" a w i f e h e might h a v e &m<ia^d ^ , ? m ^ , i n , ^ j a p p o s e . " "fw, fproM h««r „^A*^ i P " ^ 6 ' . 1 ^ e ^ [ o m * n , „ „ , . , ' . - .something, but I neve* gave him a Molly was ahaken with * e turmpil ^ n k S i ' wonderful you " N o ' No! No t " Molly locked t h e ' c h i m w „ ^ , o f ^ / ^ thoughts, but <*e could ei j x s a o i n g i t . d a r k cover of her bed. " H e d i d n t ; s h e p o t u p a n d m o v r d t o w a r d the

ln<yt te\p observing tha t t he roan's

« u , _ ^ A n i ^ „«« «t •< ^ , ^° a . n > t n i n ^ ! " . , ., door. Then standing with her hand voice had grown deeper and graver. ^ Z J t I T f y * Ule" : 1 W P « * ^ h a s ]°* h i 8 W oh the knob, ^ t u r n e d for a few1 He waa looking «t the deak a . he £ ! S l £ ^ a " ° r a ^ l f i M r s - ^ t e r words more. I proceeded. " A t any ra t e there 's a

" v ! * J w w , Q ... „ " H e ^ ^ T r t r ' The girl strangled "You're a pret ty little th ing," she1 place where I lay flowers every Srni-Nelther. R s a calling. over a great sob that came jusi a t said, eyeing the girl. "What ' s more, | day m o r n i n g "

spoiled. You'll want the same kind of clothes you're buying now—" MoHy- east -an involuntary g4anc£^_aij. her neat silk poplin—"and want a radio to keep you entertained and you'll Want him to keep his ca r " —the girl winced—"and you'll have to be tak^n out in the eevnings. So you'll either go out to work, and wreck a home', or he'll run into debt, like an ass. and be a' poor putter ing failure- at fifty."

He arose, as if dismissing her. -"What flo you want me to do?"

_asked Molly, getting to her feet. ~rrWnat ougTrF I to do, -yiK==ytT7=^ She hesitated. Brownell had never mentioned hi? employer's name.

"Mr. Frazier ," the man supplied, grinning, faintly. "My name's Fra­zier." He walked around the desk. "If yqu'l! get on a train today, and go to some other town, and promise not to write to Brownell for five

YearsT^nor Jet him know where you are, I'll hand you five hundred dollars right now, for expenses."

He watched her twitching face, at­tentively. She was looking at her small gloved hands.

"I'll give you a thousand, cash," he amended. "I'll charge it to invest­ment in one promising boy. How about i t ? "

The girl was struggling for utter­ance, and when the words finally, came, it was in a series of little, chok­ing jerks.

" I wouldn' t—touch—a cent of your money—if I was starving," she said. Her lips were drawn into a childish pucker of woe, but her eyes were fixed on him ,now. "You' re sim­ply—wicked, Mr.—Mr. Frazier . But 111 go—I'll go away!"

She spun on her .heel and ran from the room, flinging the door open and closing it with a bang, so rapidly tha t the man had not stirred from his place when she was gone.

Those Who pawed Molly on her way up the s t reet saw a small, comely girl »winging along with clenched fists, her eyes staring straight before her. a small hat perched a trifle to one side, neglectedly, upon brown- curls, and a general air of fixed determina­tion that caoaed many to stop and

ierr and gave a receipt for the money tha t she handed him.

"Trunk'll be at the station at six o'clock, 'he said. "When you check it, give this stub to the baggage-man."

This attended to Molly went out into the street again, and forlornly began the long walk to the depot. There were hours of time before the train would leave, and it would be a s well to use part of them in walking as in any other way.

Molly was going home. - — ( T o h ^ ro^tirmpd.'l

Dear Old Lady— u please help m

you'll1 r o o m T ™~~

'Captain, would rind my state

forgotten Captain — "Have you what number it is, madame

D. 0 . L.—"Yes, but I'll know it u I see it again, there wa> a lighthouse just outside the window."

0

Taxi Driver—"My. mv, what a c lu tch ." •

Voice (f«wn the r e a n : "Say, you, keep your eyes to the front. This is none of your business."

He: "Why don't vou het t i?"

Another He: "Because advised that we avoid all tanglements.

iike spag-

Washing:on foreign en-

U. W. No. 1056—7-18—1932

Opportunity Adlets * * ^ — __ U. S. Government S tudy Jobi M e n -Women. 18 to 50. S105.U0 to $250,00 month Steady work. Short hours. Paid summer vacation. Common education usually suffi­cient. Experience usually unnecessary We coach you without leaving home. 32-page book with full particulars and sample eoaeh-ing FREE. Write immediately—TooVav }• rank Jin Institute, Dept. W - 5 1 / Rochester, N . Y . I.

BoVui _ l \^ypn^«Ter~WaThTiUton! Actual photos showing varioua encampments, in t i * ^ -1°', P*pXt,?ll P h ° t o * neatly mounted. Mailed 15c. "Fotocraft," 1523 H S t N W.. Washington, D. C. '

DIVORCES IN MEXICO International Law Ogicea

Suite 7 08 Mills BIdg.. El Paso. Tea., or 215 M»»re* Ave.. City of Juarez, Mexico. Factory Sacrifice: $85 Hoover R*ln7«~Oil ?att

^IS,r8• « 1 6 ' 5 ° : 1300 furnace burners.

Quick Horn* Mon.y. Make men'* hand tai-lored ties. Complete instructions, patt«rn, selling plan. Free practice tie. Postpaid t l .00 . National Handicraftem. 6314B Uni-versity Way. Seattle. ~W«ah.

, J ? * ^ ™ wanted, register now for fail term, |W.asMngton, Oregon Idaho, Utah./ Nevada. ^Ariion*. Mcmtan*. New Mexico. ReUeat « -

pHcatlon. enclose stamp. Pacific ITeachers A l ! ^ CUft_Bldg.. jBalti^Lake C i t y K S

Lightning EHctHe Heater boil* water quick­ly. Needed in every home. Profit to I1.4S »lm« ? l n i t s " • • " ^ '!• Steamctoud. 8«0% Phillip*, Chicago. For Sale—Cood Floridi~Tnidi L*nd»;—10 $10.00 monthly for e,0 n»e«tha, » and 4 crop* ^ * , V * a r i J ^ m € ,BZLd- H- W - Jordan Realty Co.. New Smyrna, Fla

i

The fmdmj Dispatch WcAieaday, August 17, 1932 • • »

M B M

• i i

MORTGAGE SALE

Default having been made in the conditions of a mortgage executed by Homer & Juries and Agnes J u t ­es, husband and wife, to A. H. Mur­phy, dated and recorded July 8, 1929, in the office of the Register of Deeds of Livingston County, Michi­gan, in Liber 193 of Mortgages on pages 68 an*1 66 inclusive; which mortgage was duly assigned by as­signment dated July 31, 1929, re­corded September 23, 1929, in said office in Liber 119 of Mortgages on page 401, by said A. H. Murphy to Floyd Reason, said default consisting ed to receive, examine and adjust

STATE OF MICHIGAN Tbe Probata %-omrt tor tfea Coaaty of

Liviaffttoa At a session of said court, held at

the Probate Office in the City of Howell in said County, on the Srd. day of August A. D., 1982.

Present: Hon. Willis Lr Lyons, Judge of Probate. |

In the Matter of the Estate of Joseph H. Bush, Deceased.

It appearing to the court that the time for presentation of claim* against said estate should be limited, and that a time and place be appoint-

CHANGES IN GAME LAWS POLICE TELEPHONE Upper penninsula hunters will

have their first opportunity in years tOsjhjoet Buffed Grouse next October

DIRECTORY

Value of telephone service to the law enforcement authorities of the

of the non-payment of principal and Interest and taxes, and there is claimed to be due and unpaid on this date for principal and interest $851.71 and taxes paid by assignee $69.50 and $25 attorney fee provided by statute; by which de­fault the po-v.ir to sell has become operative; and no suit or proceeding having been instituted at law to re­cover the deb* now remaining secur­ed by said mortgage or any part tnereof:

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that said mortgage will be foreclosed pursuant to said power of sale by a sale ot the premises therein describ­ed at public auction to the highest bidder at the West front door of the court house in the city of Howell, Livingston County, Michigan, Sept-ember 8, 1082, at 10 o'clock, A.~M7T which premises are described in said mortgage as follows:

Land in Putnam Township, Living­ston Cou.'.ty, Michigan, described STATE OF MICHIGAN as: Lot 1& in Chalker*s Landing T h e P r o b a t # c ^ r t F o r ^ c

Sub., a subdivision of a part of the o f L i v i t < m

northeast quarter of northwest fract5>nal qinrter of Section 31, A t a session of said Court, held at Tl N K I E, Michigan, excepting the Probate Office in the City of and rent r i n g n frtrip " f fr*"* 1* Howell in said County, on the 6th

day of August A. D. 1932. Present: Hon. Willis L. Lyons;

with the federal regulations for mi gratory bird seasons, bag limits and minor rules.

The open, season for Ruffed Grouse in the upper penninsula this fall will be Oct 1 to 12 inclusive. The lower penninsula season will be

all claims and demands against said [the same as last year, October 15 to deceased by and before said court:

It is Ordered, That creditors of said deceased are required to present their claims to said court at said Pro­bate Office on or before the 5th day of December A. D., 1982 at ten J t o b e effective Muring the coming o'clock in the forenoon, said t ime' f a l } in cjud e the lengthening of the and place being hereby appointed for tohe examination and adjustment of all claims and demands against said deceased.

It Is Further Ordered, That public notice thereof be given by publica­tion of a cdpy of this order, for three successive weeks previous to said day of hearing, in the Pinckney Dispatch, a newspaper printed and circulated in said county.

Willis L. Lyons, A- true copy. Judge of Probate.

Celestia Parshall, Register of Probate.

O —

feet in width off from the east end of said iou.

Dated: June t, 1982 ~ FT&ydReason

Assignee Shields ft >.,ith Attorneys i »r Assignee Howell, MiVr.igan

since to Conservation Commission j community and state is increased by did not renew the closing order. The the publication of a special telephone Commission, at its July meeting, also directory of Michigan Police officers approved regulations conforming i a m j Sheriffs, just issued by the Mich­

igan Bell Telephone Company. Cop­ies of the directory were delivered this week by R. VanMeter, manager for the Michigan Bell Company in this area, to Sheriff Henry D. Pinley of Livingstone County, Corp. L, J. Meehan of the Michigan State Police and Capt Fred G. Armstrong of the State Detective Bureau.

Manager VanMeter states that publication of the directory is in line witr the telephone company's cooper­ation with the law enforcement offic­ials in their work. He adds that it is the company's policy to give tele­phone users fullest cooperation in handling police and other emergency calls, as in case of fire, -sickness or accident. Telephone operators are in­structed to give special attention to emergency calls.

Designed primarily as a-telephone reference book for use of the au­thorities in getting in touch with

"We are SPOT, STRIP and DIP

26 inclusive. The bag limit of five in one day and ten in a season re-mainsT'unchanged.

Among the more important changes in the waterfowl regulations

duck season to two months, from Noon October 1 to sunset November 30; limiting the no. of certain species which may be taken in one day; and limiting the number of live duck de­coys that may he shot over at one gunning stand to 25. There will be no open season on woodducks, ruddy ducks, buffleheads, Ross's geese and cackling geese to conform with fed­eral regulations.

each other, the new Michigan police directory contains - the. office and

The game bird and waterfowl sea* >e effective this year are:

CHINESE RING-NECKED PHEA­SANTS (male) Oct. 15-26 Incl.. in lower peninsula. Closed season iif up­per peninsula. Bag limit: 2 in one day, 4 in possession and 4 in season.

RUFFED GROUSE: Oct. 1-12 incl. in upper peninsula and Oct. 15-26 in lower peninsula. Bag limit: 5 in one day, 10 in possession and 10 in season^ '

home telephone numbers, and name of law enforcement officials in the state, as of June 1, listed

Judge of Probate. - 1» *haMatter ftL_th*_E»UU of Jama* E. Kirttand, Dacaaaed.

ST A -F MICHIGAN

Tha Circuil Ctatrt For tha County of | t

LivintttOA in Chancary Rudolph E. Reichert, State Ranking Commissioner,

Plaintiff, vs,

ically according to cities, and com­munities. That makes it possible to reach any officer in the state quick­ly, at any time, day or night. One section of the book lists, the sheriffs seperately, in alphabetical order" by" counties.

The first edition of the police tMe-phone directory was issued by

and we can help you solve your small industrial heating jobs . . •

"Perhaps you aren't acquainted witr nr particular type or small electric beaters. Oui specialty is

"fitting into the small manufacturing process that needs a small amount of heat In these cases, we can often do the work cheaper than any other method.

"Take, for example, S P O T - the cartridge.typo electric heating unit This small unit provides a spot of clean, safe, odorless, precisely controlled beat just where it is needed in a process or in a machine. STRIP, the electric strip heater, pro­vides strips of heat for use in scores of hard-to-heat locations, in cabinets, outlying buildings, crane cabs, valve houses. DIP, the dectric liquid heat-

—iny unit ran htt plaraH in turU o r kftttlffl or in compartments of machines, for the heating of oil, glue, wax, water or other liquids.

"You will be surprised at how little we cost A cartridge unit like SI OT sells for only $2. A unit like STRIP sells for 81.50. And a simple liquid heating unit of the DIP type is available for 110. In addition there are many * * ' *

, • ( * ' .= •-".

£$-'k

PRAIRIE CHICKEN: Upper pen- Michigan Bell Company a year insula Oct. 1-12 incl. Lowt, p^nin- and proved of such value to th* sula Oct 15-26 inch, north of the thori*;- »n general that-i« was de north line oTVaff Ruron,Kalama^oa^: re4-4o—bring the_ii*i^_«lnames Calhoun, Jackson, Washtenaw, and Pearle B. Kirtland having filed in

said court her petition, praying f o r j W a y n e Counties. Bag limit: 5 in one license to sell the interest of said es­tate in certain real estate therein de­scribed.

It is Ordered. That the 6th day of September A. D. 1932, at ten o'clock m the forenoon ,at said probate office, be and is hereby appointed for hear­ing said petition, and that all persons interested in said estate appear be­fore said court, at said time . and

Pinckney Strte Rank, a Michigan PanLvg Corporation, of Pinckney, Michigan,

Defendant. At a session of said Court "held in

tl e Court House in the City of How­ell, Michigan, >n June 13th 1932.

Present: Hon. Joseph H. Collins, Circuit Judge

This matter comes on for hearing upon the petition of C. B. Monroe, Receiver, for an order of the Court squiring all persons having claim-against the Pinckney State Bank, to present the same to said Receiver and make legal proof thereof, and

praying for other -fcavi

teg bees mmmmwed by the TT IS OlttHBlED;

4-gfakcei to ^how why a license to sefl the "interest of said estate in said

1. Thj against tY> Pinckney §tate Bank, a Michigan '-.inking Corporation, pre­s e t the" and make legal proof thereof to C B. Monroe, Receiver, on or before September 10, 1932.

2. That all persons having claims cL whatsoe.er kind and nature against said -piirekirey""State Bank failing to file such claims on or be­fore September 10, 1932, shall

—thereafter be forever harrpri to file their claims against the said Pinck ney State Bank, and shall be deemed t have "- valid claim of any kind against any of the assets of the Pinckney State* Bank in the hand* «f said Receiver.

3. That t n or before September fl^-JWi said Rojcejyer shall file^with

day; 10 in possession and 10 in -sea­son.

WATERFOWL (except wood-ducks, oiders, ruddy ducks, buffle­heads, Ross' goose and cackling goose) Noon Oct i, E. S. f. to sun­set Nov. 30T~Bag ttmtt: In 15 in aggregate of all species pi which not more than 10 in the Ag­gregate ma^ be toiken ejt foU ^ " ~ canvasbatjk'r recflnfad," great?

telephone numbers up jjp date at j timer Because of the jnany.-chaj in names-and numbers,.^tanager Meter, urges that copi€s of -the | issue be destroyed^

Law enforcement officials, dej greatly upon local and*long dk telephone facilities, n i l there

e .day | been many instances ,/ in- whieh-iminediate use of the ^telephone resulted in preventing*, crime or

h^ ^about the* capture «©f« *] criminals.

lesserscaup,-rmjr necfc, /bluewmg, real estate should not be granted; {greonwing, and cinnamon teal, shov

eller and gadwall. Two days bag be given by limit may be in possession at one

Time; 100 ifTseason.

IT IS FURTHER ORDERED. That public notice thereof 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 said county.

Willis L. Lyons, Judge of Probate.

A true copy Celestia Parshall,

Register of Probate.

_ITfiMft OF 25 YEARb AGO

rpereonslravSrcbuai i - «sps*eh ** Angast 2¾ IffT Murray Walker and John Carrotf "^LOniPA—GALLINULES

of Detroit are visiting Carl Sykes. St. Mary's annual picnic held here

last Thursday drew the usual large crowd. Henry Ruen acted as-toast-master and speeches were made by Moriex_Vaughn and Hon. Robert Frazier of DeTrbit Stockbridge won the ball game from Pinckney 14 to 4. For the first time ice cream was sold on the grounds-in cones.—The

the Clerk of said Court a schedule-©? all claims presented to him, together with hin recommendations thereon, as to their allowance or rejection.

4. That a hearing be had in the Circuit Court Room in the Court House in the City of Howell, on September 26, J ? 3 2 , at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at which time the court will rass upon the validity of said claims and at which time any interested party may oppose the al­lowance of any claims.

5. That a copy of this order be published once each week for twelve successive weeks in the Pinckney Dispatch, a newspaper printed and published in said County.

; Joseph H. Collins Cirtuit Judge,

Countersigned* John A. Hagman

Clork. ATTEST: A traexopy. John A. Hagman

Clerk. Don W. VanWinkk Attorney for Kecefrer, Bu 'nest Addrtset Jf$wm\

profits of the day were about $400. The wedding of Miss Hazel John­

son to Mr. T. J. Gaul occurred at the home of her parents in this village Monday evening. Rev. D. C. Little-john officiating. The couple were at­tended by Gale Johnson as best man

GEESE AND BRANT: Noon Oct 1 (E.S.T.) to sunset Nov. 30. Bag limit: 4 in one day (combined) and 5 (combined) in possession at one time. .A.

JACKSNIPE^ID COOT: Noon Oct. 1 to sunset December 15. Bag limit: 10 in one day; 20 in possess­ion ; 50 in season.

WOODCOCK: Sunrise Oct. 15 to Oct. 26 in lower peninsula. Closed —••en \n upper penintjula^Bagtoait: 4 in e*e day; 8 in po^ac^sien at on time; 1$ in season.

A N ^ RAILS: Noon September 1 to sun-

T NEIGHBORING N f w S

I A community flower show wil

held in the basement of the Fovv ville Baptist church on Septcmbei

Acjney Hall, 80, former state presentative, died at hi.s home Stockbridge recently.

The front of the Hotel Fredij at Brighton is now adorned by a i\ new electric clock.

W. R. Jones of Holly threat 1213 bu.shels of wheat from less thj 30 acres of land.

The amount of money deposited

set November 30. Bag limit: 10 in one day; 20 in possession and 50 in season (combined')

Under the federal regulations the season on woodcocks is closed for the upper peninsula. The Depart­ment of Conservation sought a change in the federal ruling so as to

J^rmifcihunting the bjrd_north of the the Straits but

granted. request was not

o PRIMARY SCHOOL FUND

CUT FROM LAST YEAR Primary schools of Michigan will

feel the effects of the economic de-and^ Miss Hllen M th4s-y«ArT- when_the funds.

Ross Read and wife are about collected from public utilities, inher itance taxes, and insurance compan--iea are distributed.

ready to move into their new home on Main St. The brick work has now reached the second story on] T n e -primary school funci to be die-Marion Reason's new house and theftributed in September dropped from carpenters are well advanced on their work in constructing the new residence of Guy Teeple.

The new canal between Portage and Base Lakes will be opened for traffic next Monday with appropriate ceremonies.

The new state sanitarium opened at Howell Monday with seven pati-

While coming into Howell one day last week the threshing engine of John Bruff tipped over. Mr. Bruff claims the city did not make the road wide enough and threatens suit for damages.

o~ Mrs. R. A. Stephenson, son Rus-

a total of $24,137,898.01 in 1931, to $20,789,287.40, or a total decrease of83,M8y611.

The largest decrease is shown in the collection of the fee from rail­roads falling from approximately $10,398,000 in 1931 to $7,846,000 in 1932.

i sell, and Mrs. Walter Leezcsynski of I Detroit spent Monday with Mr. and

jMrg, Cttotft Crrafttt?

Mrs. Julia Greiner and daughter*, Mary and Julia, of Detroit spent tile week end at the George Greitter home.

Mr. and Mrs. Orla Tyler returned to their home at Belding Sunday «rV ter spending five weeks with Mi*s Viola Pettys and other Lakelaxd friends. >

Mr. Henry Graham and daughter, Helen of Battle Creek were guests wf Dr. and Mrs. R. G. Sigler the first uf the week.

re-organised and re-opened for b Iness. was thr.p,e t.iini^ibe.^jMas^Jgl

At tKF™I>ixiF^igi irybu1I

find local c i t i z ens w h o

l i v e h e r e in y o u r c o m m u n ­

ity, w h o c o n t r i b u t e to its

we l fare and it» g r o w t h —

huHtnesft m e n w h o o|>er>

-•te o n the (>olden RuL>,—

W e a r e jiroujl t o d i sp lay

the D i x i e e m b l e m . It is

o u r " S t a t u e o f Liberty .*

drawn out for the first three days business. The deposits were $9000 and withdrawls $3000.

Harvey Chase who recently re­signed as treasurer of the Nichols school in Quincy township, Jackson county, had held that office tor the past 51 years.

The First National Bank of Quin­cy closed its doors recently. A mass meeting attended by^ovcr fi00 people-was held at which the stockholders and depositors worked out a plan and the bank was reopened after on­ly being closed four days.

State police believe that they have : stopped an advertising'racket in thej arrest, of Harry Kelly, 39, of Chica-| go. Some time ago he sol*f advertls^,' ments in a fictious magazine called thp "IntPrsfoto ^Police."- This was never published. John Cox, Anh Ar-bor oil man, who purchased a $100 advertisement in the magazine recog­nized him in Ann Arbor one day la*t week and notified, the police.

Walter Rice of near Dixboro had 250 chickens stolon one night last week.

The Ann Arbor school board has voted to raise $585,000 by taxation this year. This will make a tax rate of $13.60 per thousand valuation. It has reconsidered its decision to close the Donovan school this year for economic purposes arid this, school will open as usual this year, j 1 •*»• *»•§ eity properly te trade

t*m~* ^'^ Phone Ne. 17

-^1

h

IEE-1AYEI DtXfE^OrL-^TATK>N

Norman Reason SEAL ESTATE BROKER

fam*,Raaidentia] Property aim f*ake

V m t t f e • Specialty

Pinckney. Vica. _ ^ -

Mr. and Mrs. Henry Johnson has as Sunday dinner guests, Mr. and«, Mrs. Waldo Titmus and family- of i Flint, Mrs. Wm. Hartwell of Tuscon,j Arizona, Mr. and Mfs^ Prank John-] 0 * » o* First State SavUtft Reek son, Mr. and Mrs. John Chambers ffewefl, Mfcfc and Hasel Chamben.'

Don W. VanWiakle Attorney at Law

:-WHI Put Your «at fa-*..-

FOR $1.00 PLUS PARTS Battari+f Cfaara*d M J Rtjbftfll

Aerials Eractwd-Jric* Km ALL WORK GUARANT1

Radio* Rantad. Sarviea At A l

t' faftl PHONE 72 SHIREY'S

... • i.

••m - • • » « «

•N

-_. m WrJCIClftr OftttSoatlstfttfj

— -- — ^ ,^^.¾¾^ r

S' V

/

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

%

Wed., TKwr., Fri., Auf«i»t 17, 18, 19,

SAME DAYS AS THE FAIR. DON'T FORGET

Janet Gaynor,and Charles Farreli in "THE FIRST YEAR"

News Fables Last Show Starts 10:00 P. M. A Picture Made to Fit these Two Stars

Comedy

Saturday, August 21

GEORGE O'BRIEN in •MYSTERY RANCH"

Also First Chapter of "Shadow of the Eagle"

Comedy Cartoon Mat, Saturday Adm. 10c and 20c

Sunday Monday, Aufu*t 21 , 22

JACK OKIE AND RICHARD ARLEEN in "SKY B R I D E

Comedy "Cleanup on the Curb"

• >*

Act "Crane Murder Case

Cartoon Mat. 2:00 P. M. Con. to 11:00 P. M,

Tuesday, August 23

HELEN TWELVETREES & RICARDO CORTEZ "IS MY FACE RED," i n

CAROL LOMBARD in SINNERS- IN THE SUN'i

Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, August 24, 25, 26

"ROAR OF THE DRAGON" with RICARD DIX SHARKEY--SCHMELLING FIGHT PICTURES

SEE WHO WON

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The Pinckney DUpatch Wednesday, Augnttt^l&Sg

MAIN ABOUT

HAMBURG

Burial services for Mrs. Anna Lil­lian Wagner of San Leandro, Calif., a former res ident of Hamburg were held at Hamburg cemetery, Wednes­day afternoon, Rev. Ralph Sterling, pastor of the Free Methodist church officiating. Miss Featherly, daughter of Thomas W.and Mrs. Susan Feath­erly was born in Northfield township, Washtenaw county, in 1860. She had lived in California a good many years. She is survived by two sisters, Mrs. George Bennett and Mrs. Ella Parkhurst of California, and a num­ber of nieces and nephews. Mrs. Wagner died at her home, June 29. The body was cremated, the ashes, being sent here for burial. M. Rora-

j bacher, a niece, and Mr. Rorabacher I of Ann Arbor, Mrs. William Britton, fa niece, and Mr. Britten of Howell,

Thomas W. Featherly of Hamburg, a nephew, and a number of others attended the funeral here. Mrs. Wag-j}or visited Mirbigan in 1 f) 1 2.—.

The Girl Scouts met at the home of Mi.«s Jule Adele Ball, Wednesday afternoon, for a second weekly meeting, with Mrs. Laurence R. Queal and Mrs. William E. Pilgrim' also in attendance. A review of the work given at the last meeting was held and added instructions given in the work. It was voted to hold a bak-

Ied goods sale Saturday, August 27, in the Driver building, Hamburg vil-

— lage. The next meeting will be held kS Thursday afternoon.

Bollinger at tended a County Board meeting of the King's Daughters at Howell Tuesday.

Elizabeth and Madeline Leach spent Tuesday in Lansing.

Levi Ludtke who has been ill with appendicitis is improving.

Charlotte Howlett is visiting friend in South Haven.

Miss Beatrice Lamborne enter­tained a group of children at her home Monday afternoon in honor of the birthday of Betty Lorraine Wylie

Frank Bates was moved from Jackson to a hospital in Detroit Wed­nesday.

Mrs. Walter Baker of Detroit spent Friday with her parents Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Kuhn.

Phillip Howlett of Caro is . spend­ing his vacation with relatives here.

Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Gilmore enter­tained a number of young people at their home Wednesday evening in honor of the birthday of their son, Clare. The evening was spent play­ing games after _^hjcK-a_-luncheon was served.

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rnnniniimimtmininamiitiiiiiimiHiiiMiiiHHmiiW

S TAND off at a distance and look at your home. | *J Has everything been done that should be done I to make it a real home and preserve its beauty and § usefulness. s I Painting the home, both inside and out, adding | neatly painted porches, flower boxes, fences, trellis-| es—will pay you big dividends both in personal in-§ terest and property value. You can do the job your-g self.

I We Sell [Bradley & Vroman Paint 1 Every color you may wish is here and our pric-

s es will interest you.

CHUBBS CO RNERS } )

Dr. and Mrs. A. J McGregor of Perry, Dr. and Mrs. W. E . Mercer of Webberville and Mrs. Wm. Mercer of Pinckney were Sunday callers at the Mark .^AllisoiL-home.

fTeeple Hardware ^MUIII11imittlilllttllllll»lllllll»IHIllHlllltlWniHlilllltMihMWIHWIIIWmilllllHl»»r

The home of Mrs. John -Cooper -it' Silver Lake was the jscerie' of a most enjoyable. Lady Maccabee picnic Thursday, with about thirty in at­tendance. A most delectabe Bohem­ian dinner was served at noon. The

Stanley Smaka of Pinckney spent the week end with his brother Frank at the Parent farm t

" jZir*. and Mr_s.„ Louis Wagner and sons were Sunday dinner guests of Miss Helen Bland, north of Howell.

Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Parmalee of Inkstor spent Tuesday night and Wednesday-at the C. Kingsleyhome.-

Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Kow and daughters of Detroit were week end guest.snf Mr jmd _Mrs. Albert Pinkie.

Mrs. Andrew Campbell is visiting this week at the home of her par­ents, Mr. and Mrs. C. Kingsley.

Miss Marjorie Allison attended a

afternoon was spent in visiting, some t playing cards and a few in boat rid-ing and swimming.

Mrs. Joseph Cebulski and two grand children, John and Grace Lawdy, also Miss Ann Cramer and John Forest of Detroit are eiijoying

a vacation at the Bhun CQttage--o^[-pknic Thursday at Lake Chemung, the Huron ""River:—Thursday "tfiey were guests of Mrs. Cebulski's sister, M r t William H. Keedle and family.

also one Sunday at Portage Lake.

Mrs. C. Kingsley and children

Other giuests • were Mr. and ry L. Dewolfe and three children, George, Marion and Dorothy, of Ann

rbor Aow.ELsb.ifi. .~Ml;._ an<* Mrs. De-wolfe have ju?t returned home -from a motor trip to Philadelphia, Penn. they having taken Mrs. DeWolfe's

spent Monday at Dearborn and Jnk.-•^Har-_ s t e r g

Mrs. Edith Rolston and son, Ray­mond, of Ann Arbor, also friends from Detroit—we-ge- Sunday guest'j°ef--Mr. and Mrs. Roy Smolett.

Mrs. Pauline Aymor and friend

sister, Mrs. Harold Sapp and daugh- f r o m Owosso called on her daughter, ter Murray, to their home there. | Gloria, Friday, evening.

Mrs. Gordon B. Craigie and son, | Clifford Bennett spent Sunday at Norman, have returned to their home ' Jackson, in Toronto, Can., after a month's • Mr. Wagner has his gas station

M I C H I G A N BELL T E L E P H O N E C O .

visit with Mrs. Craigie's parents, Mr. Mr. and—Mr^. Smitit _Martin of

5 . Hamburg township and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Poland, Mr juid Mrs Autnist

Slayton & Son S CHEVROLET SALES & SERVICE

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Fred Featherly and—family—and Robert Duaryea and family of Jack son are spending some time at Joslin

Lake Miss Maxine Marshall was home

from Portage Lake Wednesday. j Mr. and Mrs. George Richmond -- , . . r,, , , . , , , , and Vernon were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Hill, formerly ' , , .

. , , . . , r, . • , n . . ' . n . . ' Mrs. Inez Hadley and Dorothy. Edith Dubois, of Cincinnati, Ohio, | * were Monday dinner guests of Mrs.

-and-Dorothy;

Schmadtki and Donnabelle and Glen Hursfall of Brighton attended the 13 annual Foland family reunion at Potter Park, Lansing. Forty-three were in attendance. A Bohemian din-

OLDS S . n e r was served at noon. The business meeting was in charge of the pres­ident, Howard Flame, of Lang^burg, who was re-elected president. Mrs. Smith* Murtin wag re-elected-secret-

I

The Pres. L. A. S. will sponsor a party at the annex, Thursdaf cven-

-mp—A pmprMTn w\\\ f?r j*j*-"n and n-

PLAlNFlELfr

ary treasurer and Sidney Stevens of Perry was elected vice president The 1933 reunion will be heid at the home of Mr. Stevens.

Mrs. Alfred Brock of Palmer, Mass., came Thursday to visit her uncle, Henry ' M. Queal and Mrs. Queal and her cousin, Laurence R.

nearly completed. opeji soon. —

He expects to

Mrs. C. Kingsley called gn h^r >4«ter--ne nr- How etf"SuTrftayr—

r MARION

»

The Marion Helping Hand enjoyed a picnic at Robb's grove Thursday.

Miss Roseann Hoisel in company with several girls from Howell camp­ed at Whitmore Lake last week.

il Queal a • Queal *a

freshments for 10c. Chairman,Pearle Marshall. Everyone invited.

Mr. and Mrs. Lyman Hadley a r e driving an ^ssiex Coupe. .

J Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Gauss with

their son,' Lawton Gauss, and family attend(Mj the J jropks family__reunion Sunday at Morrison Lake.

Mr. and Mrs. Geer of Toledo are spending 4 b i s - w ^ k with Mr. and Mrs

Ralph Rhein^ans was a 6 o'clock F . E. Gauss. diner gue^ t . a t John Roepke's Mon­day.

Olin Marshall -and family s p e i t Wednesday with Otis Webb and fam­ily at^Lakc Chemung.

Irs. Fred Rentchlcr and daughter, la, entertained twelve- guests at

bridge party a t their cottage a t lin Lake on Monday p. m. Irs. Wm. Marshall was a gueat of

Ira, In** Hadley -on Thrxmtlf Rev. John Rlicingans, Hester and lph, a r? on a vacation fn* to visit

jelr .son and brother In Conn, [r. and Mrs. Louis Allmendinger

Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. K. Hadley.

Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Cram»a &*re Sunday guests of her p i r .nls,

r. and Mrs. Julian B u h l

Miss Patterson, Mrs. vJar* ut

Queahand family.

Mrs. Walter Smillie ot uctr»)it has been spending a few days with Mr. and Mrs. John W. Dyer.

The^TclTTruam- socml %{vt-n by the Lidies (juiid of Sl. S i c j i i u ' s Kpi-<-copal church on the churcn grounds Saturday evening was well attended and an enjoyable time was had by all. Mrs. John .Cooper drew the quilt.

Gus B r Smith "and family were in Jackson Wednesday evening to see the Cascades at the Wm. and Matilda Sparks Foundation,

John Musson, Gus Smith, Clay Musson Alfred Rossington and fam­ilies enjoyed a picnic dinner at New-" port Beach, Portage Lake,, it being the - birthday anlveTsartes of Clay

Detroit and Mrs. J. W. Roberts call- j A l b e r t F r a n k l i n D e a h J ) J r # o f

ed Thursday afternoon on Mrs. A. L . | G o s h e n > I n d - ? u v i s i t i n g h i s g r g n d

PUtton. ^ j p a r e n t S ) y[r, and Mrs. Myron W. Mrs. J. W. Roberts entertained for Hendrick of Winan's Lake Hills. His

d inner Thursday, Mws-4f. Patterson, Mrs. J . Clark and children and Mr. Russet Shupe of Det ro i t

Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Dutton called on Rev. H. V Clark and took lunch

- -ghinday even ing with M r and Mrs. B. W. Roberts.

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hicks of Parma, Mr.' and Mrs. Burton Hom­ing, Mr .and Mrs. Ar thur Hutchings and son, and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas-Mitchell of Jarltson attended a fam­ily picnic at the P H. Swarthout cot­tage at Portage Lake, Sunday.

parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert F. Deahl, are on a trip to Alaska. They sailed from Vancover and will land at Carcross, Alaska. Then they »vill go up the river as far nor t i is "*'U BennetE They will return by way ot

j Seattle, Wash., where they will visit Mrs. Deahl's aunt , Mrs.Louis Winans and Mr. Winans. They expect to ar­rive home September 3.

GREGORY

Musson, Mrs. Alfred Rossington and Marjorie Smifh.

Mr. and~1tf^.,Be^>White, the Miss­es Betty andNie ien Devereaux of Pinckney, Mr. Jaines-FomcT, Y p s t ; J . W. Knecht- and family, Grand Rapids, Chas. Norton and family of Morris Plains, N. J., and Mrs. Edna Celeman of Howell were callers at the Norton farm last week.

The Cassidy family' reunion will meet^wlth Mr. and Mrs. Basil White Sunday August 21 .

Lake School reunion was held Monday at Fred Berry's corners v-

Frank Gehringe* and wife a r e moving back to their farm from Howell. Gerrett VanPolen and fam­ily are moving to Iosco from the Gehringer farm.

Bruce Roberts spent 0«..day at Chester Berry's and helped celebratt Mr. Berry's birthday.

The many friends oi Gene Hoff of Howell hope for her speedy recovery*. Miss Hoff underwent an operation for appendicitis last Thursday in

FIRE! but the TELEPHONE brings

help instantly

WHEN fire t h r e a t p n a \)u> i » v ^ * ^ | f j o v e d o n e * , o r v a l u a b l e p r o p e r t y t h a t r e p r e s e n t * t h e

• w r i n g s of a l i f e t ; me 7 the telef

e p r e s e n t s t r i / / tummon

ltd immediately, day or night.

E a c h y e a r , in Mich igan a l o n e , t h o u s a n d s of fires a r e r e p o r t e d by t e l e p h o n e . T h e u s e of t h e tele* p h o n e t o r e p o r t f i r e s h a s a i d e d m a t e r i a l l y i n r e d u c i n g loss of life a n d p r o p e r t y .

W h a t e v e r t h e e m e r g e n c y , y o u r t e l e p h o n e i t P R I C E L E S S P R O T E C T I O N , e n a b l i n g y o u t o s u m m o n d o c t o r , f i r e m e n , p o l i c e , o r s e r v i c e corn* p a n y , w i t h o u t de l ay .

J UST one telephone call In an emergency may be worth the co«t of your telephone •ervice for a lifetime.

•HH

9*"

bint HI-LAND

SAT. &. SUN. Nite GENTS 25t LADIES FREE

ALSO

i Mrs. Inez Bowdish asd Mri. Ruth Lansing.

Sunday Afternoon 3 till 6 THQ R&YfcLLERS, Detroit

• , ; " * "N

^

J^K r.'iw/t; j .

7Zr>'

• » * - • • . .

• - - ' . < • • '

V

Jbe Pintkney Dispatch Wednesday,

Tbe fockney a E ;

k*-- « 1

Entered at fhe Fostafflcs at Pinckney, Mich ,as Second Class Matter.

Subscription $1.25 a yea* in Advance.

PUBLISHER PAUL CURLETT

Specials for Thurs.,FrL, Sat , Aug. 18,19,20 MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE

CANE SUGAR 10 lbs. ~

29c

45c P. & G. SOAP, 10 ban 25c HOWELL FLOUR 39c TOILET PAPER, Red Cross 10c size, 4 for 19c TOMATO SOUP, Campbells, 3 for 19c SODA CRACKERS, 2 lbs, 19c MASON JAR RUBBERS, 3 pkgs. IQc MASON JAR COVERS doz. 25«

»Xi CATSUP, 14 oz- bottle 10c CABBAGE, 4 to 10 lb heads, per head 05c POTATOES, peck 15c, bushel 50c

L C.K. KENlNtBD Y PHONE 23F3 WE DELIVER

iitiiiiii S •lllllltlllllllClTlllllltf^Hlllllllllllllil

I Nation V cie Store 1Tea, Green or Blgck, 1-4 lb. 10c §

OLIVES, large size, pt. jar 29c § MUSTARD, Fancy, 16 oz. jar 10c = COFFEE, All American, lb 19c | FLOUR, Nation Wide, 24½ lb. sack . 65c §

I H«™W*Coffffflj I9 l h ™" m c ! FRENCHE'S ROOT BEER EXT^bot, 19c MACARONI, Nation Wide, 3 pkgs 2Qc SPAGHETTI, Nation Wide, 3 pkgs, ...20c BRAN FLAKES,Nation Wide,lge pkg. K)z

Toilet Paper, Gauze, 4 rolls 21C —^^M^^^^^^^^^^^ft^B^aM^^^-^^awMaMamdavawMai^^avMMNftaHHavBatoN^^Ba^Ba^BaaHaitfaMiM^^^B ^^mm^^^m^^^^mm

BIG 4 SOAP FLAKES, 2 lge. pkgs 29c MAGIC WASHER;igen>l«fr—^r^-23c

?

Jack Galligan of South Lyon was in town Monday in the interests of the Gala Day being held in South] Lyon today.

Loren and Marshall Meabon, their sisters, Drueilla and Mernavieve, Frank Bell and sister, left for Houghton Lake, northern Michigan, Monday.

Don't forget the dance at Hi-land Lake Saturday and Sunday, August 20, 21 .

Stanley Dinkel made a business trip to Battle Creek Monday.

Mr. and Mrs. Clifford VanHorn at­tended the Babcock reunion at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Stew* art in Brighton Sunday

Mrs. Walter Jacobs of Toleda spending the week with Mr. and Orville Nash.

Miss Dorothy Kinney of Ann Ar­bor and Larry Stackable of Lansing were ffunday visitors at the home o$ Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Staskable.

Roy Dillingham and » i i e were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. ahcH""* Mrs. Kay Holt in Fowlerville.

Miss Marilda Rogers is visiting friewds in Toledo.

^ M r . and Mrs. Stacey nail, Lonnie VanSlambrook and wife visited the zoo near Detroit Sunday.

Mr;*. Fred Read and Mrs. Floyd Peters were in Detroit Friday.

Rene Menard Jr. , who has been spending the past six months with his grand parents," Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Stackable, left—Thursday -m company with ~hts father for Hoty-yoke, Mass., where they will make their home with Rene's grand mother Menard.

Miss Marguerite Adams is spend­ing- a Couple of weeks "WTTh" her grand parents in RosevHle.

Mrs. Nellie Briggs of Howell un-tT(rrwenT~ah operation at thT Mcl'her-son Hospital Tuesday of last week.

Mr. and Mrs. Fred Read had as their guests last week Mrs. Floyd Peters and daughters, Peggy and Fatty;—of -Hastings, ^rorHf\ka

BARRY'S DRUG liiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiii

^

• To the Summer ^Resort Trade i • We are ready to serve the summer trade with

J regular meals and short orders at popular prices

• We also carry a full variety of ice cream and • Soda fountain drinks. When in town visit us.

ANN ARBOR DAIRY ICE CREAM

• PII Icfcney P o u n f a i n L*unch 1 (Next to Bank)

M CHARLES WHALEN, Proa*

^ • v

\i •.ft!

I Mr. MMI Xrs. EMU RaadsJl

{Mr. and U n . Alfred Randall ami daughte r^ Shirtey Ann, * of Farmm|r-ton were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Carr.

^TFs -ElTisRandal l , Mrs. Alfred Randall and daughter, Shirley Ann, of Farmington, Mrs. S. H. Carr and , Miss Dorothy Carr called on Mrs. 'Allen in Lansfng

MILLS Ifr . &n4 Mrs, A F. B*swn are vto-

iting relatives at Brown Cfty" '"^ Clyde Soper and Jlmmie Nash

were ln~ Lansing last Wednesday; Miss Peggy Stackable and Patsy

Menard were South Lyon visitors Sunday.

Mrs. Dorothy Darrow spent the past week with Mr. and Mrs. Edward

Harry Lee and Junior King's Daugh­ters at Rase Lake Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Contz and children of Saginaw visited relat .< < in this vicinity Sunday. Walter Fish returned with them

Mr. and Mrs. Henry Harris of lola, K a f t w w > »re guests of Mrs. Alrrja Harris.

^ James Roche attended the Milfonij Fair last week. Bert Roche took sec­ond money in the trot with his horse Diamond Dewey,

Harry Palmer and wife of Detroit were Friday gtlest.s of Miss Jessie Green.

\ Mr. and Mrs. John Martin, their son, Lemuel, and Billy Martin at­tended the Martin reunion at Potter Park Lansing Sunday,

Light & Heavy Hauling of All Kinds. Weekly Trips Made to Detroit -J*,.,.

Stacey Hall and wife" of Plainfield were Monday evening visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Will Brown.

Sunday dinner guests of Mr.' and Mrs. J. C. Dinkel were Mr. and Mis. Robert Carpenter and daughter.Mar-

j garet, of Flint and the Misses Fanny

flllllUlllllMllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllltMIIIIIIMMIItllllMIIIIIM

FLY FATE, pint bottle 49c VINEGAR, 40 grain gal 29c

| Milk, Pet or Nation Wide,tall can 5c f

Mr and Mrs. L, G. Devereaux ami Monks and Nellie Gardner daughters spent Sunday with relat­ives in Ypsilanti

We understand th; i tGenrg, . CtHrk t

MRllJIS _YEOEIABI.ES

I- MEAT SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY

John Hornshaw Jr . and M. H. Chalk-er are planning to attend the Tor­onto Fair which will be held the first week in September^

W. H. Meyers was in Detroit on business Monday.

WiimUit Shaunland of Ann Arbor g i was th.» ftn^t._nf Miss, H.-lvn F i ed 'vr

Grocery

i

and Mr. and

Reason JL5ons-— Head cottage at 5 I week.

oss Read at the Portage Lake last

r..UIIPUttll<lllllll1IMIllf>H1llll1IIIUIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllll11llllllll1IUllUlUUrl

CARD OF THANKS

We wii i to express our sincere thanks for the many thoughtful kind­nesses r-own by relatives, friends a, d neighbors during the sad hours

of our bereavement.

tyrs. Sadie E. M Q ^ n

Maxine and Ada Mardell

Mr. and Mrs. Chas. T. Moran

Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Brady . and family

Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Tecple and family

Mr and Mrs. Claude Danforth Rnd family

Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Moran and family

Mr, and Mrs. S. E. Swarthout

and family.

Miss Evelyn Graves and Walter (.raves were Sunday guest; at th.' W. J. Nmih home in N-orth -Map'burtf.

Mrs. Fred Read and Mrs. Flryd Peters visited their sister :.t Fulton one day last week.

Mr. and Mi*- Wm. Brown, Mr, S and Mrs. '.'ecil Brown and son, Har­mon, were Detroit visitors Sunday

'•! .«.. .V K. Darrow spent >rwiv.l ijays last 'veek with Rev. \\<\\ Mrs

Specials 10^f^

V*':

fr* \-M

5 LB. BAG PASTRY FLOUR 14c

UNCOLORED JAP TEA (PKG.) IS*

SAUERKRAUT (LARGE CAN) •§

Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Doyle, who have been spending a couple of weeks in Sanilac county, have re­turned home.

George Davis, an employee of the Chelsea Standard for the past 32 years, ~wsr •aHGBtteT~Ht-the—Dispatch office Monday.

William Maginn of Mt. Morris, Democrat candidate for congresn, 6th district, was a caller a t the.Dis­patch office Saturday.

Quite a few are attending the gala day at South Lyon today. A brand new Chevrolet coach is to be given away by the Veterans of Foreign Wars.

Chas. Kennedy and family of Det-

Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. 1 w**^ M-Fr-^uui- JMr*i_ J^a^JL

H. Schlee.and family of Detroit. Mrs. C. J. Clinton and sons, G««-

5 1 aid and "Ralph, spent Thursday wit A her sister, Mrs. Olin Fishbeck, in Lansing.

Mr. and Mrs. Ona Campbell and daughter, Leona, visited Mr.and JVUJ.

L. C. Gorham in Detroit Sunday.' 31 s Gorham returntid home with t h e a

•^or a "wtmks "vfstt;" Mr. ami Mrs. Will Thompson a&d

daughters of Howell are spending A two week's vacation with Mrs. Mary Conn*»r».

Mrs. Eliza Gardner spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Bert Hoff in Howell,

Mr. and Mrs. Ward Swarthout and daughter, Barbara, of Jackson, Mrs. George Bradley of Flint, Mrs. F. Moran and daughters of Grand Rap-

I GOOD BROOM

1 STRING BEANS (PER CAN)

i 5 LB. BAG PANCAKtFLOURrv

* MUSTARD, FRENCfrS .....,..„,..,. l i e

| 2 LB. JAR MUSTARD - 1

I 3 PKG, SUPER SUDS

roit were Sunday evening callers of j ids spent the week end with Mr. and

Mrs. Anna Kennedy. | Mrs. S. E. Swarthout.

Whl Simmons on Brighton. Mi. and Mrs. Peter Hoi is Mrs

Catherine Folts and daughter. \ hlrf. of Whitn ere Lake were Thursday guests of Mr. and Mrs. JoseoK St:>-k-

?^elson Powe of East I / j r i n n g ' S F|>'.-r.i. the week end with Jimmie N'ash.

J. Davenport and wife t f Toledo were Sunday evening visitors ut th<> home of Mr. and Mrs. Orville N'a.sh.

Mr. and Mrs. Howard Harris a rd daughter left Saturday for the ; : home in Pasadena, California, fol­lowing a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ki$e,

Mrs. Ella Sykes of Detroit is spending a couple of weeks at th" Caxper Sykes home. 47UHIIIUlinilllllHnilllllltttmiltlltllltlllllHIHIlltllHltlHIUlltlHtlllUl

Mrs. Lydia Sharpe of Toledo is tho guest of Mm. Lola Rogers,

Mis* Bernice Iaham returned Sun­day from a week's stay in East Lan­sing,

Mrs. E. L. Mrlntyre . Miss CIOHH

Fish, and Messrs. F. Y. and W E Fish were callers on Sunday in Mun ith, Stockbridgt and Gregroy.

^^^f. {

*% <''-

W. W. Barnard .L./<

i Miss -Keiner of Ann Arbor and

Miss Henrietta Kelly re tu rned .Sa tu r ­day from a weeks vacation at Mack­inaw Island.

Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lucius Doyle were Mr. and Mrs. Luc­ius Smith and family of Howell.

Mrs-. Floyd Taylor and son, J i of Jackson were Sunday Mrs. Mary Connors.

Mr. and Mrs. Lee Lavcj visited Mr. ar . i Mrs. Steve* near Stockbridge Friday.

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Howell Saturday. ^

•_ rf* n* * *

' >

.-( r ^ r ma*e.

^^!g3LD^P^ch Wednesday, Aitgutt 17, 1932 i

• _ ^

LAKELAND NEWS

:7

Tht- Lakeland Circle of Junior King's Daugbtars and l*»dff...J»to* | ta i l ie4 b y

J Harry Lee, art spending a *eek ^ t h e r home a cottage at Base Lake. Those, .who are attending are a^dred Jack, Flor-ine Parkinson, Ailena Lear, Madge Jack, Katherine Dilloway, Roberta. Jack, Yvonne pettier, Lora Burnett* | Betty Kucher, Doris Navare and Li]

Mm Elliot.

Mrs. Marian BurneW.and daugfe-J ter, Lora, who have been living in 'Ann Arbj>r moved to their home here

Mrs. Joe Wurdock and daughter, fMary, "who have- been bere forrsome .time have returned to their home in Columbus, 0 .

Miss Ruth Qolmstrcirt who has been a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Robert

Ljack returned to her home in Detroit ' Sunday. i

Mr. and Mrs. John Locker of Det­roit entertained company from Det­roit in their, summer home here sun-day.

Mr. and Mrs. Jim Smith of Pon-tiac spent the week with Mrs.Smith's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wallace

LAKELAND CIRCLE OF JUNG'S DAUGHTERS

The Lakeland Circle of King's Daughters was pleasantly enter-

jtained by Mrs. Mildred Whitlock at in Hamburg township

Tuesday afternoon. 22 were in at-tendance. Quests were Mrs.- Cora Sawyer of Whitmore Lake, Mrs. W. J. Dougherty of Detroit and Mrs. Orla Taylor of fielding.

The meeting was in charge of the president, Mrs. Edward G. Houghton and opened witlr singing <"0 Happy Da/" and repetition of Lord's prayer Officers and committee reports were given \by Mrs. Telesphore Bourbon-nafc, Mrs. Robert Jack, Mrs.Bar­bara Tessmer and Mrs. Mildred

STATsfOF MICHtGAN The Circuit Coart for the C#fc&t^a4

Livingston la Chaaoery. Order of Publication

Rosa Gearbart, Plaintiff.

-VS-I Alexander Fraser, John Eraser, & K 'Shope A Co., Sbubel B. BHter, John

D. Pinckney, Seaman Fraaei, James Nowland, Charles A. Wilbur, Frank-^ Kn Moore,. Andrew M/Areiilarwwa, Peter R. Bonnett, John W Schenck, * Thomas W. Misner, John W, Finn, Willard B. Moon, John Kemp Misner, and their unknown heirs, de­visees, legatees and assigfl** and wives,

Defendants.

Whitlock. The admission service was given to Mrs. Albert DeGuise of Detroit Further plans were made for the ice cream social to be held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jack, Saturday evening, August 20. An invitation from Mrs. C. H. Downing to hold the next meeting, Tuesday afternoon, August 23, at her home at Strawberry Lake was accepted. Mrs. Whitlock conducted a guess what's in the box contest. No one

"Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Van Ness and guessing correctly, each one drew son, Fredrick, of Toledo are spend- for it. Mrs. DeGuise was the lucky

George W. Welch Republican Candidate for Governor

nig: a few days with Mrs. VanNess's parents Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brenn-tngstall . ~ ~~ ~

Frank Atwell and children, Betty Virginia, Mary Jane, Junior and Bill of Detroit are

party. The hostess then served candy ai^peanu^sj;^The__nieeting closed wltfrthe prayer of the order:

—O Mr. and Mrs. George Bland and

Suit pending in the Circuit Court for the County of Livingston, In

{Chancery on the 6th day of July 1 1932.

In this cause it appears by the sworn bill of complaint on file that after diligent search and inquiry, it cannot be ascertained whether the persons named a& defendants, are living or dead, or where they may reside if living, or whether the pos­sible title, interest, claim or right which they may have in the premises below described has been assigned to any person or persons, and if they are dead, whether they have person-id representatives or heirs, living, or where they or any of them reside, or the nameaofthe pers*™? who ff1^ {n-cJuded herein under the head «< un­known heirs, devisees, legatees, and assigns," or whether such title, in

fttlg.

time in their summer home at Pet tysville.

The Misses Claude and Marvin Judson who have been quests of the Misses Janet and Francis Vanderwall have returned—to—their home H n Grand Rapids.

Mrs. Armstrong and daughter, "irginia, who have been guests of

, . H . u v . «,1U M r . and Mrs. George Bland and OOB*n8' o r wnetner such title, in-spending some Miss Vera Bentley were Sunday call- ^ ^ c l a i m ' j i e n o r P°*s»ble right r home at Pet- ers at the homes of Mrs. Wm Barns-' b e e n d i 8 P o s e d * ' by them by will

and

At 11:00 A. M.

pl|n to M i s h the Property fe-ake-yiews^i JMTrtieg CommissioBrState^aBkiDg Department

r. T7ewis Sterlie have returned to thefr home in Saginaw.

Mr. and Mrs. William Hodgkiss and children, Junior and Donald, of Flint, called on~ friends here and Strawberry Lake, Sunday

dell near Stockbridge and Mr | Mrs. Will Buhl in Gregory.

C. Davis of Howell was In town Saturday Afternoon^ —

O MORTGAGE SALE

Whereas, default haw he^n m«dp in the conditions of a real estate mortgage made by Willis A. Gurnee and Carrie Gurnee, husband and wife, mortgagors, to MePherson

I State Bank, a Michigan Corporation, • mortgagee, date^ajid_j^cjirded_Nov=

• - -

or otherwise, and it further appear ing that all of the parties above named are necessary and proper parties to said bill

On Motioi^of_Glenn C. Yellandr

•ttorheyfor plaintiff, IT IS ORDER­ED, that the efendants and each and all of them enter their appear-ance_in~this—cauaer within.

FLOR1S E. MORAN Floris E. Moran, son of Frank

S-Svg msmmM •-«-mi jjmiiBiiuiiBanilwnwww

Mortgage Sale bevfog befh ma** fori

and Emma Larue Moran was born in Pinckney, Michigan, on December 2, 1885, and passed away at his home

j in Grand Rapids, Mich., on August

emberT97^29» in the office of the Register of Deeds for Livingston

-'Publican Nomination for

Livingston County

^PHmariefc, Sept. 13th, 1W62

thirty days in the cond* of a certain mortgage made by

ichard K. Wriggelsworth and Edna /riggelsworth, his wife to Nancy J.

Wriggelsworth dated the second day of March A. D. 1905, and recorded in the office erf the'"Register of Deeds for the County of Livingston and sState of Michigan, on the third day ^f March A. D. 1905, in Liber 91 of

'ortgages, on pages , s 266-267 if; on which mortgage there is

claimed- to be due and unpaid at the date of this notice the sum of Fif­teen Hundred Sixteen and seventy-ninellOO Dolors, ($1516.79), and no suit or proceeding at law or in

J equity having buJh iiad or instituted

rr-f^t wm i#n* VTInok-ney where he attended the Pinckney school. Of a_ strong, robust consti­tut ion he excelled in athletics and was first string pitcher for the Pinck­ney base ball team for many years. He undoubtedly pitched more win­ning games than any other man who ever wore a Pinckney uniform. In 1907 he with his catcher, Pat Lavey

Mortgages at pages 20 *nd 21, and Whereas, the said mortgagors have

failed to make the payments of prin­cipal and interest specified in said mortgage, which default has oontin-

„_ . . ...^n.»ic/ i/ispaicn, a newspaper Cxwnty^Jfcie^Mgaitr-iir-LTbw-^ Morteaires at D M M ?n ^A QI - - A I «»« *--

months from the date of thia order, and in default * hereof, that said bill be taken as confessed by each and all of them.

I t IS FARTHER ORDERED, that , within forty days from the date herg^-1 >f, the plainUTs cause this order or

a copy thereof, to published in the Pinckney Dispatch, a newspaper

nod for a perW of more than thirty days, said mortgagee has exercised the option provided in safd mortgage to and hereby-does declare the whdTe

\ amount unpaid thereon, together with accrued interest, due and pay*

fabte"-'forthwith, and- the amoinrr claimed to be due and unpaid on said mortgage at the date of this notice for principal and interest is the sum

— •of $614.65, and the further sum of signed a contract with the Calumet $25 attorney fee provided in said team in the Copper League and left, mortgage, and no suit or proceeding

the county of Livingston, and that said publication be continued once each week for six weeks in succes­sion.

J. B. Munsejlf Jr. eimrit—CourT - Commissioner Livingston* Countjr Michigan.

John A. Hagman filei* of said Court-- ~~ Glenn C. Yeiiand AtS^fry for Plaintiff. Busrofcss Address,: HoweiL Michigan*

Pinckney. The deceased was promin­ent in social and church affairs and was one of the leaders of the Young Men's Club which_^flojyTsJb^oL_ilgre_

JAl^P. SWEENEY KeVuniican Candidate for

Prosecuting Attorcey Livingston County

at the Primaries,

Sept. 13th, 1D32

to recover the debt secured by said mortgage, or »fry part thereof:

Now, therefore, by virtue of the power of sale ."ontained in said mort­gage, and puf mant to the statute in such case ma/ e and provided, NOT­ICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that on Friday; the m venth day of October, A. D. 1932, >t ten o'clock in the forenoon, Extern Standard Time, said mortgagt will be foreclosed by a sale aj_p_ubiliL-xenduo to the highest

during the pastorate of Rev. George

TRAtY F. CRANDALL Republican Candidate for

Ki'-olection for

State Representative ~ —Livingston € o i m | | - •• • - *- •

at thf Primaries, «

Sept. 13th, lf>32

bidder at th»» westerly entrance to the Court Hov^e in the City of How­ell, Livingston County, Michigan, (that being the place where the Cir­cuit Court for thp County of Living­ston is held), of the premises describ­ed in said mortgage, or so mu».h thereof as may be necessary to pay the amount-dtie Tsrn^atdnSoTtgage~as aforesaid, with 5 per cent interest thereon and a/1 legal costs, charges, and expenses, including the attorney fees allowed by law, and any sum or, sums which may be paid by—tha-un-dersfgfled" mortgagee at or before

"said sale, necessary to protect its in­terest in the premises. Which pre-

-miaes arc destribed as follows:

Land in the Township of Cohoc-'.tah, County or Livingston and State rt>f Michigan, described to-wit:

Mylne at the Congregational church. On August 8, 1914, he was united

in marriage to Miss Sadie Swarthout daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Swarthout of Pinckney, and the couple went to Grand Rapids to re­side where was associated with tho Richards Manufacturing Co. and for some yeas has been supeninten-dent of the insulating department, of the concern, Two children were born toTHIs marriage, Maxine and Ada Mardell, who with his wife

I survive him. He also- leaves three sisters, Mrs. M. B. Brady of Howell, Mrs. Fred Teople of Pinckney and Mrs. Claude Danforth of Flint and two brothers, Charles of Saginaw and Larue of Detroit. —The end came suddenly and with-out any warning. It is hard for the people of this section, especially the older inhabitants to realise that "Cracker," as he was affectionately calknl in his-boyhood daysTfere TiaT

at law having been instituted to re (

cover the debt now remaining secur-j ed by said mortgage, or any _^gajl theiuuf, whereby the power of sale contained in said mortgage has be­come operative,

Now, Therefore, notice is hereby given that by virtue of said power of sale and the statute in such case made and provided, 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 city of Howell, LivingsUm County, Michigan on November 12, 1932, at ten o'clock in the forenoon of said day, which said premises are described in said mortgage as follows:

Land in the Township of Cohoctah t •- •- —

The biirof complaint was filed in the above entitled cause for the purpose of quieting the title to the

j following describ^i premises located 1 in the city oi Howell, Livingston

County Michigan, to wit: Lots number Seventeen and Eigh­

teen of Block Number Nine on Mizn-| er*s Washington Heights Addition to 'the Village (now City) of Howell, "Mfehigaj^ actor ling to the recorded plat thereof. Said lots being each 33 feet in width and 99 feet in length, and situated on the west half of the, East half of SEU of Section 36^ Town 3 Northr^lange^^astrMicfii-" gan.

Glenn C. Yelland, F o r n e y for Plaintiff

o Great Peroration Not

Original Wi th Lincoln *Qt-ihe-p»ople, by—the peuple aud

for the people" are tin doeing words of Atraham Lincoln's Gettysburg ad­dress, though there la ao "and" before the preposition "for," the expression reading "of the people, by the people, for the people." m~v~>

A little research brings out tae tact , — v«.. A utue research brings o< Livingston County, Michigan, de- that neither the thought scribed as: South half of South^J^w^^ 0 * 7 Jws_ori f tnal_

the — — — —.,...»» with Iin-

east quarter of Section 22, except- *olB> T h c thought,, which, had beea" ing a strip 30 rods wide off the/ I*^0"1 7 , exPre««<J. was already eld !?*».+ ^„J __J i "j tae time LIB«A1» mui t» r».-t_t ng a strip v w ivuu wiuc on ine/ h« »k* *i '*'.—~" """ »^«««/ wi« tat end and supposed to contain ^ , ^ ^ ¾ 1 ^ ¾ 15 acres of land, AU* «««.,^.^ 1 «»n».- ^* _._._ muumr' "h «w» said.

, The south thirty-eight acres of the

i w £f tr,e southeast Wrt«* of 'Section three ajd the northeast

passed on. He will always be remem-. bered hore for his successful efforts! in putting Pinckney on the basebaHj map and making the Pinckney team one to be feared far and wide. In his time base ball was the leading

as follows, sport and his grea£/ pitching duels \ with such star pitdiers as Curdy of

Howell, Leofflcrvof Dexter and Jack­son of SlockUndge wfTT Tong be re­membered. /The old Pinckney team

•I

auartpr nt tk. Ji. ""'"least "».«'"rifu. / i n e oia nncKney team Section ten i n T I qU*HeT ° f '*S s c a t t e r ^ " ^ ^ r and wide. Some

east, Michlgaii. Dated July 4$, 1932

^ancy J. Wriggelsworth

J Mortgagee

Don W. Van* Inkle Attorney for Mortgagee;

and old Swarthout, Bert, Michael William Roche, outfield.

The funeral was held at the home of S. E. Swarthout Friday at 2:00

15 acres of land. Also conveying a piece of land jtominencing^atjL--

-BoirtlleasT^bTrier of North half of Southeast quarter of Section 22; running thence North 16 rods; thence West tOO rods; " thence South 16 rods; thence East one hundred rods to place of beginning, containing, 10 acres of land, excepting from the East piece thc right of a private road 1 rod in width on East ^ used for no other purpose. AH of said lands being in Town 4 North of Range 4 East, Michigan, and containing 75 acres of land, more

"The people's government, made by the' people, and answerable to the peopT«^--And Iheodort P a r k e r , * noted preacher and abolitionist, ased a similar expression la a speech on "The American Idea," i t the New Bag* land antisTa?ery conrentk>n in Bottom on May 29, 1860. He said: *A de­mocracy—that is a government of all the people, by all the people, for all the people." But the eapresatoa he-longs to Lincoln becaaee he gave tt te the world on a bistorts oceutep

*rsA t* hoi an<1 , B * finished farm. The feet - r ^ TT Eowell said: Tboagh *M the thought

and oft exprest, 'Tie his at last wfee says It best"—Cleveland Plata Dealer.

Ruel Cadwell, lb; Ade Lavey, 2 h i _ _ 0 1 , l e s s-Fred Read and Jack Monks, 3b; ~ MePherson State Bank, Fred Swarthout,s,s, Roy Moran, Har A Michigan Corporation

business Addiess: Howell, Michigan P- "»•. »•>• E.J. Berquist, officiating., j Burial was in the Pinckaey cemetery. J

Mortgagee. Dated: August 16, 1932. Shields k Smith, Attorneys for Mortgagee, Howell, Michigan.

I

Two Headed Calf AVU to Drink With Both Moutfae

Sterling, Colo.—Benny, a two-headed calf owned by the Bndin ranch, Paw-nee valley, ts attracting attention. Benny was bora with two complete heads, each shout normal size and rally equipped. Be sees with all four •yea and drintt . with both of hit BMtfat

"N

> «a* ,f * •

- . -¾ Tr-^TT^T

if':

•a-

BENT EELS FOUND IN MICH.

EeU, planted in Michigan waters a half-century ago, have not entirely disappeared and some 50-year-old specimens still live ip the waters of a lake in Otsego county, according to Dr. Carl L. Hubhs, d i r e c t ^ of the

.-Michigan Inst i tute for Fisheries Re­search.

Specimens of eels taken from Sher-, m a n lake, Kalamazoo county, were believed to have been the last surviv­ing in Michigan waters, until Dr. Hu-b-bs received a specimen taken froift the Otsego lake.

^ TKe spe^mer ro t t a lned fwrrr©tsego lake was submitted by W. H. Green, Elmira township, who planted the eels in his lake 44 years ago.

A half-century ago eels were plant­ed ,in many of the lakes of Michigan. They were brought from the Atlantic coast as "elvers ," the young stage of eels reached when they ascend the streams from the ocean . The eels were not native to the Great Lakes, because they cannot pa^s by Niagara Falls on their upward migration from the sea.

Since eels do not spawn in fresh water, any eels now remaining in Michigan are approaching the half-century mark in age, according to Dr. Hubb.s. The rather small eels occasion­ally seen were not young, but were

The Famous Lafayette Escadrille Honors Its Dead Economy Plan Seen as

Help to Capitalism The capitalistic structure must be

modified but need not be abolrsheu if economic planning is to became mory than a mere theory, says Morris A. Copealnd, profetssor of economics a t the University of Michigan.

Professor Copeland's paper, "Can We have Economic -Planning in the Existing Ord<>r?" was the only one of three papers on the general topic of National Economic Planning read to the meeting that declared Itself in favor of planned economy.

Economic planning would provide f for the budgeting of production, popu­

lation growth, human r-t-sources and consumption on the basis of past records and current conditions, Pro-

' frffflr CQftBlfifld^Lf'dar»-<i, pointing nut,

ALL STATE STREAMS OPEN FOR CLAMMING

French arid American members of the wartime Lafuyo-.te joined prior to the entry of the United States into the war. ;:i their fallen comrades.

)scadrille, famous air uni; which A:,1' •.'••nn aviators s:•< n in l.uxi ui!, Fiar.ce, decor .\lv.<-j {):•.• graves of

NEWSPAPER AD PROVES VALUE

Saginaw Police Ask Radio Station Permit

the mates which do not reach a largfc* size, and which do not migrate far up streams from the ocean.

The occurrence of males in Mich­igan lakes is itself evidence tha t the eels remaining alive today are of the old plantings, he said.

Taxpayers to Make Good On Bad Checks

Newspaper acTv~erU*ing is helping M tf many companies weather the business depression and boosting the 'business of some to new high record, accordin.-j; to a survey made public by the Amer­ican Newpaper Publishers association recently.

Twenty-five companies that main­tained or increased newspaper adver-

Application has b en made to the Federal Radio Ccmm: .sion for a per­manent permit for the Saginaw police

radiu .-taliUM, Whk'll WUs recently cum-" plet'-d here, according to an an-

REPORT SHOWS INCREASE IN

J£I

S t Clair county taxpayers who is­sued over $22,000 worth of worthle&s checks to the late Robert R. Ander-

- — son, county t reasurer , will make good .._the a m o u n t ^ according to a repor t

made to the St. Clair county board of supervisors by Laurie 0 . Telfer, who stated that he has already collected $17,251 of_this. sum^_ Any of the checks not made good will be collect­ed from the Anderson estate.

Make Hen*~Lay Every Day

I show you bow. Complete i n s t r u c t i o n * 25c. A d d r e e e —

. L. KAUFMAN 1811 Locust St., Plttabargb, Penna .

nouncement by Mayor George Phoe­nix, commissioner of health and safety.

Following successful tests com-| pleted over the week-end, L. D. Co- !

man, Jr . , head of the radio division ! of the Highland Park police depart ment, who supervised the construe-'

___ . Further tests made"

.lber of j)er-u-e of nets

i lake • J- indi-;

tising in 1931 showed a drop of only 7 per cent in net income, as comparedVj^0 i Ly i e r e j e ^ t e c j i y

with the "preceding year, wmTe"an w i n b T m a d e ~ l K I S w e e k under the equal number of concerns that cut g U K j a n c e o f Charles Rick, who will act down on their newspaper advertising a s c m ; e f operator for the local .-tation. suffered a 73 per cent decrease in net \ . 0

earnings, it was reported. Through their ability to conce

An increase in .i. • r. u son.; taking tish wiih I he from Michigan's in!an< cated by the May ronv ju.-t issu (1 by the stat*-depar tment

The report which li 'ts the persons convicted of violating con-ervation laws in May, shows 20 per cent of the

that each society ca*h only reconstruct its-elf on the lines of past develop­ments ami that the present economic structure of society can be rebuilt only on the basis of f.orward-looking plans.

The profit system of production would be kept in this capitalistic so­ciety based on <-conotnic planning, Professor Copeland said, b u t t h e prof­its and bonuses would be distributed on a basis of juv t dewrts rather than by more accident. Distribution of profit.-; to investors would be abol­ished altogether, Professor Copeland declared, but managerial bonuses would be distributed on the basis of -ocial efficiency and Ixmefit, he said.

In the same fashion, Professor Copeland declared, th<- concepts o*' prop*-rty,--money and piiiv-n, and fi'i« • dom of contract and competition would be altered, to permit the func tioning of economic society ticnal basis. Corporate reorganisation may be necessary, he declared, in or­der that business may adapt itself to

An order of the department of con­servation closing certain Michigan waters to the taking of mussels was rescinded by the department. Per­sons properly licensed may take mus­sels from any waters in the state.

Parts of several streams w> re closed la-t year and several more were adde'i to the list this season. These waters have been reopened July 1.

L'nder Michigan's new mustsel law, in effect for the first time last year, persons taking mussels are now regu­lated a> to the kind of gear they may ii-T' and minimum1 MJW limits i v t c placed on certain kinds of clams.

The cost of the mussel license to residents js s'A an«i to nonresidents «50. The svoson will close Sept. 30.

— - o •

Gun Lake Protective Croup Lays Its Plans

Ciun Lake Protective a.-oeiation, an organization of cottage owners in Harry, Kalamazoo and Allegan ( utili­ties, hrld it- annual meeting at Street-er's landing recently.

The association maintains rearing ponds on the northeast shore of the lake and plans to release in October :10.000 black bass and 75,000 bluegill tinge Hi rigs. The ponds produced the fia-t -eason 12,000 four-inch bluegills a n d i.SfiO oa.- o f

—o-s i m i l a r s i z e ,

on *ni- Cattle On Increase; Less Beef Is Eaten

'•'ion report conservation; ; i p o j s j t j o n 0 f trusteeship v«*ted with

public interest. Much competition between different units of industry would be eUminated rJie, .said, though ther<- would remain some unit auton-

violators were convicted for netting, o m y i whereas, he- declared, competi-fish illegally.

The report

The number of beef and dairy cat­tle on farms has been increasing for several years while the per capita consumption of beef in five years hae

-J.iropped_ 2iLner„ceILL That is one big reason, economists .-ay, why beef prices have be' n on the downgrade

li-ts 225 per.sons_con-n_ Lay 15 Miles Of NeW [vicU-d of breaking game, fish _ or fur

tion between workers would still be j f o r the past two years. - p e r m i t t e d . _ rsaja»naaasaa»jBjaaaaaaaaaaaaana»a«ni»»

o ^ "

t rate on profitable markets and enable companies to realize immediate sales, news-papers of .the country "have not

retained;

Weaver Island Cable

only "Mt Fifteen milesr of the new Beaver

rffcreased—their MamtCharlFVTjtx- cable line has been prestige as the leading national ad- laid by the United States Lighthouse vcrtioing medium," the rcpoit-6aidL_ tender Capt. Fred Maynard^.

"One automobile concern, increas- Work was begun from the light­ing its newspaper budget 33 per cent, house at Beaver island head, where -boosted its net earnings 40 per -cent ahore^jipjm^extions are made with a

*

DIABETES Symptoms , such as Thirst, Hunger,

.JJBiiujuMiaaa, Itching, and Tired Feel­ing, &an be absotuTety-frecd-trr takfrrsr Di Bit-Ex. Recommended by Dr. J. L.

Van Valkenburg. 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 Wai t . Write Today for a Fret

Sample

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

C h i c a g o , i l l .

in 1931," it was reported. "Another pole line to St. James. After plac-manufacturer, in the highly competi- ing a buoy on the cable, the boat re-tive electric refrigerator market , turned to Milwaukee for additibnal spent $200,000 last year in newspaper cable necessary to reach Charlevoix., space, and dollar sales for the year The old cable, which terminated a t were 460 per cent of sales in 1930." St. JamevS, will be taken up and sal-

Citing llm i n s t a n t uf foui to>baiio vaged foi use in making a Circuit to manufacturers who increased new©- Garden island, Lansing shoal light-paper advertising in 1931, the report house and the north shore. C. F. said tha t three showed an. increase in G l J ' e s s i superintendent of commercial earnings and one a slight decline, service of the coast guard depart-while four companies in the^sme line ment, Green Bay, Wis., had charge of who decreased their aggregate invest- the work. me:nTm-new'^al)el"~spa^e"'"s1rcvweTt^r45-

laws. Of this numher 40 paid fines! or were sent to jail for using nets.

Persons fishing during the closed season ..rivaled_Jn number those using nets. The report shows 31 men con-, victed of fishing in inland lakes before the opening of llie-^us-^easflJL-Iw&n*-ty-six were convicted in court of spearing fish out of season. — The report shows the largest num­ber of convictions recorded by the de­partment for any month ->ince No-

i vember, 1931. The 225 persons listed paid a total of $2,275 in fines and $1,431.35 in court costs. Persoms un-ar>Ie t o p p y *WIP B c^ry^d nn - o f y ^ ^ ^ f o

27,159Holdr4;,M*Stock, Latest figures released by Gem-nil

Motors-Corporation reveal tha t 21,-159 resident ' of Michigan now own 0,636,042 shares of the company's

with—2^7^4-"This—comparers"

per cent earnings.

decline in combined net Puts Cash in Furnace And Wife Lights Fire

stock: stockholders a year ago who held 6,-888.085 shares.

There are now 354,046 sharehold­ers in all, of which 298,319 are in the United States. Delaware, where Gen­eral Motors is incorporated, has 4,376 stockholders, accounting for 16,898,-339 sharevs, while New York's 57,604 ^ockholders control 6,459,139 shares of stock.

The Soap ThaT* Known and Sold The World Around

Cuticura Nothing Better for Daily Use

Price 2&c. Sample free. -XMrm*!-"QiMim^' P*pt ltB.Mal4ia,

Manistee May Have i Municipal Market]

Pheasant Projects in High Schools Succeed

COMPLETE OUTDOOR

LIBRARY SPORTS-BOATING

The First National bank of Pon-tiac is attempting to secure new cur­rency from the gove-rnmemt for one of

Recent reports received from the its clients in return for $500 in bills 33 high schools undertaking the which was burned by mistake in a pheasant rearing project inagurated Pontiac home recently. Only charred by the Michigan division of the Izaak ashes remain, yet the engraving is WUTlon^ague'""in"3Tclttie^that excellent vjf.iblf- plainly on the ashes and bank results are being obtained" S.-veral officials believe the government willjfMi, 16; netting fish"illegally, 49 ; m-thousand pheasants are being hatched redeem it. : t< rf ring with the duties of an officer, and reared for liberation in free A depositor withdrew the money to I ; taking t rout without a-license, 18; range coverts of Michigan through pay taxes. Finding the city tax rolls violation of the burning permit law, thin -work. i i T 0 n o t -completed and so the c i t y ' 4 ; selling game fish, 4; hooting fish.

L a s t year the boys of the Marshall cannot collect its taxes, even though l ; dealing in furs without a licence, and Howell high schools liberated sev- they are now due, the owner placed 2; -hooting phen-ani, 1 ; taking mon­

th* bills in a coffee can and hid them in his furnace for safe keeping.

His wife, not knowing the money was there, burned rubbish in the fur­nace.

o - -

of 1,445 days in jail. Only 16 convictions were reported

for violation of game laws. Twelve b u r l a w vfoltttionywere listed.

The conservation laws violated, to­gether with the number of persons convicted under^each law, foTTow: A_J'resh fruit and vegetable mar-j

Killing deer out of season, 3 ; ille-'ki-t for Mants-tee- seems assured as~a* gal possession of venison, 6; att'-mpt- result of a conference between ten ing to trap heaves, 3 ; illegal posses- representative growers and members sion of beaver hide, 6; u.sing snag of the local Chamber of Commerce. A hook-, 5; carrying gun in game areas resolution was to be presented to the without permit, 6; trapping rau<krats! city commission at its regular meeting during closed season, 2 ; fishing t rout Tuesday. in c l o s e d w a t e r s , 1 8 ; i l l e g a l u s e o f s e t A l a r g e p a r k i n g l o t a b l o c k f r o m

l i n e s , 9 ; n o n r e s i d e n t s fishing w i t h o u t t h e m a i n s t r e e t w o u l d b e u s e d f o r

l i c e n - e s , 4 ; f i - h i n g in i n l a n d l a k e s d u r - b a r t e r i n g purpo . -e . - .

i n g c l o s e d s e a s o n , 31 ; s p e a r i n g o u t o f - - ^ ^ ^ ^ . ^ ^ ^ , ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ 1 ^ ^ ^ . ^

s e a s o n , 2 6 ; p o s - e i o n o f u n d e r s i z e d ' ; "

NOW

" O n e G o o d I n v e s t m e n t U W o r t h a L i f e t i m e o f L a b o r "

in the time to srat ki on the ground floor of a (rood real estate invet t -

men*. Many real bargain* are beinu offered and the Alma ReaJty Syndicate U going to taka ad van*-a t e of the** bi>i>urtmiHjlee, Would you like to «har« In the profits and progreae ot this or-rirKR-nizfttlon ? If you have I3nn or more to ia-v*xt. -ftxwl waft* -an investment p*r excellence, wHte:

M. S. LAWRENCE 4 M ERIC BLDC.

CLEVELAND^ OHIO.

in coverts eral >.undred pheasants near their communities.

With 410 boys undertaking the work in 26 counties this season the supply of pheasants in these sections will undoubtedly be greatly incrnased.

; taking frog-*i:nb<-r from

• among the .h' ;-0" c) v;--

Mftke'mUdm£^€*l*

MAIL ORDER DEALERS' ANNUAL YEAR BOOK

THE p-.iblu-Hiion that '"frve^ «s a mail t.-adc direr't(i:-y and the rr,H^n7.\ne you ivant to read.

S a m j i e Topy, "Or FRED HETTICK, SECRETARY

M a i l Order Dealers' Association Blimarek; North Dakota

k HUNDREDS of ideas, kinks and

wrinkles, very fully illustrated, that increase your enjoyment of

all the old favorites—camping, fishing, swimming, fancy divinp, hunting, trap-ping, archery, games, water sports, etc., dozens'of new arid popwar twi-door pastimes, many of which are new to you, also complete instructions for making your own sport equipment at small cost as well as scores of devices tbaTfurnish thrills and excitement—all in the big 336-page book on

OUTDOOR SPORTS A L L T H t Y t A * ' R O U N D Price, Poitpsld $1.98

Complete plana and instructions that enable the amatawr craftsman to baJld at low cost any type of email boat. Inboard or outboard motor, sauing boat or baad-propatted croft an wtfl «s everythitiff the boat owner wants to know about the operation,' care, repair, maintenance, handling, eqtttpsueut and narigation of b o a t s -all m easily understood form in oae v o t a w — the one book needed by e r w y boatins enthuni-ast. 269 Page*. P ^ u a e t y Uls^atrated. LargeSiae."

Tht Popular M«chanict BOAT BOOK

Prk«, ^otlpiid $2.9w

« C V E I T Y GARDEN CLUB M Mark«t A** ( S. W.

G r u d I U p U ^ MfeUrM

t h a n lejjal l i m i t o f f i sh , <',

ouL o f s e n - o n , l ; t a k i n g

s . a t e l a n d , 2 .

F i f t e e n fish '.)<:- w >

n r o ( K j r t y c o n f i s c a t e d l iy

tionj d e p a r t m e n t , lu a d d i t i o n c o n - e i -

• vMtion offici r • - t o o k fi-o^rr r r o l a t u t s ) \-4 : " i y - , 4 p u n - , 3 4 s e t l i n e - , 2 h e a d ­

l i g h t s . 1 b o a t a n d If) fi.-h - l e . - i r - .

F o u r m e n , a l l in t h e uyjpfT p e i . i n -

.-.dla, \v re p e n a l i z e d f o r s t a r t i n t ; f ire-

v . - ; l i o u t f i r - t o h t a i n i n c a fr i ^ i i t .

T h e h ' a v i e - : . - - en tervc - impo . - d

d u r i n j r t h e m o n t h \vr<: ^ivi -n J e r r y

M y e r s a n d . W i l l a r d ]'n(\n< t t e , MJchi -

y a m m c , c o n v i r - t e d pf il!--^al p o s s e s -; i o n Of b e a v r hid i -. T h e y vvej-e s e n -

24, both wildcat locations. The test! u-nced to serve fiO days in jail. Twen-hole of the Atha Drjlliner Company in • ty-ono beaver h id ' s were confi.-cate<i.

Pure Maple Syrup , $1.50 per gallon

For 15 eallon order $1.25 gallon, F. O. B Clymer, N. Y.

N E C K E R S C O M P A N Y , Clymer, N .Y, Box 14

ENJOY

Outdoor

Sports Th* Year 'Round

th the A id of this Great Book

Smith Petroleum Company is .-ink­ing the Studor No. 1 w 11 in Section 14, Fremont township, Saginaw coun­ty. At prt-.-e.nt it is -hut down at about 1.000 feet. The Michigan and Pacific Oil and (ias Company is -ink­ing a test in Porter township. Midland

- r - r . ^ n t y r ^ ' f t i n n ^.7, ;)s w e l l tis in J a s -

per towrwup, Midland county, .n-ction

NEVERSLIP PULLEY ^ T n n s m l t H m o r e j>riv.fr , mo."«» " u p a c i t y . I ^ n s ln4', v.f»:ir; u n -n f f ' f t e i l l> V w i - M t h i " : r.i> ] >' i". 1« v r i>vnr l i iK f v n r i t - i f i i i » - I . l l i - i i l i n f y o u r t r D u n l e s o r r i e [ > U I 1 P V * w i ' h SKVKRsr.lP. Al! -.y<« $.:,••» and up. Money ln^k (r-iHr>.r,. •*•*•. A-k for N K V P ; R S L I P i.ul-ley« on All ' P o w r Marhiri- v yon buy. \ V r i t e 70 ' f r f * ( |r-wri; :; v«. 1/ tr,<\ prices.

R O S F . N T H A L C O R N HUSKE1R I O , Mi lwi iukee, Wiscf inun

Outd<K>r Sport* the Year 'Round, j i jpt | i i ibl i - ln«l b y l'ri|mliir M<-' h.-uufs I 'n tw, ror»-

t :n u« Jiiindri-iN of ulcus for in w und j>opul:ir f<l>ortH --»ncI pii-t itrie" ; IH wi' l l :\" I l i f n|i| fnvf i r i l j ' * . A t t r a c ­t i v e t o V o n n f i a n d O l d A l i k e .

I'lio itit<./)Mivt' follower nr tif<-w><iHjrt.AWill jiiiprectute tiic V-CMIOI of ^iiKKi'viimt!- t.hiit render tin- iiiimiilt of liiM lin|j|>y :mirc <TIJOV;I I I IP J-'or f\_nxr11>lf: for. the riniiiKT, ii!c;iH that n-tul t/» iniikr- r innplnt one iHiliilrrd |n-r cflil rrjmf.irt.nhlr ;nul ro t .w i i l f l i l . fcir thr fWlirriniiti, many (>r:irtir,i! Kinks in t.ho makliifc-:iiid ran- of rixln ;ihcl Ijicklc riinunl HiK your <iwn hlx nii i 'v for the l iuntrr , nii|»irt.irii 'IctJtilh on the rum .iinl li;i[i<]|iiit- 'if L-UIIM: fur the nwuntner, complete itmtrtiPtioiLs in fancy dlvliiK.

SUMMER SPORT FATIIUSIASTS will In- arnawd at the lar«e :i unlx-r of ffcvicfs that run.ii.il i t i r i l j i - "" i f \ r i t f i n i ' i . i A ipii'i'U) fi-wturn of the iKiok i- fir fart thai it ronl ior i - rirrr,iilote lf)-<lnip-tloriH tluit etiahle any ham] . Jriaii or hoy to luuke i[>orl ilevir-i > or e({iii[jri.cnt al very loivcoxt. ,»S2 Paf l is ' l a r f l r s l / i - . 7 1 10 ln.> D , ; » A C O fit\ ».50 l l l t i s t r u t t o n s . < l o t h H i n d l n e r f l C B # £ . W

>OVELrY UARDEN CLUB 58 rVUrk«t A»»., S. W. I m n d R a p i d * M i c h i g a n

GOLD MINE OF I D E A S for FARMERS Only » 1 .

Resurrection Plant Th* G«nuin« "Rose of Jar icho"

TU«M peculiar p lants are found among the 9ta«s t a d cedars of Palestine. Wh-en' you

Inger?oll township, Midland county, which failed to make oil in the Dun­dee, will be put down to about 5,000 or 6,000 feet. . ]

— o —

Begin Soon On Approaches j To USn Bridge at Hottdnd\

t Work likely wi l lbe started soon on

the concrete approaches to th% new! cement bridge across Black river, on j US31, jus t north of Holland. The!

Hear Natural Gas Pleas

con-

t*i tfee pbmt It will have the appearance approaches will be 40 feet wide, ex-^ ¾ ¾ ¾ ^ ¾ ¾ od2n"u2 tending from Lakewood boulevard, on its h«ndsome fern-^ike foliage, turn green t h e n o r t h t o a b o u t 1 , 0 0 0 f e e t o n t h e and bejrJn to grow in about twenty nrinutes. t h d J rf.h h • rf, Take it out of the water and It euv-la up. *OUlh s u a e . 1 n e D n n , t u n s brown and become* dead again. J t is s t r U C t e d l a s t y e a r . •enable, of apparent ly dying and coming to life again repeatedly, and will keep in Its dead or dormant at*>te for years and re­awaken directly upon being placed in water, tt is an Interesting, curious and most beau­tiful house plant with fine fern-like leavea »f very agreeable fragrance. If you w a n t . "a "table fern" that will prove satisfactory Milwaukee has acquired ttve tinder all condit ions , don't fail to get one

*rWeaMin a shallow 'owl of water, and Is public Corporation. Unofficially it was: from what formerly wa.^ the J i . H. rreatly admired by everyone.

Acquires Alma Plant

Sterling Motor Truck Company of _ ilwaukee has acquired th* motor truck division of the La Frarfce-Re

Hearings will be h< Id before the S:ate Public Utilities Commission in Lan-ing on the application- of two -nrrw" Muskegon corporation^ wbkh propose to transport and distribute natural gas from the Mt. Pleasant area to Muskegon and the interven­ing communities. The companies, both of which are sponsored by John Borden, head of the Old Dutch Refin-i ing Company, are the Michigan Nat-I ural Pipe Line Company and the West Michigan Gas Company,

o-

Fennville Pickle Plant Will Expand1

George G. Burleigh, manager of I the local M. StefTen Co. plant, hasi been notified to have the equipment

f i ( r< * !:.'• rno.»t renuirk alilc tinok < * er laj l i l i - lu ' i l ,of t.'.rna r-, .-.i>« one au l l io r i l ' . I ! i ' r< iri irk; 11.1.• i f the r x t r e t u r p r a e t i i a l riniurr- <•< i t - eonten i " , iii the M'nlr> rnnpi of

„i i iTXa:iui4i^.L* ' " " . i r e i l , in the wor l i l o) i l lux-t r a t i o n * it < oTTTTrm*, attd in the < x t r i i n < l y low (iriee

861 Discoveries One rli«eoverv ni i tnft i rnrn mnkrr" h fr>r1nnc. H e r e are W l «4 the.in, ; tn>.f .nr of wh ich ^ t a y he of tniinv d o l U r i v n t u r to you Theik . dio-eovericT- m a y tx~ elru«i6o<I as I O I I O W B :

t.W f o r t h r f a r m nhnp

3S OM fcnc ln f t 98 on auto, truck,

and tractor 61 on farm bui ld-

In ft* 3* o n f i e l d m a ­

chine* 4* o n ( O i c t e i s

2J o n o r c h a r d - work

23 on M l n t l n i 15 on live stock

25 o n M e - t r i m ' work

7 oat graenboMse work

22 ow fa rm tools M on fta.ilea work 34 on poulwry 17 oat tate laws

144 on ktoutebold keipa

79 o « mlsceUane-o*», f a r m work

la o a s j u a t l n t t , f l a k - l a t . a n d t r a g p i a *

—UPA e\*fcy plan has been tested and found to be ii nmnev-navrr. Moat ol toe article* are Illustrated attli photograph* or orawlnm The device denerlDM are easy to make beeanse of tnene picturm aad clear desertptior*.

w83 lllu»tratlon»

10c each, 3 for 25c, Poetpaid

NOVELTY GARDEN CLUB $8 Market A » r 3. W.

6rss»4 stayewe. I f feki fM

understood that the ne t current as­sets acquired hy the Sterling firm ex­ceeded $1,000,000. It ha* not been decided, officials said, whether the Alma plant operations transferred to Milwaukee.

Suppose you could live your life 417 times V •« you roukl fortw ahfwt of other far men* in a wify thM noni<t irtaure you Hheral aod steady nroflts! 1')..« i)i.ok enHi>i<* yon to <lo tlic n«vt i^M Uiiu« >on BIKV h*v* the exparteneea 01 41 / Uvea—experv-tfx*+ ot mtfAMmfu) liirrirtTx H« toKl hy thernoelven- hnefly. c*ear4>. orirnpietehr. And BBMV OI taeae

, »rwfTl»nM>s ttrcllltwtTHtitl vtth xrenratf dm »u»ir«' linutrtiir 27(1 pj«fW cfaoek full ol mean—683 cry aval etSwMOiwtrjrtlofiK. JUM, toir.K oi \ue vnlue to j-oul

moved. A new building will be [ ^ ¾ ^ * * n d $ l and th*b*ok wUlb* mmttHI f***r*«tfimld at Fennville to hou.«e the addit ional , machinery. The StefTen company nasi

Hall pickling plant at Portland re-

would be | been in the cider and pickle businessi N O V E L T Y G A R D E N C L U B

{for many yean' 58 Market Avenue. S. W. Grand Rapids, Mlolv

V

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JL

The Pinckney DUpatch Wednesday, August 17, 1932

s.

TUNE IN Wed...?..... P. M. Goodyear Radio Program

TRADE your thin risky tires

for new GOODYEAR

ALL-WEATHERS

r s i c

LOCAL AM** OUUAL 1

GOODYEAR TIRES

i

•+-i

- ^

'*<•%.

•*

Mr. and Mrs. Louis Coyle, Ethel and Ernest Motyesa, Henry Skor-nerski, Charles Zelaskine and Chea­ter Kobak attended the Donahue-Coy le reunion at Flint Sunday. ,

Mrs. Emma Bently Murdock and ( daughter, Phyliss, of Corunna spent

Sunday at George Bianda. .UJ. cu.u J i o , luxx Van peSauu ox

jJeuoiL, i>iis. unesier baiiu ana sou, JUCKIC, oi r eu tou were entertautieu *u LUL Jionie oi Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Campbell last Wednesday.

r

GOOD USED TIRES $1.00 UP - EXPERT TIRE VULCANIZING

1 7 Yean the F I R ST-choice tire! GOODYEAR At Every Price the Greatest Value I

Proof: Millions More people buy Goodyears

Latest Lifetime Guaranteed

GOODYEAR

Super twist Cord Tir

4.40-21

T u b e « ! «

4.50-2«

$^79 • " • ' I n Pr».

Tubeese 'laPr*.

Tub««t«

4.75-1»

so Eoeti

'inPtt. Tube «4«

4.75-20

-AM EoeH ^ • r i n P n .

Tube v i a

5.00-19

A C o t l t 1 ^STlaPti,

T u b a t i . M

5.0O-2O

$^SO ^ r i a P n

Tuba f t . 14 InPn.

Tube Ot. l*

These Prices Are for Cash A Is 0 t h es e_axi d l a r g e r sizes in the famous

GOODYE AH PATHFINDER Supertwlst Cord Tires

• i X a a ^ ' P U M " Of the 6 or 8 layers of Supertwlst Cord in this (.oodyear, r w m l n n n t r . i n l r n m \ head to bead —fhey a r e r e a l l y c o r d breaker atripa and that's what w i call t h e m a l t h o u g h aome tire makers c a l l t h e m c i tra plies.

4.40-21

InPn. Tube $1.03

454-20

InPn. T u b « « f «

4.50-21

$£27 • ^ i n P r s .

T u b « a i . » »

4.75-19

%M Each ^ in Pn.

Tube St. 17

When new tires cost so little* more than ever it pays to bfay the best. Who says Goodyears ARE best? The people who use

they bt tires "say it—they buy more Goodyears than any other kind —they have been doing that for seventeen successive years . . . If that isn't enough proof, come in—we can actually demon­strate the REASONS WHY you get more for your dollars in Goodyears.

Something New out of the Sky!

Ask us to show you the

NEW GOODYEAR ~zCTmnrTOTE

" R I D I N G is like FLYING" —on the ••Super-Soft

Goodyear AIR-WHEEL tires

Come in for demonstra t ion^

Heavy Duty Truck Tires

" Dr. C. B. CarunerTahd wife of Lansing were Sunday callers a t the home of Mrs. Eliza Gardner.

Russell Glaapie of Cheboygan spent last week and the week end with Clare Miller-

Sunday supper guesta of Mr. and Mrs. W. C Miller were Dr. and Mrs. Robert Bird and daughter, Joan, of Wayne, Mrs. Sarah Baughn, Mr. and Mrs. Karl Baughn and family of Por­tage Lake

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kennedy and sons of Detroit are spending the week with Mr, and Mrs. Patrick Ken­nedy.

Mr.and Mrs. Louis Clinton and fannlyVMr". and Mrs. C. J. Clinton and son, Ralph, spent Sunday with Mr and Mrs. Henry Ruen near Farm-ington.

Miss Rita McNeil of Lansing is spending the week with Mr. and Mrs- W. H Meyer.

Sunday dinner gueists of Mr. and Sirs': K. G. Sigie'F"were Dr. C . M. Sigler and family of Muskegon and M ^ i n d Mrs. Geo. Sigler.

) THE FINAL CARE The final'car* of the one* to weJLJcngd^ao

deared and so close to our hearts, should be as tend* er, thoughtful and thorough as b the days when they were with as. It is more than appropriate, more than a custom and a duty. It is a sacred prv livege. The final care should be placed in careful hands, where sympathy and understanding are combined with every high quality of the profession and the services conducted with im­pressive solemnity.

P/H.'SWARTHOWT — FU N E RAfc* H O M & * ~

.4

V

_PHONE NO. 3 9 MICHIGAN

r WAPTS, FOR SALE. ETC

FOR S A L E l - T h r e e Holstein heifers about two years old. All due in Oct- { ober*

George Parker , Pinckney, Mich., R. 3.

FOR SALE or EXCHANGE—Guer­nsey bull, 18 months old, is right.

J. P . Kishum, R. 1 Hamburg. Mich.

• •• •

FOR SALE: All kinds of A-l wood. L. G. Devereaux.

FOR fciALE or EXCHANGE. bore, 9 months old. Is right.

J . P. Kishum, R. 1, Hamburg, Mich.

Lost—A leather note book contain--——— i m g several receipts and also separate Jersey | f r o m n o t e b o o k a p t i r o f c h i i , j ' 8

glasses. Finder notify G. M. Foster, 511 Charles St., East Lansing and receive reward.

FOR SALE__New White seed wheat.

potatoes. Also

Geo. Greiner

o -"^-4. Forner and- family, Mrs. Ella

Ncwinan and Leonard Devereaux of Vpsilanti we re Sunday dinner guests at the L. G. Devereaux home. Char­ley Forner remained for a few days viMt in Pinckney.

30x5 * 4 K 32X6*5 Each InPn.

AINFJELLV CHURCH NEWS TELEPHONE SERVICE PH1LATHEAS ENTERTAINED

TO EGYPT

Rev. Clark will preach his last eer-inon here before Conference next Sun d a y - mo rn ihg. "

C. K. Meeting next Sunday cven-41ig -tt- ~ :'<i0 S u b j w l Qua l i t i e s •tif-^L

Christian. Leaders-Mildred Burt. I The home made in? cream social

was well attended. The; proceeds were . 7 7(>0 clenr.

The Junior S. S. Class, Mrs. Lelah Grosshans, teacher, met with Lois Caskey Thursday afternoon. Ice cream was served.

Friday evening the Loyal Workers met with Mr .und Mrs. James Caskey Ice rrcnm and cake

Telephone service to Egypt was

AT ROGER'S HOME

l'he 1'hilathea Class of the Cong-

Several dependents oi the Patrick Kelly family met Sunday at Newport for a day's outing. They elected offi­cers and will make the gathering a i annual affair. Max Kelly of Detroit was chosen president, Mrs, M. E. McQuillan, vice president and Mrs. F4w4n R-p#frfi, sec, -aftd treas7 "'" -

FOR S A L E _ H u b e r bean thresher in A l condition. Also Blizzard silo filler Inquire at Shirey Garage

FOR SALE__CettCTA blocks, 6, 8 and 12 inches in thickness. At my f a m near State Sanatorium.

-Geo*- E» Dailey,— Howell, Mich.

WANTED—Washings to do. Mrs. WmTTJarrdw

WHEN BUSINESS WAS GOOD

Recent laws have iimue it almost impossible to start a private bank. Not long ago all one had to have was the inclination and enough artistic ability to paint a sign with the word "Bank" on it.

FOR SALE OR TRADEL_A horse and 2 year tld Holstein bull. What have you?

W. H. Euler.

WANTED__To work on farm by day or n o n t h . Geo. Dodar

Heggison or John Monks farm

FOR SALE_Chickens for eating, wt. about 5 lb. each.

Doody & Sheardy Lee

FOR « A L E _ _ l - y r . old sow witn 6 3 weeks old pigs. $20,00. 4 mi. west of Pinckney on M-36, 3 mL north to E*ffernan Farm on Sheets Lake, R. R. No. 3

Ctes. Stoyikal

AUTO ACCIDENT SUNDAY

A bad auto accident occured on M 36 near the farm house of Louis Shehan about 9:30 p. m., Sunday,

An old man who had made his pile I August Mussiloff, his wife and two in private banking and who has since I

inade-a^ailablfe--l-to--Michigan-—-people.j.j^gatioual S*—S - w=aj» xnry -pltiasantiy^

and other telephone users of the [ ''Utertained on Wednesday, August

country' Monday, August X, accord­ing to announcement by R. Van Meter, manager in this area for the Michigan Pell Telephone company.

The service embraces Cairo and I

10. by Mrs. Lola Rogers and daugh­ter, MaHlda, at their charming home on Main St. About a score of mem­bers and friends responded to roll call with jokes and quotations. Mrs,

Alexandria and is available to all Bell and Bell-connecting telephones; In North America. A three minute conversation between any Michigan point and either of the Egyptian cities costs $30, and $13 for each ad-

1 ditional minute. '_ .

Holmes entertained the W. ', ^^P1 Ls cached over the regular chan-

Mr M. S. last Wednesday afternoon. The! topic was "Young People."

Jack Donahue S. S. met witn Dona j King' Saturday evening for their reg­ular business meeting and good time.

There was -;o preaching SPrvicn here Sunday as Rev. Clark was sick.

W f

Mr. and Mrs. T'' guests Inst

"O*

trans-Atlantic radio telephone 1 nels operated by the American Tele-I phone and Telegraph company and

the British post office, and a radio circuit between London and cairn. The distance from Detroit to Cairo is about 7,000 miles. Cairo, with a population of 1,100,000, has some 17,500 telephones, and Alexandria,

.Josephine TTafita.

S. fl. Reynolds of . . , Wednesday of M J s j J - W f t ^ ^ ' - 0 0 0 ^ ° ^ . ^ ^ 1 2 ^ 1 ^ ° ^

i Euler presided over the business i meeting which was precoeded by singing and repeating of the Lord's prayer.The social hour was in charge of Mrs. Mabel Isham and Miss Clella Fish. Mrs. Meda Henry gave an a-musing reading, " When Hilda Has •«-Jlf-.;i.ii,." i\nA Miss .Inym i,-V>->m w •

cited Kipling's "Gunga Din," and sang "Abide with Mc," accompanied by Mrs. Rogers at the piano. Other interesting features were readings by Mrs. Mae Daller and Mrs. NYuie Johnson(Kdgar Guests 'Old Trouble' and Mrs. A. J. S t a n W ' s "Wl.at Con­stitutes Succfss/'^L also echoes from a trip to Niagara Falls, which Mrs. Rogers a:vl Miss Rogers had recently

The successful winner in.

*T

to become a banker. "Well ," he said, " I didn't h^ye much else to do, so I

j-rented an—empty- «feore-b«41dfng a n d

o THE BALD EAGLE R E T U R N S

1'or many years a pair of Bald)painted the word bank on the win-Lagles spent the summer months mjdows . The first day I was open for the vicinity of Portage Lak% ju*t east of Pinckney. They nested in a t r i e on the Thomas Birkett farm. Some ten y< ars ago the female bird was shot by the late Charles Carrol who claimed it was taking his chick ens. The male bird has reappear-,1 at intervals since then and has anpar-j ently never remated. This year it has been in that weeks. It has

business a man eame in and deposit­ed a hundred dollars with me; the second day another man dropped in and deposited two hundred and fifty; and so, by George, along about the third day I got confidence in the bank and put in a hundred myself!"

We swiped the above from Clyde Sibley's Springport Signal.

vicinity for several

children of near Gregory were com-re t i red . Wim n^Vod hrvw VIP happpnnH | i n g w e s t and a car Hrivpn hy .Tnrk

Butler and J. B. Buckley, J r . of Fowlerville was going east. The two cars crashed and the Musiloff car, « Ford, Model T coupe, was literally smashed to pieces. The Butler car, a Ford, model A roadster, had a wheel broken off and sustained other dam­ages. Mrs. Musiloff was badly scalded by water from the broken radiator and the children were cut and bruised. The others escaped serious injury. Mrs. Musiloff and two child­ren were taken to the Pinckney San­itarium for treatment.

an e n o r m o u w i n 2 ipread wrt.eh IF estimated to ho e 'cr"

| nilllllllllHlllimiini:uniiiiiimiuinitimiimitin itiifiiiiiiiiinniiHaiitMqiinttm

-ix feet and takes off in the manner of an airpiane. Old timers ehrm it has beei. . een here almost yearly for S o pasL twenty-five years.

«H

GROCERY SPECIALS

Cherries, No. 10 can . Salad Dressing, qt. Mustard, qt. Bran Flakes ~. Shredded Wheat Ol ives^ oz jar Pork & Beans Defiance, 4 cans Roma Coffee

45t 45c 23c

17c TOC 10c 10c 19c 19c

. ..... .,utton guessing contest vn.' Miss I Betty Schaefer of Albion, an 1 the I states abreviation test was won by

Miss Joyce Tsham and Mrs. Kiina Kuler. A picture was shown from th> Baraca-Philathea News, showing the recent World wide convention group on the White House grounds with two H. H. presidents, Herbert Hoo­ver and Henrietta Heron, standing side hy side, the convention slogan being/ 'Home to the heart of the nat­ion, forth to the heart of the world." After the pot luck lunch and friendly

j chat, the class group adjourned to meet in September with Mrs. B. G. Isham.

Next Sunday's lesson fr~m F ^ d u s 33 :7-1 fi is "The* Tent of Meeting." The general thought : \ Becoming a-ware of God." All Community wo­men and visitors welcome.

Established 1865

Over Si>:ty-fhe Years Banking

Incorjoi-ated 1915

u Safety

dark' s We deliver goods at all timet

For County Treasurer

FRED BERRY Republican Ticket

Primary Tucs., Sept 13

State Bank H jwell, Micb.

Surplus $70,000.00

The Right Travel Cheek

Take the first train to unnecessary

trouble by providing yourself with

travelers' checks when you start on

your vacation trip.

Our travel checks are self identify­

ing and can be cashed readily in

Hong Kong, Paris, Oshkoah or any­

where in the civilized world. —

Liberal interest paid on Savings

Books nnd Certificates of Deposit

Your business always appreciated.

McPherson State Bank

f All Dining Room Furniture I Drastically Reduced

i 1

Rich looking yet conservative, these dining room suites are just what you've always dremwd o i - = a t i

f e n c e s that you've NEVER dreamed of and probably s will never see again. | 8-piece WALNUT DINING SUITE, 1 usually $139.50 $79.50 I Extension table has leaf that folds up in center of 1 S table. * 3 >pieceJ5AK SUITE, usually $85.00 S4frflO^ | 8-piece WALNUT SUITE, usually 89.00 $49 00 • | 6-pkeeOAK DINETTE SET, usually $99.50 $55^0 | 6-pie*e CHERRY DINETTE SET, Table, buffrt

| ^ e c e W A ^ N U ^ ^

I Third Floor p h o n e

PERCY ELLIS ' GUSliSSMAW Uce»*jd Mater Plumb*

nomWni »ifc Hsttiag "~ We Do Plumbirf » d Hertliif ^ AH Kln«U We H*ndJ« Electric Wmm, Septic Tank. « d Water P f ^

Tnki «04 Washington H o w 0 f t ^

Kont eio Repaid Work of AD Mta*

AUSflONEftft

Fam Sale^ a Specialty Pinckney Phone 19F11

Mr. and Mrs.. Jesse Henry and son, Gerald, were Sunday dinner guest* of Mr. and Mra. L. J. Henry near Plainfield. , _

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