ijiiuUno ispattij - pinckneylocalhistory.orgpinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1941-11-26.pdf ·...
Transcript of ijiiuUno ispattij - pinckneylocalhistory.orgpinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1941-11-26.pdf ·...
"Ww?..
O U R M O T T O l&; " A i i THE
N K W 3 T H A T ' S FIT T O k'RINT ijiiuUno Vol. 58 Pinckney, Livingston Couflky, Michigan Wednesday, Nov. 26. 1941
Dec. Term To Joe Hess Killed Open Monday I While Hunting
72 Cat** A r e Lis ted, of Which 26 A r e P e t i t i o n s for Ci t i zensh ip , 12
Divorce a n d One Cr imina l
J o e Hess, F o r m e r P inckney i t e , Is Fa ta l ly Shot While Deer H u n t
ing Last W e e k
M T h e December t e r m of cou r t is fert to open on D e c e m b e r 8.
h e r e a r e a b o u t 13 j u r y cases,
'Die communi ty was shocked to learn last F r iday of the t r ag ic
dea th of Joseph L. Hess of E a s t t h r e e non - ju ry cases , 18 chancery | Lans ing at the ear ly ase a n d 12 divorce .
The sole c r imina l case is t he m u c h pos tponed one aga ins t t h r e e Lansing neg roes cha rged w i th commit t ing a r o b b e r y n e a r B r i g h t o n las t New Yea r s . S ta te S e n a t o r H a r r y Hi t t l e is the a t t o r n e y for the colored men .
T h e r e a r e 26 seeking ci t izenship. T h e y a r e : M a r g a r e t Root , Leonard -us S p r a n g e r s , Signe Mat i lda Olson, Tho rwa ld Sorenson , E m m a Sofie Sorenson , Adel f ina Sak, K a t h e r i n e E l i zabe th W a s m u n d , Ca the r ine Mar t in F lo rence Myr t l e Macki , Jos eph Eu lbok , Wa l t e r Wil l iam Granger , Somonea Owsiak, M a r g a r e t H e n n i n g , Ju l i a A r o n , Guy Leving-ton But le r , Amy Beryl Young , Lyman Nelson Miller, Ma t t i e Young , M a r y Longcor , Vi lma Bokros , I rene Ca rney , M a r t h a J a n e Michaels , Ot-tilie Be r tha Weiss , Chessley F ranc i s M u r r a y , J a n e Amel ia Griff in , and F rede r i ck De lmar Ker shaw.
The issue of fac t j u r y cases a r e : Russell Smi th vs Rudolph Van Val-k e n b e r g , a p p e a l ; Associa ted Discount Corp. vs R a y m o n d Sa lmon a p p e a l ; Commonwea l th Loan vs John Hall , appea l .
The t respass on the case sui ts , most ly au to acc iden t d a m a g e cases , a r e : Haro ld McMacken vs George V a n H o r n , Madel ine McMacken vs George V a n H o r n , Luc ia D r e y e r vs E a s t e r n Michigan Moto rbus , Haze! Marsh vs Newell Newton and John Gray , Ronald Marsh by g u a r d i a n vs Newell Newton and J o h n Gray , Eugene Marsh vs Newell Newton a n d J o h n Gray .
C o n d e m n a t i o n of p r o p e r t y : Ci ty of Howell vs H u g h M c P h e r s o n et al
A s s u m p s i t : Wm. Bain vs J o h n Wr igg leswor th and O r a Koch ; Gen. Ex. I n s u r a n c e Co. v s* G r a h a m Downing .
Repe lv in : H a r t l a n d A r e a Hard ware vs R o b e r t Hoover .
A t t a c h m e n t : Don M a n vs Vic to r Geer and W a r d Tracy .
C h a n c e r y : Livingston C o u n t y Mutua l F i re I n s u r a n c e C o m p a n y vs Dayle K e t t e r and w i f e ; J o h n F a d d e n vs Marion A n d r e w s E l i zabe th P a y n .
P a r t i t i o n : Ra lph Wigg ins Casey Wiggins et al .
I n j u n c t i o n : Chris R e b e r e t al. vs Mer le Cranda l l , a d m i n i s t r a t o r .
Qu ie t T i t l e : R icha rd Kinney vs W m . Slyfield et a l . ; George Hill e t al . vs L y s a n d e r S e a r s ; Gleason S t a g e vs Daniel S h e r w o o d ; Lill ian Gates vs J o h n S w a r t h o u t et a l . ; Au-n e S t e w a r t vs Solomon A d a m s et a i . ; T h o m a s and Viola K a n e vs W m F a u l k et a l . ; Cor T r u b y vs J o h n W r i g h t e t a l ; -Lottie Whi ted vs Thomas Fu r fo son e t a l . ; Thomas a n d Bern ice F e e n e y vs J o h n A. Wel l s et a l . ; J a y H o r t o n vs W a l t e r C r a n e et a l . ; Howard Bohn vs Wal t e r S t e v e n s ; Millie B u e k vs Olney H a w k i n s .
T h e d ivorce cases a r e : Sidney vs ••~ Ida Ly t t l e , Allen vs Ka th l een Smail
I r e n e vs Al f red Piehl , Leo ra vs J e s se McDanie l s , Lo t t i e vs J o h n Brook-h a m , E d n a vs S t i r l ing Bradshaw, E d i t h vs J o h n Comiskey, Alex vs I r e n e V a r a d y , L a w r e n c e vs Virg inia F o r s y t h e , J o h a n n a h vs P e a r l B l a n c h a r d , George vs A n n a Belle G i t r e , E r n e s t vs Opal Fu lke r son .
of 4U wi th years . He was deer h u n t i n g
a pa"*.y n^ar Seney, in n o r t h e r n M i c h i g ' n when a gun , be ing un loaded by a companion , R o d g e r Rein-h a r t ?f J ackson , was acc ident ly discharged, the slugs caus ing the dea th of Hess He leaves a wife a n d t h r e e small d a u g h t e r s .
J o s e p h Hess c a m e to t 'mckney us a homeless boy a t an ear ly age and lived f i r s t at the home of Miss Dede Hinchey. La te r , he res ided a t the Rollin W e b b home fo r a t ime . T h e n he was received into t h e home of Mr. and Mrs. F r a n k Mowers where he was r e g a r d e d a n d t r e a t e d as a son a n d given an educa t ion . WThen a voung n u n , he v e n t to Lans ing whe re he became a cont r a c t o r and p la s t e re r and buil t m a n y houses in tha t ci ty. He was wel l k n o w n in this sect ion a n d leaves m a n y f r iends to gr ieve his u n t i m e l y dea th .
The fune ra l and bu r i a l were held at E a s t L a n s i n g M o n d a y a f t e rnoon .
L e r o y Shank land , 4 1 , of A n n A r b o r was also a deer h u n t i n g vict im. He w a s shot n e a r H u r l b u r t , Mich., last Thu r sday , when Albe r t V o e r g e r t of S a g i n a w mis took him for a deer . The bul le t e n t e r e d his r igh t shou lder and p e n e t r a t e d th lung . H'e died in the N e w b e r r y genera l hospi ta l .
He was born J u n e 12, 1900 at Salem and was a sh ipping clerk for King-Seeley Corpo ra t i on a t A n n Arbor . He leaves his wife , fo rmer ly Mable Dixon, and five chi ldren r a n g i n g in age from 18 to 5 yea r s . The funera l will b e held f rom t h e Muehl ig F u n e r a l H o m e , A n n A r b o r , with Rev. Harold DeVr iees officiating. Burial will be in Beth lehem ceme te ry .
ispattij OUR S U B S C R l F T t O N R A T S IS
91 .25 P E 3 Y E A R
No.
iMich. Mirror State JNews
A n w E f f e c t i v e P r i c e C o n t r o l M e a
s u r e M u s t H j v e C o - j p e r a t i o n
o f B o t h A g r i c u l t u r e a n d
L a b o r
U R R t N - T O MM E N I " B e Ye Edi tor" ' *
Acco rd ing to A u d i t o r General Vein BJ-OVMI, the def ic i t of the > ,diu of Michigan which once reach-
c Lan.-ing' - Old man " H i Co.-t-of-
l . iv ing" is again appear ing in Michigan headline.-?.
F a n n e r s are insisting on. a fa i r deal on agr icul tura l pr ices , while the consumer.- are beg inn ing to .•.Tumble abou t the m o u n t i n g food w i r e s . It 's the old , old story .,1 o u n t r y vs city, f a n n e r vs labo \
p roduce r \ s consumer -- ea 'h with :.
f f e ren t viewpoint and logical! ' .-o. Only this t ime we have a genuine t h r e a t c f inflation which wott 'd ie- d i sas t rous to all.
Ke n . i
ixr^ND LIKE THESE EARLV SETTLERS IV£ ARE A&AOY TO DEFEND OUR FREEDOMS, AND WHAT WE 'VE
&U<LT AND EARNED AND SAVED.
Mean d
vs
W H A T ' S T H E S E C R E T
George Richmond, who lives just over the line in Unadi l la township , and who has ce lebra ted his Mith b i r thday , is still hale and hea r ty despi te his years and still able to do a good days work. Monday he a r r i ved a t the home of a ne ighbor , Char les Pub i s , as the l a t t e r was d r a w i n g c o m stalks and helped to pitch off two loads wi th the ease of a youngs te r , The f i rs t t h ing Mr. Richmond knows he will he sought a f t e r by the heal th magaz ines as to his secre t of l iving to a good old age with his facul t ies uni rqpai rexl
Ro\. J.E. Cook Passes Away
Catholic Franc i* IV.urphj R
F o r m e r Pinckney Pas to r Away at His Home in Bur l ing
ton. Burial at Athens .
J
• p a « a e *
>ok, • >',', died at lie v. Joseph E. LOOK, •>, Bur l ington , Mich., on
a re his wife, f
Arbor,
his heme in T h u r s d a y . Surviving a son Arkel l , ass is tant m a n a g e r o
hospital , Ann Mrs. Retha Drown
cinte Woods , and a son . ' -o six grand-l a ;
N O T I C E
T h e P r e s i d e n t ' s c lub of King* D a u g h t e r s will hold t h e i r annua l C h r i s t m a s p a r t y a n d exchange of g i f t s on Monday , December , firs^, a t t h e h o m e of Mrs . E . Clyde Dunn i n g n e a r P inckney . P o t luck dinn e r a t one o'clock. Devotional.s and p r o g r a m in cha rge of Mar ion and Iosco c i rc le .
Mrs . Ga l lup , P r e s .
. CONG'L C H U R C H N O T E S
Communi ty Chicken S u p p e r on T h u r s d a y , Nov. 27 th from 5:0() to 8:00 p.m. (See pape r for a n n o u n c e m e n t ) .
George SokoUky, o n e of t he bri ll i an t men of ou r age , has given us a very keen analys is of ou r Wor ld p rob lem in the fol lowing s t a t e m e n t : " T h e essent ial p rob lems of our gene ra t i on is t o f ind God, the ta lk is t o l ea rn to p r a y . And unt i l we have l ea rned tha t t h e r e is l i t t le hope for a r e s t o r a t i o n of decency and jus t ice , we have become p a g a n and m e r e p a g a n people a r e easily, mis led ."
In the face of wor ld condi t ions , Mr. Sokolsky gives us someth ing to t h ing abou t . Come to c h u r c h a n d l ea rn to p ray and cu l t iva te t h e God consciousness . A h e a r t y welcome awai t s all who worsh ip wi th us. Come wi th us and we will do thee good. (
Fami ly Night will be held Monday evening , Dec. 1, in t h e Comm un i t y Cong' l church d in ing rooms
N O T I C E
E a c h fami ly who m a d e one or m o r e m a t t r e s s e s las t s p r i n g is ent i t l ed to e n o u g h m a t e r i a l a n d cot ton fo r a comfor t e r . Th i s ma te r i a l is a t t h e h o m e of L. J . H e n r y a n d can b e had by cal l ing f o r it th i s w e e k o r nex t .
L. J . H e n r y C o m m u n i t y C h a i r m a n
the Univers i ty and 0 daugh te r , of G: o se Ross, in V. chi ldren.
The funeral was held at AtTiens,
Mich. , Saturday af te rnoon, Rev.
l ic-nia officiat ing. Rev. Cook was born in St. Marys
On ta r io , and served as pas tor in a n a m h e r of Canadian churches . He came to Michigan in 11)20 and be- , came pas tor of the P inckney g rega t iona l church. When it federat e d with the Methodist church he r ema ined as pastor . He was here abou t five years , du r ing which t i m e he took a p rominen t pa r t in f r a t e rna l and public a f fa i r s . He was p a s t o r at Athens for ten years a f t e r leaving P inckney .
D E C E M B E R J U R Y LIST
The following a re t h e Jurymen d r a w n for the December t e rm of
c o u r t : C o n w a y Roy Benjamin Deerf ie ld Lowell Carey Genoa A n n a Milet t Greet Oak Hi ld re th Bakkus H a m b u r g Gladys Shannon H a n d y Rolla Smith H a r t l a n d Melvin F rank l in Howell Ci ty Reba Sargison Howell' Township Wende l ine Sorg Iosco F r a n k Noyce Mar ion Guy Garlock Oceola Henry Vei th P u t n a m Louise Glenn T y r o n e Dan Elston Unadi l la Gladys Bowen R n g h t o n City F r a n k Henn ing
Sunday M a ^ e s at S and 1 > ' ') :i.Yttrtr~rs*-thc f r f>r -Sunday- t r f / . - 1 -.. at a: d the opening of the 1 ioly Season of Advent , which pre< em s i.;- Feast of Chr is tmas . The w i -k
:i\" .Masse.-- are at * a.m. Novcna devotion.- are al 12:1 •> and 7 :•' ') p.m. on Friday •-. Thi- i,- the fii. t Fr iday of the Mb Xovena. Sunday i- the 1,1,11 Sunday of the mom h and therefore it r- general Con -' .uii 'on Sunday in devotion t() t ; e <a ;ed Heart for the in tent ion of t-e ace and the conversion of .-ou .
Flint'.- Mayor W. 0 . appoin ted a cc mmit tee l"> s tudy l'cod ami rent prices in Fl int . The s tudy will seek to de te rmine w h e th e r pi : ••• .ncreases in Flint a re p r u p o r t i n a l e to increases elsewhere. The committee comprises citizens r e p r e s e n t i n g L'rocers, housewives, meat dea le r - , labor, r ea l to r s , and the city government .
As everyone knows well, living costs have been c l imbing s teadi ly . More than two- th i rds of the increase in living cost.* have he< :i due lo higher food pr ices , a f ac to r which is being utili/.ed by labor in :ts demand for h igher wages . Thus 1 iie familial" spiral of inf la t ion is a s ight , and there r e m a i n s only t h
: r g u e m e n t about which came first , the v'j:^ or the chicken, l abor costs
r commodi ty prices. Pr ice Cont ro l
Alber t S. Goss, special r e sea rch advi.-or for the G r a n g e , de-ckered hefoie the farm o rgan iza t ion ' s 75 th annua l convent ion in W o r c h e s t e r , Mass . : "Unless someth ing is done , n e r i c i U u r c will lose out in the price control legislation now pend ing before Congrc - s " .
In o ther word.-, the f a r m e r wants :he,ri,u,ht to get h igher prices if the .- ity- worker* re ta ins t h e r igh t of higher wages.
If '.here is to he price c o n t r o '
i-U U . e
r a p i d l y
: i o: i. .;'
. . , 1 . 111 I .
1 , / , . ( - .
' ' . - ! • i l l
f igure of $ ; J : J , 0 0 U , 0 U U , is dwind l ing and. ha* fal len 1 , 7 O ' J , 4 U J on J u n e 30 to
o,uoi),0u0 at the p re sen t II.i,- i- due to a con t inued In- collection of sales t axes
anil lajuor l a x e ; . Year.- ago when Hie main suppor t of the s t a t e was t;;e p rope r ty tax , r educ t ion of t h e m l mil vsitli any a m o u n t of speed would h a \ e been impossible . Now, . itti tiie j t a t e col lec t ing the g r e a t e r
par t of the tax from new sources reci mly tapped , mo m i i y
appe
•1 a n y t h i n g
,.r.- to be possible.
,i i De
l a t e o
account - aud i te
i'en-nt draf t boards in the Michigan a r e having the i r
d by s t a l e men . This
1 bv the fact tha t so many or r e j e d
it in many have coin-
being no tiie a rmy, ovyr the
,-ervice system ible to b reak
a re
i Ca'.cchi-m cla.-.- a f te r Ma.-.- Sur,-: ivs and Sa tu rdays at 10:000 a.m.
Classes for the rehearsa l of the i
feast of Chris tmas - tar t Sa tu rday . The general in tent ion of this
j month is for the poor souls. All a re •ged to enroll thei r intent ions for
Con- i * n e poor .-ouls. Ma.-.- for this intention is said each S a t u i d a y morning at eight o'clock.
l i e
h a •
o f
An t l e ,
ine
)V
t o
of
" — *
Fed. Con'gl. Rev. J. M. McLuc**, Mi&Uter
M. . H e r m a n Vedder , S. S. S o p t F lorence E a u g h r , O r g a n U t and
Chcir Di rec tor .-Joining worship and s e m e n
10:30 a. m. i lnday School 11:30 a. m. Wednesday evening choir rc -Y. P. Meet ing 7:00 p. m.
hearsa l 7:30 p. m.
fed< ral go\ ermen t, if we a re e r< g imenta t ion in the name onal defense , then the a t t i t ude the ( i r ange is that all phases of ei ican economic 1 if'e should be ited alike -- e i ther exempted or ' ( i ed on an equi table basis.
Fa rm B u r e a u
The Michigan Sta te F a r m Bureau a1 ,t recent 22nd annua l convention in Ka.-t Lan.-ing, revea led a will ingness of farmer,- to submit to "'•,cf: reg imenta t ion only if industrial and iabor were combined .
At a three-way forum the s ta le •Mccau presented the v iewpoin t - of farmer.-, m a n u f a c t u r e r s and organ-1,(0 labor, about as fo l lows:
F d w a r d A. O'Neal , na t iona l prcs-• i. i of farm b u r e a u : Only government control over prices and wages can save Us from ru inous inf la t ion. Big business is benef i t t ing from the defense boom. F a n n e r s a r e ent i t led tii get 110 per cent of pa r i ty , the ave rage of farm prices be tween
Con t inued on Last Page
.,-' cau.-e( men have been e x e m p t e d .•ii for ph\ • ical defec t s lb a -e- the draf t hoard . pieted thei r work, t h e r e m<. n avai lable to send lo li tm, .-huuld happen al
l u , , , i h e s i ' l e e t l v e
i t de fen.-e \\ ould be lia down, tm thi - accoun t , audilor.--L'U'. to the di f ferent count ies to re-.ejw tiie work of the dial ' , boards and see w nether .-enie of the exempted men and '.ine-e i e jected for siiglil phy.-icai dc i ec t s can not be made avai lable lor a rmy service. The auditoi 's were at work in thi.-couniy la.-t week. We unde r s t and tii.a the a \ e r a g e for re jected men loi ph\.-ica! lea-om- i- .">() per cent and that T*i per cent were exempted :>eeau. ^ t h e \ had d e p e n d e n t s or for o ' .mr rea.-on-.. At the ,>i.- ait l ime lie. Cia-,- 1A list in th count;, i i 'bout exhausU'd.
W i l l
1.. he
union
\ l e w p o i lit o t I l ie
Ml 1,1 mil;, follow \ear,- the.-e niinei
l - e d - r o u p - ii
, i a n a i . u i i w a g e . - , i m p o . - . -
i , - h o a i - a n d p r i v a t i o n
J o h n L . L e w i - i
a . o n a m o n v
h,.'ief f o r J o h n
IO
e we h a \ e n 0 tijae ) -, lie,id of the coal miners
md think lie is guilty of mis-p o W e r , - t i l l w e c a n v i i t h e
union miner.- who his lead. For
- w e r e one o f t h e
downt rodden and underpr iv i -i he C n i t i ' d State. - .
h i e w o r k -
\', a t ' a e i r
' f e i t e d a \ M i i k -
t l e , . : , g o t
b e t t e i l i o u lv a n d
condi t ions . In i V e t e d t h e g o o d s .
, , , - o i g • i! 11 v, a
•j i >iu i n - i r | ' w a,a e
; n i p j < j \ e d w o r k m ;
, l , n r w o i . l , Ii-
•J"o ('» - H o y h i
ll-,' m i w d l b e ;
I n i e t a . - k . C a
i - 111 a n y .
he
m f l u e i a e among hard, a lmost imposing names will not
Di
ne
Po t luck suppe r a t 7 p.m. C h a i r m e n : i Knjrhton twp F lo rence Whalen Mr. Alf red Lane . The fol lowing will ' Cohoctah F red Seymour ass i s t : H e r m a n Vedde r , H e r m a n W i d m a y e r , Wm. Eu le r , R. K El l iot t E . L. Hulce , Ross Read , F r e d Read , F red Fish, Morley Reynolds , Don S w a r t h o u t , Roy Di l l ingham, J ack H a n n e t t . Pe rcy S w a r t h o u t is in
; Conway Pau l ine K u n k e I Deerfield Ed Whi t e , Genoa George E l w a r t i Green Oak George Bench
H a m b u r g Wm. Knigh t
• Handy E l l^ E c k h a r t c h a r g e of t h e p r o g r a m . Mr. Char les Ha r t l and Sidney Lyons
Poole of E u g e n e , Ore . , will show ~ ' a n i n t e r e s t i ng movie of the W e s t e r n S t a t e s a f t e r the supper . All memb e r s a n d f r iends of the church a r e cord ia l ly invi ted t o en joy th i s social occasion.
Mennonite Ezra Heachy, Pa s to r
S u p e r i n t e n d e n t Marvin Shirey Worsh ip Service 10 :30 T h e m e " J o y in A d v e r s i t y " Sunday School 11:30
Even ing Service 7:30
The re will be a special message for chi ldren each S u n d a y evening p reced ing the Y o u n g People ' s mee t ing. Weekday P r a y e r Se rv i ce :
Wednesday even ing 7:30 If you a r e not worsh ip ing else
where you a r ? cor.r. ' . lly invi ted to worsh; ) wif h us .
"P.less the Lord , O my soul, a n d forget not ail His bene f i t s " . Psa lms 103, 2.
A N N U A L C O M M U N I C A T I O N The annua l communica t ion of
Livingston Lodge No. 7b Y. & A.M. will t ake place on T u e s d a y even ing , December 2. At this t ime the annual elect ion of off icers will t ake place. Fol lowing the elect ion an oys ter supper will be served. good t u r n o u t is r eques t ed on occasion.
Ross T. Read , W. M.
• •Upe i
Micn.'gan, -1 \ h y g i e 11 <
l a " . L a . - t w e e k
of ' - page.-, con t a in im on "Sex H y g i e n e " viUthnri/.ed to be i Dr. Liiiott ha n< m a k e t h e o t h e l
e \ i: ' t o e y e
a.V: m o I (,
iugene Elliott
•ducal ion i" long \ e a r
, n l e n d e 11L o 1 'ia. a d v o c a t e d leach ing
i„ the schools of the de fended a book
a chap te r v.hicii he had m t e d . However , (.,- heen able to
school heads see
v.. ;th him on this subject them were disposed to
A very few eo.-i.i-ii it as d y n a m i t e . idopted it and in the.a
illiott c laims mora
has decreased .
a j e a s h a v e
instances Dr de l inquency
j Accord ing to r e p o r t s t he re will be b u t one T h a n k s g i v i n g da te next year , as the big d e p a r t m e n t s tores ,
the da te was
A this
Howell City Dida Wr igh t Iosco G e r t r u d e Longneeker Powell Township F r e d Smith Mar ion Charles Love Oceola Will iam Bigtow
N O T I C E
; i s - D r . Ray Duffy r e t u r n e d from
Abel Hainea and K e n n e t h Davis ; n o r t h e r n Michigan l r s t week with a
h u n t e d d e e r n e a r H a l e l*st week . s p i k e h o m deer ,
The P inckney Circle of K ing ' s Daug te r s will meet a t t he h o m e of Mrs. Don Hfemmer on T h u r s d a y , December 4, at ' p .m. Elect ion of officers will be held . All ladies a r e welcome.
A N N U A L C H U R C H F A I R L.A.S. of the Congrega t iona l
church will hold ou r a n n u a l church fair in pa r lo r s on Dec. Oth.
Commi t t ees in cha rge of booths
a r e as fol lows:
F a n c y W < i k .
Paui ne Vedder , Carr ie Swar thout
and Lucy Reason.
A p r o n s : M a r y Teeple , Sadie Read and
Millie El l io t t . Baked Goods :
May Dulier V e g e t a b l e s :
Clella Fish, brook. Fish P o n d :
Gladys Lee, Bessie S w a r t h o u t W h h e E l e p h a n t :
Ruth McLucas.
?A-ery m e m b e r is expec ted to
furnish a t least one ar t ie lp for each
booth. Dinner, will be served a t
noon. Mrs . W. H. E u l e r , Sec .
nnd Meda H e n r y
Minnie VanS lam-
at v.hose suggest ion m iiiiiiij s t a tes , have
iie expected bene-ksgiving has chang-n the pass ing years
youth , it was the day-
shoved ahead failed to receive tit from it. Than! cd considerably In our
for
commun i ty ban-foot bail game.-, , ( i ance- , and usual ly the re was
this t ime . The football red long ago as the
shor tened t h e i r schedules communi ty b a n q u e t s soon
InMowed them. One f e a t u r e of the wi th us, however ,
i j u e . s , n
s k a t m g
- • a r r a s
c o l l e g e s
and th(
it i n n
-appem
(! days remains family reunion and oi
and tha t is the long may it con t inue to endu re . Old Dobbin and the sleigh no l o n g e r furnish the power to c a r r y us ' O v e r the r ive r and t h r o u g h t h e woods , to C>eandfa'her's h o u p e " b u t t h e fast moving au to m a k e s r e u n i o n s possible in u,;ltiy < ases whe re old Dobbin would have fa l len s h o r t . A t ,he present t ime in c o m p a r i s o n wi th the rest of the w o r l d th i s n a t i o n h a s much to be t h a n k f u l fo r a n d
p , . s l
t h e
T h a n k s g i v i n g shou ld b e a no te -
o r thy one in m a n y w a y s :
V
F O N D R I C H • D A R R O W T h e m a r r i a g e of Haro ld F . Da r -
row a n d Miss Eve lyn F o n d r i c h , b o t h of De t ro i t , took place t h e r e T h a n k s g i v i n g Day. T h e couple will r e s ide in D e t r o i t .
The Pinckney Dispatch
If food burns in a pan, shake a generous amount of soda into it, fill with cold wa te r and let stand on back of stove until pan can be easily cleaned.
• • • Crocheted bedspreads can be
washed, but they should be ca re fully spread out on a clean sheet to dry and not hung on a line.
* * •
The little tots will enjoy soup when they have tiny toast animals on top. Cut out small animals from thinly cut slices of bread. Toast and pass or place on top of each soup serving.
* * * When pressing men ' s suits al
ways press over a damp cloth. • » »
Often a coat of paint is saved by first washing the walls before repainting them. This removes the soil and stains and assures a better job and takes less paint.
• • * Directly under the skin of pota
toes is a valuable nutritional layer, so, whenever possible, cook potatoes in their jackets. The skin can then be peeled off easily without loss of food value.
* • *
A teaspoon of baking powder in the water m which meat and vegetables a re cooked will help make them tender .
• • • Leftover mashed potatoes c a n -
be fashioned into small cases and used for holding creamed foods, shaped into flat cakes and browned, or then can be used for covering meat , fish or vegetable "p i e s . "
* * * Keep in mind that rubber dark
ens si lverware, so never let anything with rubber on it remain in the silver drawers . Use cord or ribbon to hold silver together in its case—never fasten with rubber bands.
Price Control Problems Enliven Inflation Threat
Three Distinct Groups Hold Up Definite Action; f U. S. Farm 'Bloc' Is Often Confused
With Farmer's Organizations.
By B A U K H A G E National Farm and Home Hour Commentator.
TEPNS
Books and Personality Given the books of a man, it is
not difficult, I think, to detect therein the personality of the man , and the station in life to which he was born.—Stoddard.
QUINTUPLETS relieve misery of
CHEST COLDS
For Independence Economizing for the purpose of
being independent is one of the soundest indications of manly character .—Samuel Smiles.
MaubeVouVe • p9Cf o Q bu* ?°u c*a ke*p peep'*
gucMing • loot time if you watch youx health. A few lovely pouadt can make euch a difference la your looktt V1NOL ha* Vitamin Bl and Iran to help promote appetite. Get pleaunt-tasting W | BJ f t I VINOL from your druggist. V l l l U L
Self-Esteem A man is valued according to
his own es t imate of himself.— Turkish Proverb .
/Relieves distress from MONTHLY r FEMALE WEAKNESS
Lydia E. Plnkham'8 Compound Tablets (with added iron) not only help relieve cramps, headache, backache but also weak, cranky, nervous feelings—due to monthly functional disturbances.
Taken regularly — Lydla Pink-ham's Tablets help build up resistance against distress of "difficult days." They also help build up red blood. Follow label directions,
W N U - O 48—41
•TactA off
ADVERTISING • ADVERTISING
represents the leadership of a nation. It points the way. We merely follow—follow to new heights of comfort, of convenience, of happiness.
As tkae^oej^n advertising is used more and more, and as it is used more we all profit more. Ifstheway advertising has— of bfMQMIQ o prom to ovwyfrocfy concerned ffc§ comwmr JacfoaW
WNU Service, 1343 B Street, N-W, Washington, D. C.
There a re three distinct groups in Washington all pulling in different directions at price control legislation. There is a group which believes with Bernard Baruch that a ceiling must be put on all prices and wages. There is a group, represented by Leon Henderson, price control administrator , which believes that only those prices which show signs of getting out of hand should be controlled. There is a third group in congress which simply refuses to take any action. These latter are the ones who are responsible for delaying consideration of the present bill which is widely criticized by many in all three groups.
The result of these conflicting groups is a growing fear that inflation which cannot be checked will be upon us before we know it.
For a while it was thought that the administration might follow Canada ' s plan of price control which is soon to be put into effect. First , Canada tried a piece-meal method, similar in some respects to Mr. Henderson's ideas. Then, inasmuch as this did not work satisfactorily, "cei l ings" on both- prices and wages were written into a new plan which more nearly retenibles that supported by Mr. Baruch's followers.
Details of Britain's price control policy were recently reported by officials here and they reveal some interesting theories of particular interest now. This policy may explain why it is being said that some people in Washington believe " a little inflation is a good thing," in spite of the dire warnings as to what will happen if price rises are not checked immediately. British 'Bidding* System
The British, it seems, have come to the conclusion that freezing prices and wages and profits just do not go hand-in-hand with a max imum war effort in a democracy. They say frankly, "You have to bid for a max imum war effort." In other words, you have to permft the workman to get bigger wages, you have to give the farmer higher prices, you have to offer industry a bigger profit, if you expect a maximum effort in the machine shop, in the field and orchard, behind the desk. Therefore, you have to follow a certain amount of elasticity in prices and wages and that means a certain amount of inflation.
Equally frankly the British have evolved this maxim: Building morale is just as important as checking inflation. You can give the workman certain social advantages to improve his morale , you can remove some of the business man ' s
i restrictions—but you must also bid for their services with something more material—money.
When full war production is fully achieved, when every human unit and every piece of mater ia l which is not actually needed for the minimum non-defense production is at last being utilized in the war effort, then prices can be frozen, the British believe, and not before.
It is perhaps this philosophy which some of the administration leaders have borrowed and which eventually will be adopted by congress—if it is not too late by the time congress makes up its mind to act.
• • •
'Farm Bloc? And Inflation
In the next few weeks you a re going to hear some unpleasant things about the farmer. He is going to be blamed, whether justly or not, for encouraging inflation by refusing to allow farm prices to be curbed sufficiently to hold off inflation. In this connection you are going to hear the te rm "farm bloc" applied to al lthe interests working rightly or wrongly for the farmer.
This inclusive use of the phrase is incorrect. A bloc, according to the dictionary, is :
"Bloc, (French, bloc or lump) 1. Politics (a) in European countries, especially in F r ance and Italy (this was before Mussolini and Pe-tain, of course) a combination of two or more groups or part ies willing to make common cause for some definite object. (b) In the United States, a combination of members of different par t ies for a similar purpose, especially in congress; as the agricul tural or farm bloc, a bloc in the United States congress
formed in 1921 by m e m b e r s from agricultural s tates , to secure agricultural legislation, irrespective of party l ines."
By the definition, a bloc is composed of members of congress, but many people when they use the word include the farm organizations which maintain their offices in Washington. The Grange, the F a r m Bureau Federation and the Fa rmers Union. Like the United States Chamber of Commerce , the Congress of Industrial Organization and the American Federat ion of Labor, the agricultural organizations are pressure groups—lobbies, if you will.
'Bloc' and Politics There is a realfcn why the bloc
can, and sometimes is, more likely to be an evil force than the organization. The bloc composed of politicians who must have votes at the next election try to out-promise their political opponents. Therefore, they will promise to vote for special legislation and even vote for it as it is brought up. But sometimes their real purpose is not to get a certain law passed but rather to promise it and work for it until they themselves are elected.
The need for the farm organizations did not appear at the beginn i n g ^ the nation. When representation in congress was established on a geographical basis this was an agricultural nation. Each farm was a unit which to a large extent represented a cross-section of the nation's economic activity and interest. / - ' "~^ ,
Then conditions changed, cities and industrial centers grew up whose problems were entirely different from the economic interests of the farmer. At first the result was rebellion—small revolts but significant ones \ the Whiskey rebellion, Shays' rebellion, at tempts by force to obtain recognition of the rights of special groups. Finally, the farm organizations came into being. At first their chief objective was to obtain public school and agricultural education.
This movement was the beginning of the depar tment of agriculture, the land grant colleges, the state agricultural institutions. Gradually, these organizations began to give more and more t ime to promoting the farmer ' s interests by obtaining state and federal legislation for his benefit.
Of course, some of the methods of these groups can be anti-democratic. We frequently hear more about them than about the honest effort, and sometimes not until much harm has been done. That is why Secretary Wickard says that "each group must operate tolerantly, and above all openly and frankly, not through stealth and concealment."
• • •
Carrying the Mail!
suit or skating outfit, a gay trio which you can m a k e in brightly colored wools, suede or felt. You can have loads of fun making these accessories, too, so much that you'll enjoy making them again and again as gifts for your admir ing friends.
• • • Pattern No. 8044 Is for sizes 11 to IS.
Size 13 weskit takes l'/e yards 36-inch material, cap and gloves. % yard. For this attractive pattern send your order to:
Land of Opposite*
SEWING CIKCLE PATTERN DEPT. Room 1324
311 W. Wacker Dr. Chicago Enclose 15 cents in coins for
Pattern No Size Name Address
JUST
The Chinese compass points to the south, men wear skir ts and women wear trousers. The dressm a k e r s a re men ; women ca r ry the burdens . The spoken language is not wri t ten; the wri t ten language is not spoken. Books a re read backwards and footnotes a r e inserted a t the top.
White is used for mourn ing; br idesmaids wear black, and, instead of being young maidens , a r e old women. The Chinese s u r n a m e comes first. They shake their own hand instead of the hand of the person introduced. Vessels a r e launched s ideways; and horses mounted from the off-side. Chinese begin their dinner with desser t ; end with soup and fish.
His Trouble Modern Orator—My friends, I
a m full of uncertainty. Then a number of people in the
audience looked a t one another and hoarsely whispered: "He mus t have had hash for dinner ."
Funny that when a girl 's dress consists of nothing to speak of, it usually gives the neighbors plenty to speak about.
D IGHT now, your tweed or * ^ camel ' s hair suit for fall will take a new lease on life brightened with this matching set of weskit, cap and mit tens. Later you'll sport these with your ski
Entrea t ing Now Diner—I would like to change my or'
der. Waitress—Yes, sir, uhat would you
like to make it? "/ think Vd better make it a petition."
Trimmed ' E m ! " I just heard him say he was
in close touch with the heads of several big organizat ions!"
"Yes, he ' s a b a r b e r ! "
Lingering Shadows
When a person casts a shadow-on a pool of crude oil on a sunny day in a tropical country, the shadow appears to remain for as long as 10 seconds after he has moved away. The explanation is that the shadow causes the oil to cool slightly, thereby decreasing the number of rising bubbles and darkening the surface.
What to give the men in Uncle S a m ' s services for Chr is tmas is a l ready solved for you by surveys m a d e in the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard. Cigaret tes and smoking tobacco head the list of gifts the m e n want most. This natural ly places Camel Cigarettes and Pr ince Albert Smoking Tobacco in the forefront, since actual sales records from the service men ' s stores, afloat and ashore, show the favorite cigaret te is Camel, and the big favorite among smoking tobaccos is Pr ince Albert, the National Joy Smoke. Dealers are already featuring "Send him a carton of Came l s " or a "Pound tin of Pr ince Albe r t " for Christmas.—Adv.
<\.<%_f^fuf»-(v.fufwo-r^f^fw<^.o-r-f^f*-^f^o-f^^o-o-f^p>-o-o-t>-f^^r-c^f^c^f^f^
ASK MS 1 A quiz with answers offering \
A M f m i C I ) information on various subjects ? The Questions
1. In what sport do three kinds of animals take par t?
2. What is the d iameter of the moon?
3. What was Ty Cobb'srlifetime major league batt ing average?
4. The s tamp act of 1765 imposed a duty on what i tems used in the American colonies?
5. What animal has a bull for a father, a cow for a mother, and is known as a pup?
6. What city is known as the Pit tsburgh of the South?
7. What is the record average speed in the Indianapolis 500-mile auto race?
8. When were pigs first brought to America?
The Answers 1. Fox hunting (the fox, horses
and hounds). 2. The diameter of the moon is
2,160 miles. 3. Ty Cobb's average is .367.
4. Paper , vellum and parchment.
5. A fur seal. 6. Birmingham, Ala. 7'. The record is 117.2 miles per
hour, set by Floyd Roberts in 1938. 8. Thirteen pigs were brought
to Tampa by DeSoto 400 years ago, when he with 600 soldiers planned to establish a colony in Florida.
Amer ica ' s favorite cigaret te gift package is now making its appearance in the windows and on the counters of local dealers . I t is the famous carton of (Camel Cigaret tes, all dressed up in gay, colorful, Chris tmas wrapper—complete and ready to give even to the gift ca rd printed on the wrapper . Camels also a re featured in an att ract ive gift of four "flat fifties"— 200 cigaret tes — packaged in a snow-covered Chr is tmas house. An ideal gift for all smokers—including the men in the service with whom Camels a re the outstanding favorite.—Adv.
BIG CANNON DISH TOWEL when you buy a box of
SILVER DUST IT'S THE WHITt S O A P . . ?
THE tflGHT SOAP...FOR A SNOW WHITff WASH,
SPARKLING DISHES. BIO f*\ 17X30 DISH TOWEL L 3 ) WORTH 10« OR MORS
L PACKED INSIDE
Wonder and Admire The longer I live the more m y
mind dwells upon the beauty and the wonder of the world. I hardly know which feeling leads, wonderment or admiration.—John Burroughs.
GOORAYT VITAMIN
• No wonder cheering thousands hail the newly-im-prored Durkee's! In every pound there axe 9,000 U.S.P. units of precious Vitamin A —never mny Uts !
I r t t i im I . m • - - » - « - - -*
MARGARINE Wealth's Secret
The secret of wealth lies in the let ters S.A.V.E.—Greek Proverb .
Relief At Last For Your Cough CreomuMon relieves promptly be
cause it goes right to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, in* flamed bronchial mucous m e m branes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulslon with the understanding you must like the way it quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back.
CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis
One-Letter Alphabet Egotism is an alphabet of one
letter.—English Proverb.
NOW...the service man's favorite cigarette /
... specially wrapped and ready to mail A navy mail clerk on a trip to the local
post office to pick up mail for officert and men serving on his station. It is in this manner that officers and men on shorjs obtain mail from their families, sweethearts and friends, as well as from official sources. The crossed quills and three stripes am the rating badge above this sailor's elbow indicate that he is a Yeoman, first class, while the service stripes near the wrist in' dicate that he has served four "hitches" or a total of over 16 years in the navy.
BRIEFS By Baukhage
C When ' T h e G-String Murder" by Gypsy Rose Lee was received a t the Library of Congress one of the woman at tendants catalogued it under "Mus ic . "
• » •
¢. In six years of work by an average of more than 2,000,000 persons, WPA accomplishments Include 30,-000 new public buildings and 600,000 miles of road construction and improvement .
C Plans and specifications for the chapels built by the war depar tment for the a rmy have been so drawn as to provide* buildings suitable for use by Protestant , Catholic and Jew alike, and all chapels built with government funds m a y be so used.
« « •
C An application received by the FCC for a new broadcast station lists among the applicant 's assets 100 barre ls of three-year-old whisky I
• Actual sales records in post exchanges and canteens show that with men in the Army, Navy, Marine's, and Coast Guard, the favorite cigarette is Camel.
^ * *
<V*£ >
. ^ <&&.
ce & * * ^¾
AT YOUR
PSAMS CAMELS
r U Piackncy^ap^iw Wednesday, Nov. 26. 1941 3 C
PROFESSIONAL C9RNER NOTES of 50 YEARS AGO
y
i he Pinckney Sanitarium ; .Y M. DUFFY, M- D. Pinckney, Michigan.
Offic« Horn*— • t £ 0 to 4 J 0 0 P . M. 7,00 to »«#0 P. M.
DR. G R. McCLUSKEY DENTIST
111¼ N. Miokifan Ffcones
Office, 220 Res. 1 2 3 J Svts t inf i by appointment
HOWELL, MICHIGAN
CLAUDE SHELDON ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR
Phon* 19F12 Pinckn*y, Mock
PERCY ELLIS AUCTIONEER
Farm Sal** * Specialty Phon« Pinckney 1 9 - F ' i
MRS. WM G. WELLS
"Divine Healer"
714 N. Weit Ave Jackeon, Mich.
Phone 21563
Cemetery Memorials A R N E T S
924 N. Main Ann Arbor> Mich Represented by
JOHN W. RANE Whitmore Lake Phone 6*1
JAY P. SWEENEY Attorney at Law
HOWELL, MICHIGAN
LEE LAVEY GENERAL INSURANCE
Phone 59-F4
Pinckney ; Michigan
Ray H. Burrell Paul M. Bnrroll
A. J BURRELL & SONS ARTISTIC MEMORIALS
R M. Charleeworth, Hgr .
Phone 31 Brighton Mick
MARTIN J LAV AN Attorney at Law
Phone 13 Brighton, Mich.
Van Winkle & VanWinkle Don W. VanWinkle
Charles K. VanWinkle
Attorneys at Law First State A Savings Bank
Howell,, Michigan
P. H. Swartfiout & Son FUNERAL HOME
Modern Tel. AmboJaaac Equipment 39 Sorvice
Pincknoy, Mich.
C. Jack Sheldon Phone 19F12 Electrical Contractor P'nckney
Dispatch of November 26, 1891 Born to Mr, and Mrs. C. Lynch
last week, a girl. Married at the church of the
Good Shepherd in Allegan on Nov. 19, Miss Marion Barton to Eugene Bucher.
The firm of Lyman and Clinton has dissolved, Mr. Clinton carrying on the business alone.
I w o men in Jackson are eating quail on a wager that each can eat f qui.il a day for 30 days,
K. G. Webb, township treasure!.*, will receive taxes at the town hall, s tar t ing Saturday.
Samuel Roberts is sick and Sam Grimes is lighting the lamps.
The sale of the Weimeister property is confirmed by Judge Newton.
Emil BFown, who has been working in his father 's blacksmith shop, will now carry on the business.
James McCloskey, who moved from here to Jackson a year ago to become a brakeman, was killed last
day. The coon reason end* December 15, but the ra t season extends U Jan. 1.
Winter i'eeduig stations for song bii'L» and pheasants have already ueen started. t;etds, suet and shelled corn are p 'pular foods.
The state law prohibits the use of poison to kill or capture any v..la bird or animal.
i t is suggesitd thai a two-mile canal to be dug to let oxygen into waters oi the River Raisin near Monroe and prevent the death of ducks and fish. The river is so filled with seepage and refuse from the nulla and factories there that the wild ducks and fish are killed by the thousands.
STATE OF MICHIGAN
The Circuit Court for the County of Livingston In Chancery MENNON1TE BOARD OF EDUCATION, an Indiana Corporation
Plaintiff,
vs
ELLEN TAYLUii and her unknown heirs, device.-, legatees and assigiu-,
Dei'e ndants Suit pending in the Circuit Court
for the County oi Livingston in Chancery, at Howell, Michigan on thii 17th day ol November, 1941.
U app^ai'ii.;* Loin me sworn bill
PHILATHEA NOTES A very fine "Prayer of Thanks
giving" lesson was ours last Sunday morning. Mrs. Jennie Kellenberger led us in such a helpful discussion of this timely lesson from various portions of Matthew, Ephesians and 1 Thessalonians. For the last Sun-
night when he fell between two i . . VT . u ^ *k~ •«„; ,., „ . . . . , i day m November, we have the topic
cars there. His wife was formerly J (i/^^ion I W , f r f t r n J n h n 1 3 : s 4 . Minn.e Armstrong of Webster. The funeral was held at St. Joseph's church, Dexter, Friday, Rev. Fr. Goldrick officiating.
The firm of Thompscn and Johnson has dissolved., Will Thompson buying Frank Johnson's interest.
Wm, Cobb of Portage Lake sold 300 barrels of apples this year.
{CASH PAID CATTLE $4
1
Dead or Disabled HORSES $5
FREE SERVICE ON SMALL ANIMALS
Carcass Mutt B« Fre«h and SonW
Phone Collect Day or Night - Neareit Station Howeii 360 Aim Arbor 5538
Oscar flyers Rendering Works
NOTE OF 25 YEARS AGO Dispatch of November 30, 1916 Mrs. E. G. Carpenter states that
she will weave rugs at her home in Pettysville from now on.
The sophomore girls of the higl school have challenged the other girls of the school to a game of soccer football to be played December 7.
On Tuesday morning Miss Edna Tiplady, daughter of Frank Tip-lady of this place, was united in marriage to Lawrence Spears, Rev. Fr. Coyle officiating. They were at-t nded by Miss Madeline Moran and John Spears.
St. Mary's church is planning an extensive -"air a t the opera house Liv.oy m d Saturday evenings There will be a fancy booth, plain booth, baked products, farm products, ice cieam, refreshments, candy, poultry etc. Rev. Fr. Goldrick will sing and Valentine Seewald, the mirth maker will also appear. Dance each evening. The Highland Symphony orchestra will play Saturday night.
Mrs. Minnie Phillips, sister of Mrs. Sanford Reason, died at her home here Wednesday.
The Pinckney high school football team will play the town team on Thanksgiving Day.
Flintoft & Read sold an Overland car to James Gregory of Dexter and a Dodge to John Blacker of Webster last week.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Mc-Intyre on Nov. 25th, a daughter
Born to Amos Clinton and wife on Nov. 24, a son.
Christian Love" from John 1 3 : 84, 35 and 1 Cor. 13:1-13.
We learned during this past week ! that a former Pinckney pastor, Rev. I J. E. Cook of Burlington, had been
called to the "Church Tr iumphant" He made many friends while in Pinckney, who sorrow with the fam-
| ily in their loss. The interment was i at Athens, where he had a more re-> cent pastorate. I Those who heard the first half j of the challenging sermon on last • Sunday will want to hear the re-\ mainder next Sunday, the text be
ing, "Man Shall Not Live By Bread Alone". Matthew 4:4. You are invited. Af | |
Srops Need Wei! Rounded Diet Same as Do Livestock
CHICAGO. — Placing plant food within handy reach of growing crops is as important to farm profits as setting feed within easy reach of hungry livestock, according to • s ta tement issued here by the Middle West Soil Improvement Committee.
"Crops need a well-rounded ration the same as ca t t le , " the statement r iV i ; nut. "A f'lvrvpr's re-
The World's News Seen Through THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR
An International Daily Newspaper u Truthful—Constructive—Unbiased—Free from Sensational-inn — Editorials Are Timely and Instructive and Its Daily Features, Together with the Weekly Magazine Section, Make the Monitor an Ideal Newspaper for the Home.
The Christian Science Publishing Society One, Norway Street, Boston, Massachusetts
Price ¢12.00 Yearly, or ¢1.00 a Month. Saturday Issue, including Magazine Section, ¢2.60 a Year.
Introductory Offer, 6 Issues 25 Cents.
Name. .
Address SAMPLE COPY ON REQUEST
STOCK POOD Co-ops. Chop and Ground Feed for Sale
Hauling Trucking LOCAL LONG DISTANCE WEEKLY TRIPS MADE TO DETROP
STOCK—GRAIN-CREAM Product of All Kindt
W. H. MEYER
CONSERVATION NOTES The return of cold weather,
bringing snow, is cheering the deer hunters in northern Michigan. By the end of this week it is expelted that 200,000 deer hunting licenses will have been issued. Last year the number was 176,000. Back in 1932 only 45,000 were sold.
So far 10 persons have been killed and 17 injured while deer hunting, compared with 14 killed and 28 injured during the season last cear.
There has been a nine inch rise in lower Michigan water levels from October 15 to November 15.
Thin oil, once made from raccoon fat was formerly used for domestic purposes and for machinery and leather.
Any person who thinks they have tularemia or rabbit fever can quickly have their doubts dispelled by laboratory tests. Six cases were recently reported in Jackson county.
A game bird recently shot near Grass Lake has been identified as
W a cross between a prair ie chicken and a grouse. This is the first such
1 hybrid ever reported. i Shooting of antlerless deer for
the 500 persons who drew lucky numbers, s tar ts in Allegan county Dec. 1. 200 archerB killed two bucks and six does there from Nov. 1 to 14. These 500 deer are descendants of the 11 bucks and ten does liberated there in 1932.
The trapping; season star ts Mon-
Well i'cd Soil Produces Bumper Corn Crop.
sponsibiluy does not end merely In supplying his soil with fertilizer. His job is effectively done only if he places that fertilizer where it will do the most good."
The practical value of correct fertilizer placement has been demonst ra ted by thousands of corn growers throughout the Middle West.
"Ten years ago many corn growers applied all the fertilizer broadcast or par t in row and part broadcast. But the rapid improvement in equipment for applying fertilizer near the row or hill and the higher yields resulting from this method, have encou" nc^rl fa rmers to adopt this systeir of p lacement ."
of complaint u,s filed in said cause, that the plaintiff has not been able after diligent search and inquiry to ascertain whether the said defendants are alive or dead, or where they may reside if living, or if they have any personal representatives or heirs living, or where they or any of them may reside, or whether the title, interest, claim, lein or possible right, of these defendants have been assigned to any other person or persons or whether such title, interest, claim, lien or possible right has been disposed of by will by the said defendants.
And it further appearing that the plaintiff does not know and has been unable after diligent search and inquiry to ascertain the names of the persons who are included as defendants without being named.
Upon motion therefore of Van Winkle & VanWinkle, at torneys for plaintiff, it is ordered that the above named defendants and their unknown heirs, devisees, legatees and assigns, cause their appearance to be entered herein within three months from the date hereof, and that in default thereof said bill be taken as confessed by said defendants and each and all of them.
It is further ordered that the plaintiff cause this order to be published within forty days in the Pinckney Dispatch, a newspaper printed, published and circulating in said County once in each week for at least six successive weeks.
J. B. MUNSELL, JR. Circuit Court Commissioner, Livingston County, Michigan.
A t rue copy John A. Hagman, Clerk The above entitled suit involves
and is brought to quiet title to the following described lands, located in the village of Pinckney, County of Livingston and State of Michigan " and more particularly described as follows, to-wir
Lots one, two, seven and eight, in Block two, Range three of J. W. Hinchey's First Addition to the Village of Pinckney, as duly laid out platted and recorded. VanWinkle & VanWinkle Attorneys for Plaintiff Business Address: Howell, Michigan
STATE OF MICHIGAN
Tho Probate Court for the County of Livingston.
I At a session of said Court, held at the Probate Office in the City of Howell in said County, on the
i 31st day of October, A. D. 1941. Presen t : Hon. Willis L. Lyons,
Judge of Probate. .In The Matter of the Estate of
Ford K. Lamb, Deceased. Lulu V. Lamb having filed in
said Court his petition praying that the administration of said estate be granted to Lulu V. Lamb, or to some other suitable person,
. It is Ordered, That t h e 24th day of November, A. D. 1941, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at said Probate Office, be and is hereby appointed for hearing said petition;
It is Fur ther Ordered, That public notice thereof be given by publication of a copy of this order, once each week for t h r e e 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.
STATE OF MICHIGAN
The Circuit Court for the County of Livingston — In Chancery MILLIE lil'KK.
Plaintiff, vs
OLNLY HAWKINS, JOlrN CL'SH-IN(i, AHRAM W. DKAN, HENRY I5LAKK, CATHI^IN'K MeLAUOH-L I N , P A T H K K M C L A U G H L I N ,
J O H N M C L A U G H L I N , H E L L E
M1ENHAM, JOHN CUNNINGHAM' MARY ANN PRICE, and their unknown heirs, devisees, legatees, and assigns, and WILLIAM W1NKLE-HOUS, surviving trustee of the estate of Frederick C. Stuhrbcrg, do-ce sed; LOUISE M. HILL, DONALD FTTC-M HILL and VIRGINIA ELIZABETH HILL,
Defendants. Suit pending in the Circuit Court
for the County of Livingston in Chancery at Howell, Michigan, on this li")th day of October, 1941.
It appearing fvnm iho sworn bill of complaint as filed in -aid can••;•, that the plaintiff has not been able after diligent search and inquiry to
defen-Cush-
Red Cross, OCD Look to Volunteers For Civil Defense
(
To relieve
Misery of
666 COLDS
i
ff Liquid Tablets
Salve
Nose Drops
Cough Drops TfT "K«*.Mv-l l sse" a
Washington, D. C. — To the question, "What can I do for America?" the lied Cross 13 providing an answer for hundreds of thousands of men and women who wnnt to do their part on the civilian defense front.
For women, the Red Cross is pre* fidins an SO-hour training course to recruit a corps of 100,000 Nurse's Aides. It is the Red Crow' newest project, undertaken at the request ol the V. S. Office of Civilian Defense to relieve the current pressure on nursing facilities. '
With thousands of nurses bein; fakea into military service with ou armed forces, civilian nursing has s / fared a direct blow, the Red O:oz. points ou t Moreover, the defense pro gram has crea'tcd additional healti problems which has heightened tb/-need for civilian nursing.
Red Crosi Nurse's Aide* will u%m AS assistants to registered nurses, pa* forming scores of important duties ^Mch will enable nurses to cave to* more cases. The Red Or^ss str iates that Nurse's Aides will not lake the place of the registered nurse, but will serve In an auxiliary capacity.
On the more dramatic side of civilian defense, the Red Cross is gearing its far-flung disaster fighUng machine to landle mass fc:uing, houelng ani :!otl!ng ct csacu.es under wartinr ' conditions. In cooperation with th* ' Office of Civilian Defense, ehapcen
COMMUNICATION Dear Mr. Curlet t :
In regard to your ,.:; ,.:; ment" of last week concerning Mrs. Rodeheaver's request for prayers for peace, it doesn't seem to me that her request is incompatible with any policy of our jrovernment. It isn't a question of Hitler 's peace or Hoosevelt's peace, but of "peace of God" wh'ch passeth understanding Surely God could make a peace and enforce it without the help of any mere man or a country's armaments. But because of our lack of faith and absolute dependence upon God, we will undoubtedly have to continue to make war timber and
ascertain whether tho said (hints Olney Hawkins, John ing, Ahram W. Dean, Henry I'.lake, Catherine McLaughlin, Patrick McLaughlin, John McLaughlin, Helle Mienham, John Cunningham, Mary Ann Price, and their unknown heir s
devisees, leg. tees and a-signs, are alive or Head, or where they may n n i l c if living, or if they have any personal representatives or heirs living, or where they or any of them may reside, or whether the title, interest, claim, Hen or possible right, of these defendants have been assigned to any other p. i on or pt-Mon; or whether such title, i n t e rv t , claim, lien or possible, right hi. been disposed of by v. ;)1 hy - I'd defendants.
Ann it t m i n e r appearing that the , , l : i !r i i | i <\r.o< not know and has bee., M.. M,- afler diligent search ai.d imiiilr,, \n •• -evt- ;>-, the names of the per. or.s who are included as defendants without being named.
Upon motion therefore of Van Winkle & Van Winkle, attorneys for plaintiff, it is ordered that the above named defendants Olney Hawkins, John Cushing, Ahram W. Dean, Henry Rlako, Catherine Mc-still continue to send our boys to
be slaughtered until we find just Laughlin, Patrick McLaughlin, John how humanly weak Hitler 's forces | McLauphlin, Belle Mienham, John and our forces really a r e ; then God will settle it n His way, not ours. That way might possibly be the prayer-way, or at least with the backing of praying men and women (I 'm sure Mrs. Rodeheaver wouldn't object to one or two men joining the prayer-band.) Read what Gideon of old did with God tov direct. I'm, thinking at that time there were more praying people than munitions factories at work. And they were patriotic. So are we, and we love our country. That 's why we pray for God's peace and a new heaven a n i a ^ e w earth, wherein dwelleth righteousness.
Sincerely, Clella M. Fish.
My contention that the only peace possible at this time would be a Hit ler peace, still stands, unrefut-ed. Prayers did not avail to save
Cunningham, Mary Ann Trice, and , their unknown heirs, devisees, lega-j tees and asssigr.s, cause their ap-t pearance to be entered herein within three months from the date
' hereof, and that in default thereof 1 said bill be taken as confessed by 'said defendants and each and all t of them. i It is further ordered that the plaintiff cause this order to be published within forty Hays in the Pinckney Dispatch, a newspaper printed, puMisheri and circulating in said County, once in each week for at lea?t :>ix evecessive weeks.
J. B. MUNSELL, JR. Circuit Court Commissioner^ Livingston County, Michigan
A true copy. John A. Hagman, Clerk The above entitled suit involves
_ i and is brough to quiet title to the Hol land 'Belgium, Denmark, Greece i following described lands, located Prance and other countries overrun J"1 l l ° C l t y o f B r ' ffhton, Livingston by Hitler. Just how would be ' C u " ' iX . 'Mich igan , and more part ic-possible to bring God into the | u l"j; 'y Ascr ibed as follows, to-w;c. framing of any peace t rea ty with either Hitler or Mussolini, both of whom deny tho existence of a God?
Ye Editor
Mr. and Mrs, Floyd Haines and daughter ai Lansing were Thanksgiving gue«ts of Mr. and Mn. Abel Haines.
K^phty-five feet off the east end of lots seventy-one and seventy-two of Section 8 of Wm. Noble's Plat of the Village (now City) of
, Brighton, as duly laid out, platted land recorded. | VanWinkle * VanWinkle , Attorneys for Plaintiff.
Business Address: [Howell, Michigan. .
SYLVAN THEATKc Air UouJitiooed
Michigan '* F n j i t Small Towa Theatre
CHELSEA, MICH. • i mm I M .'
Friday, Saturday, Nov. 28, 29
' UNDERGROUND " A Melodrama with
JEFFREY LYNN, PHILIP DGRN, kCAAREN VERNE
La: toon News
Sunday and Monday November 30, December, 1
"WHEN LADIES MEET"
A Comedy With JOAN CRAWFORD, ROBERT TAYLOR, -GREER CARSON, and . ERBE4T MARSHALL It's a Kioi. of rast, Slick Fun!
Thm Pinckney DUpatcb Wednewky, Nov. 2& 1941
- Hamburg
i' r The Well-Known Radio Character
'SCATTERGOOD BAINES" Starring
GUY K1BBEE with JOHN ARCHER and CAROL HUGHES
alto "'I he Bomb«r" "Jo;kev's Day"
"Mr. Mouse Takes a Trip"
•i S M • •
Tues . , D e c 2 (One Day On ly )
"GREAT GUNS" A Comedy with
STAN LAUREL, OLIVER HARDY, SHEL1A RYAN and
DICK NELSON Cartoon
Clielsea high school band presents a 30-minute musical program at 7:15 and 9:15. Two Complete Shows.
Sunday, Tuesday, November , Sun., Tues., Nov. 30, Dae 2.
THE MARX BROTHERS in
«*• THE BIG STORE" with VIRGINIA GREY, DOUGLAS
DUMBRILLE, and MARGARET DUMONT
News "Rookie Bear" "Mediterranean
Ports of Call"
Coming: "Let's Make Music "Barnacle Bill" "Blossoms in The Dust" (Technicolor)
Wed. jnd Thurs. Dec. 3, 4. Double Feature
I
CHEERS FOR MISS BISHOP"
A Drama with MARTHA SCOTT, WILLIAM G A R G A N , EDMUND GWENN
Plus
"MOONLIGHT IN HAWAII" A Musical With
JANE FRAZEE, M1SCHA AUER, JOHNNIE DOWNS,
and LEON ERROL
The toil Theatre lO'.t tax on all tickets
1'hursday, r nday, Nov. 27, 2o VvALi Di3Ni-V j
"RELUCTANT DRAGON"
with ROBERT BLNChLEY and
FRANCES G1FFORD Sequences in Multiplane
Technicolor Novehy Cwinedy Newt
Magic Carpet
"Saturday, November 29th Double Feature
Matinee H p. m, l i e and 22c
"SCATTERGOOD MEETS BROADWAY'
Starring GUY K1BBEE
"NORTH FROM THE LONE STAR"
With BILL ELLIOTT
RICHARD FISKE, DOROTHY FAY Cartoon
mmU9UtmWmBWt i t f s W « r a**-* — w ^ SSMEK ^ s ^ e a i M s l s a s W
Sunday, Monday end Tuesday, November 30, December 1, 2. Matinee Sunday 2 p.m. cont HUMPHREY BOGART and
MARY ASTOR
THE AVON THEATRE j f Stockbridf*. Mich. I
• • inmn I Mr, and Mrs. Alex Labadia ob-iday, Saturday, November 28, 29 j served their golden wedding last
| «'eek by entertaining about 55 at j dinner from Detroit, Whjtmore
Lake, Northfield and Hamburg1. ! Mr. and Mrs. Fred Myers.had as ) Thanksgiving day dinner guests Mr.
and Mrs. John Myers, Elva, and Olin Myers of Coffey, Missouri, Mrs. Basil Bell and two daughters, Wanda and Geraldine, and Mr. and Mrs. Edmond Martel and son, Ronald, of Dearborn and Glen and Miss
• Florence Myers. Mrs. Glen Borton has returned
i home from Drummond Island bring-1 ing home her deer. | The Ven. Leonard P. Hagger, j Arch Deacon of the diocese will j conduct services at St. Stephen's I Episcopal church Sunday morning. i Holy Commun'cn will be adminis-! tered. { Hamburg hive, No. 392, Lady ! Maccabees, held its last birthday
meeting of the year Tuesday afternoon at I.O.O.F. ball honoring the members whose birthday anniversaries are in the months of October November and December: Mrs. Minnie Buckalew, Mrs. Emily Kuchar, Mrs. Mary Moore, Mrs. Ida Knapp, Mrs. Jeanne Ferman, Mrs. Lucille Tomlin, Mrs. Mary Dyer, Mrs. My-relte Winkelhaus and Miss Jule A. Ball Each one was presented with a gift,
A potluck dinner was served, the tables being centered with a birthday cake; followed the business i meeting in charge of Mrs. Mary Moore, lieut. commander. Official reports were given by Mrs. Emily Kuch»." and Mrs. Jennie Ferman
. Mr3. Kuchar received the Pearson ! fun 1 box. The next meeting will be
held at I.O.O.F. halT Tuesday after-\ noon, December 2. i Memorial services were held at
St. Stephen's Episcopal church for deceased members of the Ladies' Guild of St Stephen's, conducted by Rev. R. M. Blatchford; viz: Mrs. Aden Bennett, Mrs. Wm. Brockway Mrs. Hiram DeWolf, Mrs. Edwin Winans, Miss Julia Galloway, Mrs. Charles Hollister, Mrs. Manley R. Bennett, Mrs. Htebart Twlchell, Mrs. John Bennett, Mrs. Wesley DeWolf Mrs. Abner Butter, Mrs. L. Dow Ball, Mrs. Albert DeWolf, Mrs. John Butler, Mrs. Owen Gilmore, Mrs. Henry Hetchler Mrs. George Lease, Mrs. Carrie Leslie, Mrs. Edward Hollister, Mrs. Thomas Mitch-
tomhgid Several from here attended the
Thanksgiving dinner at Parkers Corners Thursday.
Mrs. Olin Brotherton and Mrs. Roy Gladstone are on the sick list.
Mrs. Florence Dutton with Mr. H. A. Wasson, Ario, and Mrs. Mabel Gordon attended the South Iosco Aid at Mrs. John Roberts' Wednesday for dinner.
Mrs. Marie Roberts spent Satur-: day in Lansing and Paul Roberts I with his Grandma Dutton.
Mrs. Gertrude Bradshaw is in the siore t'or Mrs. Brotherton is sick.
Mrs. Emma Jacobs and sister, and Mrs. Eva Jacobs were Tuesday night guests of the Jewell's.
Mrs. Mabel Gordon spent Thanksgiving with her son in Wayne.
Mr. H. A Wasson and Arlo spent Thanksgiving with his daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Delmart. Mr. Wasson remained for the week end.
Mr. Fred Jacobs and Clyde and Norman returned home. Clyde brought a. deer.
Miss Carrie Swadling and Mr. Wan-en Canfield of Ann Arbor were Thanksgiving guests at the parsonage,
Mr. and Mrs, O'Brien of Flint were Sunday guests of his sister, Rev. and Mrs. Ed Swadling.
Mr. H. J, Dyer and sons returned >->uhdu> from deer hunting in the north.
Mr. and Mrs. Clare Holmes of Lansing were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mr.;. A. J. Holmes.
Mrs. H. J. Dyer and granddauh-ters, with Mrs. B. W. Roberts and i'aiil, were Thanksgiving guests of In>•. ;>nd Mrs. Gale Reasoner at Holt.
»n <c 'THE MALTESE
FALCON" with
GLADYS GEORGE, PETER LORRE, BARTON MacLANE
and LEE PATRICK Henry Busse's Orchestra
News
Wednesday, December 3rd 2 Features 2
All Adults 15c plus 2c lax
"DOCTORS DONT TELL"
with JOHN BEAL, FLORENCE
and EDWARD NORRIS also
ANITA LOUISE, RUSSELL HAYDEN
cTWO IN A TAXI" with
NOAH BERRY JR., CHICK CHANDLER
""••Father Take. A
The high school football teams of Washtenaw county were given a~ banquet Tuesday night at tl Michigan Union Building in Ann Arbor.
Mrs. Hattie Decker in company with Dr. and Mrs. Hollis Sigler spent Thanksgiving Day with Rev. and Mrs. Sanborn at Battle Creek, parents of Mrs. Sigler. While there
| they visited Camp Custer.
' Mr. and Mrs. Ross Read, son, Howard, and Mrs. Harold Tooman left today for Pittsburg, Per.n., to attend .the wedding of the former's
( son, Russell, which takes place on Thursday,
ell, Mrs. Mary Moon, Mrs. Lawrence Olsaver, Mrs. William Olsaver, Mrs. William Olsaver, Mrs. Burton Royce Mrs Nellie Robbing, Mrs. Charles G. Smith, Mrs. William Sheffer, Mrs. Nathan Sheffer, Mrs. Henry Olsaver, Mrs. Perry Grennan, Mrs. Edwin Ball, Mrs, Sarah Saunders, Mrs. Harriet Culver, Mrs. Frank Draper, Mrs. Augusta Crossman, Mrs. Oscar Grisson, Mrs. Charles
4 Sampson, Mrs. E. E. Everett, Mrs. Mary Featherly, Miss June Murray Gulatian,"*Mwrs-*N€lhe.Truesdel, Mrs Lawrence Queal, Mrs. Cleo Smith, Mrs. A>in Htolmes, Mrs. Hazel Kisby Mrs. Culver, Mrs. Henry Queal, Mrs. James Hayner, Miss Sophia C. Galatian, Mrs. Anna Miller, and Mrs. Emily Docking.
LAKELAND
I I
Coming: Wife."
-< :T / .^*»
PLED NOT GUILTY
George Gentry, colored, who Uvea on the farm west of John L Donohue'8 in Unadilla lovrrwWp was arrested by Sheriff Kennedy last weak, charged with threatening William Darrow and Jack Cava-noogh with a loaded gun. B e plod ftt* gaflty. end hit hearing will be
"' ' Swim:1***'-....
( Fertilizer Profits Low A ten-year average profit of the
fertilizer industry as reported by the Bureau of Internal Revenue shows a return of only one and fire one-hundredth cents on a dollar of sales while 32,000 farmers in a recent survey reported a return of I3.6C in increased yields for each dollai spent on fertilizer.
In the last ten years for which figures are available 1929-1988— total fertilizer profits amounted to
[ one and five-hundredths cents for each dollar of sales, or 94 cents on each ton of $26 fertiliser sold
Figures just released by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue on corporation income tax returns by industries for 1938 shows returns for 874 fertilizer manufacturers. Of this number 161 or 43 per cent reported deficits. The average return for 1938 was 3.6 per rent. The S.E.C. reports returns of 16 large chemical com-
l paries not engaged in fertiliser manufacture showed a return of 20.5 pier cent
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lee have returned from a trip to Rhode Island where they visited their son, Alger, who is attending U. of R. I.
Mr. and Mrs Robert Dunning and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Brenningstall and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Downing have returned from the north. They have been deer hunting.
Mr. and Mrs. Add Collum of Strawberry Lake have gone to St. Petersburg, Fla., to spend the winter.
Mrs. Frank Wright of Howell spent Thanksgiving with her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Van Kleek, Miss Viola Pettys was a dinner guest.
Mrs. Frank Wallace of Pettys-ville is spending some time witn Miys Viola Pettys.
Mr. ancT^Mrs. Harry Lee of this glace and Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Carr of Pinckney were Sunday guests of Mr and Mrs Mylo Kettler at Albion.
DROP LINDY'S NAME FROM ROLL
Rev. Morgan Harris of Ponti le •pent last Wednesday At the Win. Shehan home.
The Liberty Memorial to the 1 World War Dead at Kansas City
has removed the name of Col. Charles Lindbergh from its membership roll. According to Joseph W. Mc-
• Queen past national commander of ' the Disabled American War Veter-Lans, this action was taken because o i Lindbergh's isolationist, attitude and also because he has never acknowledged the membership which was bestowed upon him in 1930.
At Kalamazoo, a petition signed by 78 citizens was presented to the city commission, asking that the name of Lindbergh field be changed to some other suitable name. The petition was referred to the eft? mi niter*
Laundry Soap Laige Bars
2 Can
>Nev. a s
Roto Roy Orange Juice Par kay Marga Peets Cocoa iFamo [Jewel] [Vegetable Soup If Sv Brahiast I » I * Food
Red Salmon Roman Cleansei Bacon Squares
Sat. Nev.ae
•i
45 Oz.Cau 83
Pancake flour
Butter tOranges •Gem Oleo
Lb. Dez.
lb.
3 8 c < P o t $ t t o e s No. 1 Pk. 32 .Cottage Cheese 2 lis. 25( 15]Bananas 3 Lbs. 23(
PHONE 38 Lang & Son SUCCESSORS TO REASON & SONS
PINE MEAT.1
ATHLETICS The first basketball games will
be here on Friday, Dec. 5, at which time both boys and girls teams will play. This is one of the big games of the season.
On Tuesday evening, ten first team basket ball teachers went to Albion to witness a basket ball demonstration put on by Lansing Eastern, Jackson High, Albion college and Albion High. One of t main attraction was foul shooting demonstration by Bunny Leavitt a man who appeared in Ripley's column for having a record of making 499 successful foul shots in a row. He gave a demonstration for all the boys.
Although Thanksgiving day has come and one, the "being thankful" spirit is extended and always should be extended throughout all the days in the year. With this spirit in mind the following is the list of what the pupils of P.H.S. can be thankful for:
A Home Economics kitchen is being built on the west side of the school house. It's dimensions are to be approximately 500 square feet. Mr. Hulce is going to Lansing with the purpose of investigating the possibility of having the Department of Instruction hire a Home Economics teacher. In the case of a Home Economics teacher the government pays approximately one-half to two-thirds cost of the teacher. A woman from the Farm Security Board visited the school and is helping with the arrangement of the kitchen. When the work is completed there will be a kitchen shower for the purpose of <• quipping the kitchen. It will be used for serving hot lunrh°s at noon.
The work of building the new school kitchen is coming along nicely. The walls are all up and the
School starting half an hour S later. 3
A football team which won six 5 out of eight games.
A promising basket ball team. Having such "wonderful" teach
ers and having only one teacher in the study hall.
New library books and encyclopedia.
Work on the Home Economics kitchen.
A music class being started. Mrs. Earl, our music teacher,
not being seriously injured. ^osketball practise during school
hours. The privilege of going to school
every day in a free, peaceful country.
JIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIHI
| What Does Your B*r | Consider A Good Lot E ' S The two major tests which S ply to loan applications 5 these: Is it sound? Is the p| 5 pose constructive? Will it S beneficial to the borrower £ to the community? Is it saj s Does it provide a proper s for the funds of our S positors, entrusted to s care? Can the borrower s vide assurance that the U S will be repaid as = When the answer to tl
I 5 questions is "Yes", we usu| say "Yes" too.
AUTO LOANS _ Finane your new or late m< S usetl car through this bank.
| WE HAVE AMPLE S AVAILABLE FOR* SOI 5 AGRICULTURAL IAV s REAL ESTATE MORTGA* § OR PERSONAL.
£ If you desire to add to £ dairy herd, buy feeding § or feeding lambs, call osi 5 talk over your financial i| g with us.
JUNIOR CLASS NEWS
On the night of December 12 the Junior class will put on a riotous farce in three acts. It's definitely a comedv and an exciting one at that. Our ticket salesmen will be around within 'lie i ext two weeks, and by buying a iicVet you will be accomplishing two thing9. First, you will have your admission to one of the greatest stage plays presented in this school and, second, you will 'JC
1 /# ^,^. — . helping the Junior class have their wirk of laying the floor and roof , Washington trip next year. The is \ x p e c t e d to be completed this ' cast for "Aunt Tillie Goes to Town' w « k . Mr. Jeffreys, assisted by Nor- ( i8 mader up of class members who man \JfcnBlaricum, Kenneth Kellen- j very successfully take their parts berger, Hollis Swarthout, and Philip , Lucinda Talbot Elaine Young Gentile have done most of the Aunt Tillie Trask Pauline
McLucas 1 Mervin Tucker Ralph Graham j Rnnaid Howland ... Herbert Palmer ; Lizzie
I First National B; 3 IN HOWELL ! S Under Federal Supervisi] | Member Federal Depeettj
S posits Insured Up To S for Each Dope-rite*.
IfllllllllllllltllllllllUilllinilllll
most of the work. A case worker from the AAA county office was here Monday and suggested the layout for the interior of the kitchen.
Dr. Hattie Bing Bt . Due to the new tax, the
tickets will be higher, but nj enough to keep you\ from at
Admission including tax, for adults and all thol eight grade and over, and all those under the eighth Reserved seats, including tav] be bought at the drug ttei ten cents.
The frade children are Christmas Seals, not for good, but for the good children suffering from
SOPHOMORE NEWS This is the last week you have a
chance to buy a box of that "personal stationery" from this class. Help them by buying yourself a to he need s i a gift at Opfitmaa.
Parsons Betty Baughn v o u r share by buying seals j Pamela Marsh Mary Jane children are willing I D he*
Gallagher by selling the seals yea *h Ellen Neejand Gloria Craft w iWng to help them by bay Luther Lorrimer .... Tom Perkowski •• Charlie One-Lung .... Philip Gentile Norbert Levey e l _ Mrs. T a l k Tucker : Jeanette . W« mother, Mrs. Jeaate
Heinei Sunday.
mt if-'SJ^TMMM^.
*:>. '*%;. . •*•%
^.-4 \;
• > , : > '
Thm Pincknav DUpatcb Wednesday, Nov. 26. 1941 e —•
CASH SPECIALS FBI. SAT-. Nov. iS/Nov Silver Dust 2 Ige p kgs. No, 1 Dalr* Butter Lb. 9unB weet Prune* % lb.pkg.
ancyRice 2 lbs. ranco-Amer. Spaghetti 3 for
Pet Milk 3 Ige cans oldendale Batter 3qc
Tana; Clearwater Can 18c 'Miracle Whip qt. 37c
26' Pineapple N3.2 Can Rolled OatS 5 lbs. 25c \ Argo Corn Stareh 3 pkgs. *5c
Flake White Soap 4 bats Peanut Butter qt, jar Golden Holly Grapefruit Apple Sauce Ige. can Sugar 10 lbs-Wheaties pkg Gold Medal Flour 1 Giant Kinso, l Cannon
Nu. 2 CAN
24½ Lb. Bag DISH TOWEL' Both
Gold Dust Cleanser 5c | Spry 3 lb can RittSO Zlge.pkg; 39c Lux Soap 4 bars 21c Swan Soap I Ige J mei tor l i e
59f Soda Crackers 2 lb 15e Matches . arton 6 Zlc Del Monte CoSSee lb 33e
Pinckney Dispatch Entered at postoffice
lnckne>, Mich. -»econd class u.atter. Subscription ¢1.25 a year raid n Advance. PAUL VV CURLEl i PUBLISHER
Mr. and Mrs. Cashmore of Detroit called at the Patrick King home Sunday.
Mr. and -Mrs. Bob Tasch attended the Michigan-Ohio State game at Ann Arbor Saturday.
Mr*. Edna Spears and Mrs. Aso-los were in Detroit Monday and in Jackson last Wednesday.
O C ^ « i J (Hartley Bland and wife of Oceola £\jt 1 i called at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
J I George Bland Sunday.
_ ;. j Mrs. Nellie Erye spent Thanka-• " • " " * j giving with her son. Myron Dun-J , © ^ * n-ing-and wife in Detroit.
Mr. and Mrs. l'atrick King spent ' Thanksgiving at the Russell Hoag-I land home in Wyandotte. I Mr. and Mrs. William Gillon ni" ' Lansing were Thanksgiving guests [ of Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Darrow.
Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Curlett and daughter, Paula, spent Thanksgiving and the week end in Detroit.
Dr. and Mrs. C. M. Sigler, daughter, Marjorie, and Margaret Curlett of Lapsing .spent Thanksgiving in Pinckney.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Allen and two sons of. Detroit were Thursday guests of Mr. and Mrs. George
I ! Bland. Mr. and Mrs. Asher Wylie and
daughter called on Mr. and Mrs. Walter Rabbage near Fowlerville
I Sunday. ' • Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Bergin of 1 Toledo spent the first of the week with her mother, Mrs. Jennie Dev-
1 ereaux. 1 Rev. and Mrs. J. M. McLucas and I daughters, Pauline and Norma Jean I spent Monday afternoon in Ann j Arbor. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Ona Campbell and daughter. Leona, were Thanksgiving gutsts of Mi, and Mrs. L. C. Gor-
17«
10 10 j 594 10c|
$108| 59c;
for
Colds and LaGrippe Take Our Cold Capsuls 2 Doz. in box
25c
for that cough take
White Pine and Cherry
Cough Syrup 3 ozs, 25c, 8 ozs. 50c
PRESCRIPTIONS ACCURATL.'.Y FILLED
Kenned) Drug £core
JOE GENTILE
ICE CREAM CANDr, CIGARS, TOBACCO ETC.
FOUNTAIN SERVICE:
LAMBERTS CHOCOLATES
A Full Line of Bulk Chocolates
Service with a Smile Open Every Evening
Kennedy's Gen. Store PHONE 23F3 WE DEL1VEP
• • «MS»«> • ' .
Mrs. Edna Reason and daughter, Leota, were in Ann Arbor Monday.
Mrs. Walter Rice of Ann Arbor spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Shirey Sr,
Mrs. Thomas Shehan spent Thanksgiving with Edward and Elizabeth Steptoe of _ Dexter.
SPOT CASH FOR DEAD OP. Z/lSAbt-tD
$5 CATTLE HOGS, CALVES AND SHEEP
according to six* and condition Carcass mint bo froth and sound CALL COLLECT TO: HOVVET.L 450 AN. ' ARDOR 63fl6
DARLING & COMPANY SoccMon to tho MILLENBACH BROS.
Tho Original COJBO*»> TO Pa> i»r Doad Stock
$4
Garry Eichman of Detroit spent the week end with friends here.
Dr. and Mrs. Cecil Hendee of Ithaca were Thanksgiving guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Hendee.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Monroe and daughters," Helen and Charlotte, of Howell were Friday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sneed.
Miss Dolores Eichman of Detroit spent the week end with Miss Leota Reason.
Mrs. Lynn Hendee and son, Gayle, were Monday callers at the George Bland home.
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Hendee spent the week end with relatives in Shepherdsville, Michigan.
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Hendee ex-
daughter Thanksgiving with Mrs. E d i a Kea-
Mr and Mrs Kenneth Reason and pect to leave for Kjssimee, Fla., of Ann Arbor spent | on Dec. 1 to spend the winter.
• Mesdaznes Walter and Charles 1 Clark and daughters, Jeanne and
Mary Margaret, were in Ann Arbor
Monday. The Misses Bernardine Lynch and
Frances Cobb of Kalamazoo spent
ton. Mrs. Martin Ritter Jr. will enter-
tain at her home Thursday afternoon at a stork shower for Mrs. Winston Baughn.
Mr: and Mrs. R. J. Cari* and family §P«»t Thanksgiving and the week and with Mr. and Mn. Wiyntfr Carr in Detroit
Mr. and Mrs Frank Aberdeen and son. DmvW, spent Thanksgiving in Detroit with Mr. and Mrs. Fred j
Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Yount of Detroit spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Martin Hitter Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Reason were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ambrcpe Eichman in Dearborn.
Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Swarthout spent Thanksgiving at Flint.
Mr. and Mrs. B. Cole of Detroit I spent Sunday with Mrs. Anna Ken nedy. |
Mr. and Mrs. John Burg and daughter of Armada, Miss Helen > Kennedy of Kalamazoo were Thanks ] p-iv\ng guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. | Hi. Kennedy.
Mrs. James Roche spent Thanks- i giving with Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Roche and family at Lansing'.
Mrs. Julius Gaul spent the past week in Detroit.
Mrs. Mary Wilson Reason and daughters of Lansing spent the week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lucius Wilson Sr. atPortage Lake.
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Bradley, Mrs. F. E. Moran and daughters, Maxine and Mardell, of Flint, and Mr. and
! Mrs. Fred Swarthout of Lowell I were weiek end guests of Mr. and f Mrs. S. E. Swarthout.
Thanksgiving guests of Miss Jessie Green and Mrs. Weltha Vail were Dr. and Mrs. A. B. Green of Jackson, Dr. and" Mrs. Snyder and daughter, Mrs Buttleman of Horton.
Quite a few more deer were brought back last week. Among those who brought back deer were Bob Singer, Louis Shehan, Friday Haines, Mike Blades, Willard Wiltse Others who went north last week were W. C. Miller, Norman Miller, Edward Parker, Loren Meabon, and Winston Baughn.
The following. motored to South Bend, Indiana, and saw the Notre
the week end with Mr. and Mrs. *.< rSJfcme-Soufchern California garne C. H. Kennedy.
Mrs. Elizabeth Clinton, daughter, Lorotta, and Dick Gardner of <De-troit called at the C. J. Clinton home Thursday.
Mrs. C. J. Clinton entertained Cogent and Mrs. Fairchild. Sunday in honor of the birthdays
Thanksgiving guests of Mr. and of her sons, Ralph and Gerald. lira. W. J. Nash were Mr. and Mrs Those promt w e n Mr. and Mrs. Martin Ritter Jr., Mr. and Mrs. | Ralph Clinton, Fred Berry and Mr. Bufus Yount of Detrott and Miss and Mrs. CHon Berry, Miss Maxine lobelia Naah of itoft Axfeo*. i S « * «* HowoU.
}a*t Saturday: Murray Kennedy, Leonard Devereaux, Stanley Cul-•eef,. Hmrry. Murphy, Mr. and Mrs. Hubfit Ledwidge, Lawrence James T orenzo Murphy, Miss Justine Ledwidge, the Misses Druscilla and rioioTice/Murphy and John Sullivan Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Ledwidge, Lorenzo Murphy, Miss Justine Ledwidge and Lawrence James went on , Dolores Lane, all of Detroit They
• to Chicago and spent the weak end , were entertained with motion pir-I there. "'" :. tures.
. . . te.J^lS K . 1
[ htiin in Detroit. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Cox and | children and Mr. und Mrs. Roy i Henry of Battle Creek were Thui.k-j giving guests of relatives here. , Mrs. Mary Teeple, W. H. Clark,
Mrs. Emma Burgess and Harley j Miller attended the lecture by Peter f Koss at Howell Saturday evening.
Louis Shehan, son, Francis, of ' th's place and Gerald Bauer ami ! Ed Rhodes of Brighton hunted deer
in Luce county, near Lake Superior last week. Louis returned with a fine deer.
Mr. and Mrs. R. K. Elliott, Mr. and Mrs. 1'. H.• Swarthout and Bessie Swarthout attended the funeral of Rev. J. V. Cook at Athens Saturday.
Miss Virgiline Stackable, who hu.> been at the Pinckney Sanitarium for several months with a broken pelvic bone received in an auto accident, was able to go home last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Royal Culver of Detroit, and Mrs. Harriet Wissel of Ingram, Pennsylvania, called at the Fish home on Wednesday on their way to Greenville for Thanksgiving.
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. AtLee, son, Cyras, and Mr, and Mrs. Robert Tasch and daughter spent Thanksgiving with Mr. Anna Tasch in Ann Arbor.
Mrs. Lulu Lamb, sons, Gordon, William, Ross and Ford, and daughter, June, and the Misses Willa Meyer and Wanda Walsh were i Thanksgiving guests of Mr and Mrs Bert Smith of Perry.
j Thanksgiving guests of Mr. and ' Mrs. Andrew Nisbett were Mrs. Lil- ! t lian Wylie, son, Fred, and father, J Henry Evers, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon i Hester, Mr. and Mrs. James Wylie, I Mr. and Mrs. Asher Wylie and daughter, Dr. W. C. Wylie of Dexter and Mrs. George Drudge and j two children of Detroit.
Mr. and Mrs. Willis Caulk enter tained for Thanksgiving Day Mr. ] and Mrs. E. M. Bigelow and son, Jack, of Lansing, Dr. and Mrs. C. I B. Gardner, Mr. and Mrs. Bert J Hbff, Mrs. Howard Angell and son, Jim, of Howell and the Misses Fannie Monks and Nellie Gardner.
Mr. and Mrs. R. K. Elliott, wr.o Vi vc teen spending a month with •vlntivps in Berkey, Oh*.\ and v'!\n-lo ' \ Mich., have returned home.
Mrs. C. H. McRorie has purchased the Byer home on East UnadilU St., now occupyed by Wm. Doyle Sr. and John Hammer.
Thanksgiving Day guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Evans and Alfred Lane were Mr. and Mrs. Avery Thomas and daughter, Gwendolyn, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Dalach and son Richard, Mr. and Mrs. Don Button and daughters, Nancy and Judith, Mr. Howard Lane and Jackie and
Standard Static to RED CROWN GASOLINE For Quicker Starting
CHANGE NOW TO STANDARD OIL AND GREASES
CAR GREASING CAR WASHING
Nat. Door Ctieck & Mfg. Co.
Miss Mary Spears spent Thanksgiving with friends in Detroit.
Edsil Meyer left for West Virginia yesterday with another truck-loud of bean*.
Mis, James Roche was the guest of Mrs. Russell West of Ann Arbor ;\er the week end.
Mrs, G. W. Geyer of Hamburg .spent the week end with her sister, .vir.s. Joi: Griffith.
Miss Mary Margaret Clark is taking treatment for ear trouble at St. Joseph's hospital, Ann Arbor.
Tuesday guests of Mrs. Charles Chamberlain were Mrs. Albert Gar-trell and Mrs. Clyde Gartrell of Howell.
Erdley VanSickle expects to return to Houghton Lake Friday for ihc balance of the deer season. He brought back a fine deer last week.
John Dillon, who is in the signal corps of the United States army at
.March Field, California, is home on a furlough. H^ called at the Dispatch office Monday.
Albert Shirley and daughters, Roberta and Marion, spent the week end in Roscommon county. Mr
! Shirley brough bads' a fine 10-| point buck.
Mrs. Philip Sprout and Mrs. Jennie Kellenberger called on Mrs. George Crane at Harper hospital, Detroit, Saturday. They found Mrs. Crane much better.
Through the courtesy of Joseph Griffith the Pinckney school will be or has been presented with a Bteel fhig pole. It is being made at the Hamburg plant of the Brown-McLaren Co.
Mr. and Mrs. Ona Campbell received a card from Leo Bettes, former Grand Tmnk agdi* hi>rc rtst-ing that he is now stationed 18 -u'les from Washington B . C. and expects to see the sights there as soon as he gets out of -quarantine,
Mr. and Mrs. David SchoenfeWt of Roseville called on relatives here ^ last Friday. Mrs. SchoenfeWt was formerly Jeonno Bunert, a mfoot of ' Mrs. Paul Curlett. Mr. SchoenfeWt belongs to toe same ragtaMRt at Norman Miller at Camp Lhrlnfitoo La., and la home oo
Mr.>. Jennie Knapp of Macon was the week end guest of Mr. and Mrs. Philip Sprout.
Rev. and Mrs. J. M. McLucas, Mrs. John Evans and daughter and Alfred Lane were in Detroit Tuesday.
j Sunday guests at the home of I Mr. and Mrs, Philip Sprout were ' Mr. and Mrs. Charles Soule and
oaunhter of Howell. i Thanksgiving guests of Mrs.
Chailes Chamberlain were Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Chamberlain of Ann Arboi and Mr*. Walter Me"er of Lansing.
Thanksgiving guests of Mr. and Mrs, Erdley VanSickle were Mrs. A. VanSickle, Mrs. Martha Adams, Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Adkins and son of Detroit.
Dr. and Mrs. Stephen Brown, daughter, Marilyn, and Bob Mc-Kinstrey of Detroit were Sunday callers at the home of Mr. and xMrs. Fred Read.
Miss Eva McLucas is spending , the week with relatives in Detroit, j
Mr. and Mrs. Bert McLucas and sons, James and Westey, of Detroit ' spent Sunday with Rev. and Mrs. i J. M. McLucas. I
Mrs. Merw*in Campbell, who has :
spent the past year at the Michigan State San;tni;um, has returned I home. Mrs. Elizabeth (Jail is help- ' ing her with her work.
Thanksgiving guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ross Read were Mrs. Gladys Schneider and Mrs. Ida Feidler of Detroit, Miss Helen Feid-ler of Ann Arbor and Mr.and Mrs. Harold Tooman of Manchester.
The following from here attended tho Christian Science lecture at the Howell high school auditorium, given by Peter Ross last Saturday, evening: Miss Dede Hinchey, Mrs. ]
Ella Mercer. Mrs. Lillian Wylla, Mrs. Roy Dillingham, Mr. and Mrs. kCallod on Norman hot the lattf* m John Craft ' north door hunting. . , -<mc^
mmmmmm
'*'
The Pi ittckn^Bfc^BHfr m^kh^am^Noy^ 1941
Avoid Ikt Peaks and Help Defeatt
At certain periods of the day — especially mid-morning and mid-afternoon—teaopntonc facilities are laWy to bo overloaded with calls. With thousands of BOW telephones ia defense plants and homes, and with business booming everywhere, yon may find delays in making Long Distance and even local cask.
You can improve phone service and important defense
* Jvelef fee "a***" pertetfc-1QA.H.H Tt ood t H 4 KM. -
Your co-operation hi at other times w l
* Micaigsi Bell Telephone Compaay DfffMSf COMU H M I
i
RAW KR5 >
^ligiv;,^ ', o.ti'" . . 1 -
• »
LOCAL NOTES 1 **f
THAPPERS, ATTENTION! . GET TOOL VJUJ0E lor yooz fas by «Un-
ssm, rliwgss collect on all aUp-k» vehse ©rot t i l to a forbore*
*••"»-._
lot otB poaaJbry bo up to
IT back lo yon will grfo yon taojo of tins snoot VOCOBI pfloo ' Ba^towetbringyonrmmtOBa to efetttsatery eve mat yon N, >i..
TRAUGOTT SCHMIDT * SOJtt •oa MOtwoi A V U M « ©mon, MKMMAN
3*
.. > WHAT THEY SAID
to your Watkins Dealer: "My, what a beautiful display." "1 never knew that you sold
Bibles, Plax and Scripture goods." "I didn't know you had so many
lovely Christmas boxes." "I never got so much for nothing
in my life.", "Your Christmas cards are the
most beautiful I have ever seen." «
SWEET. HOT, BRAND NEW AND BLUE!
Vaughn Monroe, America s young favorite new bandleader, selects a tune thrill of the year . . . "And So It Ended . . . as Weekly Song Hit No. 6 . . . complete with WORDS and MUSIC . . . in this coming Sunday's issue of The Detroit Sunday Times. Don't miss it! You'll love it! Get The Detroit Sunday Times this week and every week never saw so many pretty . ^ „__ , . . .
boxes in my life - and so reason- j f o r a N E W wn« Ut
able." "My, but you carry a big stock
oz everything."
& > ? • • •
'111 surety be back now I know I can come any time to buy Wat-Idnt products."
"Your display is simply gorgeous" ...>i
MMy, sty, are^your going to give me »11 that?"
•It sure helps seeing you give credit"
"I never connected Watkbr* with BJee Christmas boxes."
Thanks a lot for trusting me." *tt*H net this all paid for by
and free gifts to Wednesday and ! until Christmas, in and around
ate a y display and get
Open
COM. SUPPER AND SHOW
The Community Chicken Supper will be served Thursday, Nov. 97th in the Community Cong*! church dining rooms from 5:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m., followed by a free movie in the high school auditorium at 8:00 p.m.
Supper tickets, Adults 60 cents. children in grades, 85 cents. It is looped that the community win patronize this rapper. Only those wh9 purchase a rapper ticket are encitf. c<i to attend toe free movie.
I
'V,'* • , **. WaUrins Dealer
wrrt aadafrsCW
W
Wlxy people who hats are no-healthy. A, prominent New .York ptychiatrist explains why it is impossible to be normal while carry* ing around a load of flj-wfll for your fallow dtisens. Bead, this nv> terartiaf article in The American
wiih aeat week's Sunday Cldeags Herald
Mrs. Eleanor Ledwidge is enter taining her card club Tuesday.
Mrs, Magdalene Asalos of Romeo 8pent the week end with Mrs. Edna Spears.
Mr. and Mrs. John Sikora and children of Detroit called at the home of Mr. and Mrs Clifford Van-Horn Sunday.
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Joe Basyd-lo Monday, November 24th, an eight pound daughter.
Mrs. Edna Spears and Mrs, Asta-los were in Jackson last Wednesday and i Detroit Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. J. .«. Hooker were Thanksgiving guests of Mrs. Henry Shankland in Ann Arbor.
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene, Shehan and daughter of Ann Ar>or called on Mrs. Edna Spears Sunday.
Miss Catherine EUele of Detroit spent the week end with, her grandmother, Ms*. Emm*. Xoibner.
Mr. and Mrs. Frenfc . Johnson were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Johnson.
Mr. snd Mrs. Claud* Soper were Thanksgiving dinner guesU„of their daughter, Mrs. Esrs Plummer and family.
Mrs. Nettie Vaughn and Mr. and Mrs. BoJand Sbehan spent Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Merrill in Webster.
Dr. and Mrs. Malcolm McGregor and children of Brighton were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Mercer last Thursday.
Dinner , guasti, or Mrs, Edna Spears, last Wetossoay were Arthur K m * an4 Glen Smfth of the Michigan State Sanitarium. ,
Mrs. Patrick Kwmjdy i« visrtmg her sister, Mrs. Charles Dyer, In Lansing. She spent Thanksgiving
i with Sheriff and Mrs. Kennedy hi 1 HoweU.
Mrs. Mark Nash and Mrs. Clifford VenHorH attended the Farm Bureau meeting at the home,of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Latson near Row-sll one day laet week, ,
Roche o>ehan and.famn^ of Ann Acrbor and Dr. Harlow Shehan and family o | Jaeksoa were, thanksgiving guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Shehan-
Mrs. Beit H|cks and Miss Luey Jeffriea virited Mrs. HefttjetT season at the MeJtus hospital, Brighton Wednesday, * , _ . , . . . .
Mr. and Mm J ^ a jphambers and
M-rtft less daughter, Mia. Kpna Uwis and sens, Warree aa* .XsflA.
Mrs. ISeaaer LesWs^sons, David and Jerry, and daughter, .Han, wans Ae*4ay tiane* guests of Paul ant) Matnanst B»—» ef enftatn. feaer gueete were, 1Roth Beaaett and Leo MeCaae of Meats*.
NEIGHBORING NOTBb The HoweU Community Stand
Drive has already netted $4100. Mies Joyce Hewlett, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Wilson of Howell has been chosen to represent Howell by the Daughters of the American Revolution.
Miss Janet Calder of Middletown X. Y., has been named superintendent of the McPherson hospital in HoweU.
St* Joseph's church of HoweU moved into their new school on Fowler Street this week
J. V. Brady of Howell has been named head of the University of Michigan club there.
Roy Shankland, 41, of Ann Arbor, was badly hurt last week when he was shot while hunting deer near Newberry.
Th« city of Ypsilanti is requesting a federal loan of $300,000 to construct a new hospital because the present Beyer hospital cannot handle the workers from the $47,-000,000 Ford bomber plant there.
H. E. Pierpont, prosecuting attorney of Shiawassee county, has been railed to active service in the United States army. James Miner, a grandson of former Judge Sel-don S. Miner, has been named prosecutor.
The Washtenaw Post-Tribune claims the grand jury investigation into gambling there killed all the Thanksgiving turkey raffles in the county.
The Ingham county board of supervisors voted to pay two cents apiece bounty for sparrows and 10 cents for rat bounties.
The Michigan Tradesman recently carried a writeup of Harry German, cashier of the Carleton Bank. For 63-s years he has pitched win-nijRg baseball. Last year he pitched
iVS games,, although 66 years old. Of tft^-l^^ntests he won 14. He hol<lfHhe worlds record of having pitched and won three games in one dayt in 1927.
Jpjfwlerville will furnish the majority of boys to make the annual trip to the Chicago Stock Show next week. 14 boys will leave from there Nov. 30, two from Hartland and four from Howell. No Pinckney or Brighton boys names appear on the list.
St. Mary's Notes!
Lucia Soper of Ann Arbor spent Friday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Claude Soper.
Eugene Soper returned to the Presidio, San Francisco, Thursday, after a 20-day furlough. He is be-
|ing transferred to Fort Lewis, in Washington, immediately.
On Thanksgiving morning the following class recived their first Holy Communion: John Joseph Bugis, Joseph DeParma, Eusaell ' Mark Clark, Harry Elliott, Donald j Kaiser, Philip Michael Murphy, Gerald S alar, Richard Singer, and Sharon Mary Dowd. For their solemn Holy Communion Michael DowJ an! Donald McAllister. Following the Communion and Holy Mass all were enrolled in the Con-ferteinity of Our Lady of Mt. Car- ( rnel, thereby receiving ail the spiritual benefits of the Society of the Holy Sepulchre. For the special services the altars were decorated in white chrysanthiums and green foliage, massive candles and votive lights. Led by a procession of altar boys, the class was directed from the vestry to their respective pews preceding the Mass. Some 80 relatives and friends also received Holy Communion with the class thereby
| receiving the many spiritual benefits conferred at the hour of their
• child's first Holy Communion day. He wish to thank the following
for contributions of revenue and fowls for the Nov. 15 party. For revenue: George Savoy, Miss Mar- j ion McCleer, Gorman Kelly, Claude Kennedy, Lee Lavey, Roy Clark, Loy McCleer, each $2; Cass Clinton Michael Roche* James Brennan, Guy Kuhn, Ben White, Claude Sheldon, Walter Kaiser, Mrs, Rose Howard, Miss Eva Melvin, each $1. For fowls: the James Gihney family, the Arthur McCleer family, John Donohue family and Wm. Roche.
We are grateful to the following men who composed the clerical executive staff: Thomas Anderson, Philip McCleer, Gorman Kelly, Paul Robert and John Young.
Great stress was given this week to the supper at the local Community Cong'l church which will be served Thursd*y evening, Nov. 27, the old traditional date of Thanksgiving- Dinner will be served from 5 to 7;30 p.m.. Following the dinner program an interesting movie pii'.cV.uHPnent will be enjoyed at the local high schol auditorium at 8 o'clock. Among the pictures to be shown are those taken at Cord-ley Lake which featured the parish-
I oners of the two churches. Children tickets are on sale at 35 cents and adults at 60 cents. Your patronage is solicited. To patronize this benefit you show loyalty and boost your home town. The movie company singled out your community and
surrounding country as one of sen-ic beauty and a desirable place for vacation land, and its people as ideal home-making Americans. Community action is one of the offered opportunity for us to grow to know and respect our neighbors.
Prayers are requested for our sick. May we also solicit your devotions for the soul of the late Miss Catherine Byrne, of Washington D. G, a relative of the pastor's. Since the time of President Mc-Kinley, when she received her appointment, she has been employed in the statistics department of the U. S. goverment. Her death occured during the past week while at for desk at work. The funeral was held from the church of the Sacred Heart in Penn Ave., Washington She is survived by one sister and one1 brother, and she is a relative of Bishop Byrne of Japan. May her so ul rest in eternal peace.
Baptism was conferred last week for Harry Elliott of R. F. D. Pinckney and Joseph Francis DePrifna, sponsors were Ralph Graham and Mrs. W. Shehan; and for John Bugis, whose sponsors were Mrs. J. H of /man and Mrs. Orville Smith of near Pinckney.
CULTIVATING HAPPINESS Happiness can be built only on
virtue, and must of necessity have truth for its foundation,
—Coleridge Human fthcity is produced not
so much by great pieces of good fortune that seldom happen, as by little advantages that occur every day.
Ben jam' n Franklin In every part and corner of our
life, to lose oneself is to be gainer; to forget oneself is to be happy.
—Robert Louis Stevenson Self-ignorance, self-will, self-
righteousness, lust, covetousness, envy, revenge, are foes to grace, peace and progress; they must be met manfully and overcome, or they will uproot all happiness.
Mary Baker Eddy Happiness is not a reward—it is
a consequence. Ingersoll
The fruit of the Spirit is lore, joy, peace, longsuffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance: -against such there is no law. —New Testament .-Galatians 5:22-25
i t
GOOD LIGHTING BRINGS
GomfrvU and Bafaty Now is the time to look to your lighting. Days are growing shorto? and darker. And eyes must do more work under artificial Hght—reaoV ing and studying, sewing, keeping hooka.
To protect the eyesight of every member of your family, be rare yo* have good lighting wherever it is needeth If the children study on the dining room table, give them plenty of glarelese light Investing in a good dining room fixture may bring yon big dividends in comfort and happiness.
And wherever seeing tasks must be done, have enough hght of the right quality to help the eyes see easily and without eye-etrain. See the new Better-Sight lamps on display at ^our department store, hardware, furniture store, or electrical dealer*
T H I b E T R O I T E D I S O N C O M P A N Y
' " u , •• -•• J£N*
*.•*»
The Pinckney Dispatch
0¾
B E up-to-the-minute in gay slip-*^ pers you've crocheted yourself! Both these smart styles are done in afghan yarn and have simple pattern stitches. They're good bazaar items, too.
• • *
Pattern 7114 contains Instructions for making them in any size; illustrations -of them and stitches; materials needed Send your order to:
Sewinj Circle Needlecrait Dept. 82 Eighth Ave. New York
Enclose 15 cents in coins for Pat
tern No
Name . ,
Address
Linked to the Law
On Rossel island in the South Pacific, says Collier's, a man arrested for a crime, even murder, has a handcuff attached to one of his wrists and is set free until his trial. Wearing a handcuff, the natives believe, links him with the law and prevents his escape.
Delicious Recipes Free Would you like to try a brand-
new delightful recipe for Apple Cake, Coffee Cake, Herb Bread, Orange Bread and dozens of other appetizing recipes? Just drop a post card to Standard Brands, Inc., Dept. W, 691 Washington Street, New York City, and you will receive a grand cook-book absolutely free.—Adv.
•t imulat* aoplca iant stomach •ymptomt. May warn heartburn wad tea-era! rtomaeh discomfort. The Bismuth and Carbonate* i s AOLA Tablets « • Here *out stomach, add
iadiiettioB. Your drugfitt has ADLA Tablets.
FEAR ANGER
WORRY
A D I A
Ready for Good Be always at leisure to do good;
never make an excuse to decline the offices of humanity.—M. Aure-lius.
¥ * COLDS LIQUID
TABLETS SALVEm
NOSE D«OM COUCH DROPS
We Can All Be
EXPERT BUYERS • fc> frHwglwo m baying bfamottaivos
' to prtetfs that ar« being aikod for wbol we htejnd to bwy» ottd os to w% oaomy wo eon •xpsKit ne aavwinang eaamaea at *M« MwiMMMf Barton* a worth whlfo torvlco which saves as M17 QQMV1 Q /*"• • »h« food bob»*ofaray ft* bob*
M i l t w w y oapoea jam wnor wv woat OOQ WOOFO WO O*O fljoioQ so eoy • » Sr SjlVM M lOO BSOSf pitCMOOl fooMsaj hi ffce werldi tho fas (lag of bote*
w Whoo wo oo boo o asortvi » - » — » - * _ ^ A i » * - •» - - j k j ^ ^ ^ 1» • O I W O T WWW B M n i m B j * w» W W SI ofForod ow ot woot poo*» wo 90 os 00 oxport ooyof • Woo wnh totf •oaan* OOOOe. If • • B J M S W I « S M | m t*sratj|r fbo fooBof) of odoojoocy. Moot of floo «jkoaofeo»s hi «JO world eon bo troeod to 0 tot* of thai faoif. Tho. odvor. Helot shows ooorhor of Its omoWold
WHO'S
NEWS
THIS
WEEK
My Jly*ut Gkaml&te.
By LEMUEL F. PARTON (Consolidated Features—WNU Service.)
"MEW YORK.—There was once a A ~ hill-billy girl who walked 10 miles over the mountain to borrow a hammer. She said her pappy was
1 •*#! /* J I f i g u r i n g to Little Candle* build himself Still Burn in a a house next
Darkening World f a U tt ™ an a c t of
faith, not to be cynically regarded, in spite of small beginnings and remote eventualities, and quite comparable to the brave hopes and contrivances of sundry men of good will today.
Paul Van Zeeland, former premier of Belgium, is one of them. He sees a world of decentralized power after the war, with small, autonomous states of economic and political groupings, associated in regional collaboration—diverse enough to allow a "localization of function" in world economy and compact enough to form a stable political equilibrium. He presented his plan to the New
York conference of the International Labor organization, and, simultaneously, there issued from the conference a proposal for a bloc of nations, comprising Poland, Czechoslovakia, Jugoslavia and Greece, for post-war rebuilding and for collective defense.
M. Van Zeeland, holding both earned and honorary degrees from Princeton university, is widely and favorably known in this country both as a political philosopher and banking economist. He was a sol-
"dier in the World war, and in the ensuing years was an experimenter and innovator in financial theory and practice in a desperate effort to sidetrack a doom which he thought might well end Western civilization.
Here in 1937, as unofficial envoy of Europe, he tried to sell the United States a bigger cut in the bank for international settlements, with the quite plausible idea that a freer flux of money throughout the world would cure bellicose nationalism. Nothing came ot this, but M. Van Zeeland keeps on hunching. The son of a prosperous merchant
of Soignes, he was educated at Lou-vain and Princeton, returned to Belgium to practice law and won eminence as an economist and banker— a director of the Bank of Belgium and professor of law at the University of Louvain.
M e e t the P o t R o a s t — J u i c y and T e n d e r (See Recipes Below.)
S a v o r y M e a l s
YZ2... . ° feQ<
B
0« OOT
ACK in the days of the militant suffrage campaign, this report
er asked several of the leaders whether they intended to maintain
a p o l i t i c a l Militant Women solidarity of Out for Equality women after OfR»pon«bility £ * * „ £
said they would do just that. The emphasis was on the effective pressure group, rather than on widely diffused social responsibility among women.
Considering that that is the history of pressure groups, of both genders—how to get power, rather than its social uses and implications—there is news interest in the simultaneous arrival of two distinguished women leaders of foreign countries each of whom has stressed so* cial responsibility, along with the "liberation" and political education of women. They are Miss Caroline Haslett of Great Britain and Senora Ana Rosa S. de Martinez Gerrero of Argentina. Miss Haslett is an engineer and
adviser to the British ministry of labor, somewhat comparable in her career and achievements to our Lillian Moller Gilbreth of Montclair, N. J. She will study the participation of American women in the defense effort and will deliver some addresses on the technical and industrial mobilization of British women in the war.
She is president of the Women's Engineering society, director of the Electrical Association of Women, founder and editor of the Woman Engineer and the Electrical Handbook for Women. With many variants and on many occasions, the has said: "Women once asked for equality of opportunity. Now we ask for ©quality of responsibility." The career of Senora De Martinez
Gerrero has been a close parallel to that of Miss Haslett in its repeated stress on social responsibility. She came to Washington to attend the annual meeting of the Inter-American Commission of Women of which she ia chairman. A spirited evangel of Western hemisphere solidarity against totalitarianism, she tails the meeting that the mission of women is to * 'rekindle the flame of a living faith in democracy." Senora De Martinez Gerrero is the wife of a wealthy cattleman and tho mother of throe children.
Pep up the personality of your meals by serving meats more often
as the weather becomes frost-nipped and colder. Meats are synonymous with good, wholesome, hearty meals because they're sat
isfying and filling. Meat sets good tone to the meal and rounds it out to give you a sense of completeness when you've finished eating.
Meat is honest and straightforward both in flavor and purpose. Its abundance of vitamins and minerals really come through and give you sustaining energy. All in all meat contains nine out of the thirteen food essentials of a normal diet:
First is protein and meat's proteins are complete. They help to build or repair body tissues which you wear down every day and keep you on good maintenance level. It has iron the oxygen carrier, copper, iron's partner and the builder of hemoglobin.
Meat has phosphorus that helps calcium in building good teeth and bones and helps give you energy. Meat has fat, too, producer of more energy and heat.
As for vitamins, meat is an important source of four: vitamin A, the resistance and growth vitamin; thiamin (vitamin Bl) which helps the body translate sugars and starches into energy; riboflavin, of which meat is the top source, that helps prevent nervous disorders, and finally nicotinic acid, which prevents a nervous digestive disorder known as pellagra.
Fortunately- -for economy's -sake, the lower-priced cuts of meat are just as good for these minerals and vitamins as the higher-priced ones. Today's column gives you tricks S P ^ S and tips on how you can use them for savory meals and have them juicy, tender, and full of flavor. First call is for pot roast which you can make just as desirable as the best steaks and chops:
•Pot Roast With Vegetables. Wipe meat with a damp cloth.
Brown in hot fat and add one or two small onions sliced to meat while it is browning. Season meat wifh salt and pepper. Combine ½ cup catsup with 1 cup hot water and add to meat. Place in a roaster or cast-iron skillet or pot, cover tightly, and allow to simmer gently 45 minutes to the pound. Add more water if necessary. Whole carrots and onions may be added to the meat and cooked with it the last 45 minutes of the cooking period.
THIS WEEK'S MENU
•Pot Roast Carrots Browned Potatoes
Apple, Celery, Raisin Salad Bread and Butter Beverage Baked Custard, Strawberry Jam
Sugar Cookies •Recipe given
LYNN SAYS:
You're going to sell nutrition to your family not just because of its virtues but by attractively garnished, well-cooked food. Here's how:
Whenever possible serve the vegetables with the meat, as browned potatoes, whole carrots, browned onions. These can be placed around the meat for effective coloring.
Radish roses with parsley brighten almost any kind of meat platter.
Spinach, chopped, seasoned and mixed with white sauce can be made into nests or mounds and served around meat.
Baby beets may be scooped and filled with green peas served around the meat or on a platter by themselves.
Ham can be scored in circles for a change by using a small cookie cutter and a maraschino cherry placed in each circle. Circ les look best if they overlap.
Bananas or pineapple slices broiled make a tantalizing accompaniment to baked ham, roast beef or lamb chops.
Slices of orange topped with a smaller slice of jelly is excellent for meat platters.
rrrf
"£? Teach Yourself to Type With Aid of New Booklet
By VIRGINIA VALE (Released by Western Newspaper Union.)
PE R H A P S it 's Sh ir ley T e m p l e ' s g l o w i n g hea l th that in
s p i r e d the Br i t i sh Minis try of F o o d s to a sk Walt D i s n e y for he lp . Studio e x p e r t s s a y that in al l the y e a r s that s h e w a s m a k ing p i c t u r e s for 20th C e n t u r y - F o x s h e n e v e r suffered f rom the n u m e r o u s a i l m e n t s ch i ldren u s u a l l y h a v e , and now that s h e ' s approaching 13 making sub-deb pictures for Metro she's still the wonder of the studios because she's so well. That means a lot in Hollywood, where a star's illness can be so expensive for a studio.
Well, Shirley's diet has always included plenty of vitamins and minerals. And—Walt Disney has cre-
U M HAND HCnr HA.HO
Veal is tender and delicate and deserves careful cooking.
Breaded Veal Cutlets. (Serves 6)
2 pounds veal steak, cut in 6 pieces 1 egg Cornflake crumbs 1 small onion, chopped Salt and pepper 4 tablespoons lard 1 No. 2½ can of tomatoes
Dip pieces of meat into the egfe and cornflake crumbs which have been seasoned with salt and pepper. Brown in hot lard on both sides, using a heavy frying pan or skillet. Add tomatoes and chopped onion, cover and cook slowly for 1 hour.
Variation: Make as above omitting tomatoes and onion. Add 1 cup of sour cream after meat is browned and cook for 1 hour. Thicken the sour cream gravy with flour and water and serve.
A cut which you may not have used is lamb shanks, but I assure you they are simply delicious when braised. They'll be a good food dollar stretcher for you this season:
Braised Lamb Shanks. (Serves 6)
6 lamb shanks 2 tablespoons lard Salt and pepper 1 cup celery j 1 cup carrots, cut fine, if desired 1 cup green beans, cut fine, if
desired Brown the lamb shanks in hot
lard. Season with salt and pepper. If you're using vegetables, place them in the bottom of the casserole and add a small amount of water. ! Put in the lamb shanks. Cover and | cook in a slow oven (300 degrees) 1 2 hours.
Kidneys are right up there among the top-notchers as a source or ribo- , flavin, preventer of nervous digestive diseases. They're good broiled with bacon and good also in this de- 1 licious savory loaf:
Kidney Loaf. , (Serves 6)
1 pound of beef kidney ] 1 cup milk 8 slices bread | V* cup bacon drippings ; 3 slices bacon 1 small can pimientoes Salt and pepper y 3 tablespoons grated onion I ¼ teaspoon powdered sage, if j
desired Wash kidney in cold water. Drain
well and grind, using internal fat. Pour milk over bread and soak. Combine all ingredients except bacon and mix thoroughly. Line bot-torn of pan with uncooked slices of ; bacon, add meat mixture and pack firmly. Bake in a moderate oven ! (350 degrees) for 1¼ to 2 hours.
What could be better than spare-ribs with barbecue sauce as a tasty meat dish on a cold night? Bake t h e s p a r e r i b s brown and crispy and brush them with the sauce for a dish you'll long r e m e m b e r a n d enjoy looking at:
Barbeened Spareribs. (Serves 6)
5 pounds spareribs Brown spareribs under broilei.
Cover with the following sauce and bake about 2 hours in a covered pan in a slow (329 degrees) oven.
Barbecue Sauce. 1 small onion chopped 2 tablespoons lard 2 tablespoons vinegar 2 tablespoon* brown sugar 3 tablespoons lemon juice % cup catsup % cup water Salt and pepper 1 teaspoon paprika Dash of ground cloves and cin
namon Brown onion in lard and add r»
maining ingredients. Brush over spareribs.
(Released by Westcn Newspaper Unlea.)
SHIRLEY TEMPLE
ated three new characters—Doctor Carrot, Clara Carrot and Carroty George, to be used in a drive to get the people of England to eat more carrots!
Good Touch Typist, Wins Jobs.
'"PYPING away with never a •*- glance at the keys! It may
look tricky to you, if you're a job-seeker without such training.
Really, touch typing's so simple you can teach it to yourself, with a keyboard chart like the one in our sketch.
• * • Prepare fur a Job with the aid of our
new 32-page booklet. Has keyboard chart , exercises, speed drills to train you in touch typing. Includes rules for typing English; business, social and official letters, tables of figures. Send your order to:
READER HOME SERVICE 635 Sixth Av*nue New York City
Enclose 10 cents in coin for vour copy of TEACH YOURSELF TOUCH TYPEWRITING. Name
Address
Best for
Juice Young women workers in the na
tion's Capitol are about to be glorified on the screen; evidently the same idea hit several studios at once. Paramount's version of the life and times of the young ladies will be called "Washington Escapade." Metro bought a story called "White House Girl," by Ruth Fin ney, wife of a newspaper man.
Every so often somebody has to [ screen Rex Beach's "The Spoilers." j It was done in 1925 with William Farnum and Tom Sanchey staging the fist fight 4hat made it famous. Paramount did it in 1930 with Gary Cooper. Now Universal will make it once again—this time with Randolph Scott and John Wayne in the he-man roles, and Marlene Dietrich as the heroine.
— * —
cmd Me!
<*..
tA 1 ? ' 's',\
' f,4\ A;t\ '4\
4,
MT'fi
Another re-make scheduled for the near future is "Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch," which was last made by Paramount, in 1934, with W. C. Fields, Pauline Lord and Virginia Weidler. This time little Carolyn Lee will be the child lead.
*
That won't be just gibberish that you hear the actors speaking in RKO's "Valley of the Sun"; it's really Apache. Producer Graham Baker hired Chief Chris Willowbird to make phonograph records in which each speech was spoken first in English, then in Apache. Then James Craig, Antonio Moreno, Tom Tyler and other members of the cast settled down to study the records.
— * —
Elizabeth Bergner, one of the most famous European actresses to work in Hollywood, has just completed the first of her films to be made. It's "Pads Calling," a story of the betrayal and fall of France. 1 Miss Bergner's European pictures include "Catherine the Great," "Escape Me Never," and "Dreaming Lips." She became famous as one of Europe's leading stage figures before she made pictures.
— * —
The movies are an old story to Frances Robinson; at the age of four she played Lillian Gish as a child in "Orphans of the Storm." More recently, she appeared in "Smiling Through." Now she's left pictures for the radio; she's the giddy debutante in the air's version of the delightful "My Man Godfrey."
— # — j A 19-year-old girl is in Alexandria,
Va., getting background material for a murder trial. She's the daughter of Jane Crusinberry, who writes ra- [ clio's "The Story of Mary Marlin," \ now in its eighth year. Mrs. Crusinberry is a stickler for accuracy, ' and the dramatized trial takes place ; in Alexandria, so young Jane was sent off with a candid camera and a notebook to help her mother out.
f— ODDS AND ENDS-Bob Hop* Hm
bom away from home so much, making parMonai appearances, that ha tweari that MS children haven't the slightest idea who he is . • • Jeon Arthur, Cory Grant and Ronald Colman will head the cast 0) Columbia'* "Mr. Twilight" . . . Phillip* de Lacey, famous not so many years ago «j « chdd ttar of the movies, is note producing commercial pictures for the March of Time company . . . Alica Faya toili portray Helen Morgan in tho picture bated on the singer's life . . . Though they don't have night clubs in Iceland, Sonja Hani* may be %houm running ona in her mast Fox picture, tokick tiiU probably play down her skating.
W**m
More "health* per glass In California juice
The deeper color and more delicious flavor of California ortnge juice come from extra riebntss.
Science proves this meins more vitamins C and A, and calcium io every glassl
SttdUss Navel oranges are easy eo peel, slice and section for recipes, lunch boxes and all-round eating.
Those stamped "Sunkisr** are the finest from 14,000 cooperating growers.
snniiss
Sunkist C a l i f o r n i a Navel Oranges
CopyrtgM, 1*41, CftllfomU ftatt O i m m r»itnn«i
Lesser Evil Better the feet slip than the
tongue.—Herbert.
T E X A C O STAR THEATRE
J***-£M
FRED ALLEN EyeryWedrmdoy Night
WITH
KENNY BAKER PO«ruu<D storm
Lire*** 0*"
TEXACO DEALERS w * « * !
«.oi-
MERCHANDISE Must fit GOOD
to bt Consistently Ad vrtifd
BUy ADVERTISED GOODS
w f*W* » • " <flpp
'lhe Pinckiucy isupatcb Wednesday, Nov. 26. 1941 S S H B "
Make Y jar Kitchen Continued From Firs t P a g *
MICHIGAN S T A T S iiiOl> and 1914.
John Lovett, general .^iichiKan Manufacturer*
manager, • asaocia- (
Classified f Want Ads
FFOR SALE OR TRADE for young ! cattle or farm machinery: Kitchen
ma-
Beautiful and Convenient
>.±-£l
29
FOR SALE: English Doll Cab. L new. Cost $26. Will sell for $5.
Mrs Wm. Loll, Phone
"WANTED?* Merf tcTcut wood ~ on share*. Jual off Cedar Laktj road on Vines Road.
James A. Smith
FOR SALE: Two gam prices.
Alfred Lane
WANTED: To trade a six-legged calf for a young heifer.
Eli Aron, 1 mile northwest of Pinckney.
FOR SALE: Round Oak Heater, rug, 9 x 12, davenport , table, bookcase, lineoleum.
J . W. Hudkins, 805 E. Main St.
FOR SALE: Five-room circulating Heater.
Dutch Baughn
LOST: PockttbooK containing driver's license and other papers. Finder please re tu rn to »
Robert Vedder.
t ion: Labor is fostering public ! • • aentment by ita strike., in national uefense plants. Government has been overbuying, creating ita own priority problem. We are in for ft lorijLr war. The closed shop at the Dearborn plant of the Ford Motor company has hindered production im-teud of helping it.
Price* and Labor J. A. Wishart, Detroit, director
of research, United Automobile , Workers {C.I.0,) declared at the , farm bureau forum that price ceiling were needed for farm and in- ' dustrial goods but they would be un ' fair for labor. More efficient machinery, he said, was replacing la-bur. Labor wanted to retain the right to strike and opportunity of higher wages.
Wishart disclosed that the month-y dues income of the U.A.W. from employees of the Ford Motor company was $500,000, this amount jepr tsent ing an average of about $5 a month from each employee under the closed shop agreement.
All three speakers - O'Neal, Lovett, and Wis hart — were in one agreement; Inflation is developing. Farm Income
The national income has increased nearly 50 billions since 1932, going from a low of $40 billions in that year to an estimated $90 bilious for 1941.
Compared with the prosperity yeai, 1929, this year's national income will be nearly seven billions higher, and it will be an all-time iccord.
Employees received 64.3 per cent o: Vie na.ii nal income in 1929; they received 68.8 per cent in 1940 proof that the defense boom is benefitting the working man.
How about the farmer? Cash income including government payments this year is estimated by the U. S. department of agriculture a t FOR S ' lLF "OR TRADE $11.2 billions, while next year's income is expected to reach $13 bil-iom-
Each farm dollar now has a purchasing power equivalent to $1.15 in 1929, according to the official inaex of prices of thing which fanners buy. This level is the high-
lest in the nation's history by a sub-tantial margin.
milch goats. Bar-
l coal range, electric washing chine, oil Btove. ' •
Vincent Dark, 4 miles west of Pinckney on M-36
WANTED: A nice reliable girl to care f%r one child occasionally. Call
Dexter 8256
FOE SALE: Blacktop rams] 15 Blacktop breeding ewes, 10 feeding lamb*.
John L. Donohue, 1 mile north, 1 mile east of Gregory. WANTEDT TO buy~a _farra within five miles south and east of Pinckney. Give price. Must be reasonable full description and location.
3358 West Lafayette, Detroit
FOUND: One stray cow. Owner can have by ider t i f in j and paying for ad. Mrs. Louise Glenn
I am the representative for a full line of Avon cosmetics and household necessities. For free demonstration call Pinckney 60.
Mrs. J. M. McLucas
FOR "SALETFor ty~ fine~wooT ewes and five fine wooi rams from two to five years old.
Wm. Eisenbeiser North Lake, Phone 3482 Chelsea
F O l T S A L E T E i g h t ' r o o m nouse, 2 ¾ -
acres of land at Anderson corners. Edmund A. Perry
W ^ A N T ¥ D ~ t ^ R E N t T 9 0 acre farm on Farley road, known as Michael
j Farley farm. Cash rent. Wm. Kennedy 6223 Avery, Detroit
FOR SALE: "Ear ly Days In Dex-icr" , a hundred years of Dexter history, 32 pages, illustrated. With heavy cover, 50c; light cover, 35c. Dexter Leader office, Dexter, Mich. FOR SALE: Three-year-old Guern-sey cow, fresh.
T. A\ Ware, Pinckney
F O R r S A L E : Pair of mares, 8 and 11 years old^ Heavy set of britch-en harness.
Cecil Hudkins, Stockbridg -
FEMALE HELP W A N T E D : Lady to do laundry. Call 212 Main St.
FOR SALE: Grapes. 75c per bushel. George Bandol Nancy Beebe Farm
FOR SALE Pigs. William Kennedy
FOR R E N T _ H o u s e at 1013 Dexter Road, Pinckney for the winter .
W H E N - Y O U " BUY ~ VITAMINS, Vanilla or Mineral, get a product v/.'th complete open formula and
-> 'Know what you get. Buy Watkins* C. F. Hewlett ,
Box 3, Pinckney.
Fri. Nov. 28 SPECIALS
CASH SPECIALS
Sat, Nov.
^
A-
Maxwell House Coffee
1 Lb. to Jar 33' 2 Lb Tin
I
63<
• f c .
3 Lb. Tin
59C
Gold Medal Flour
24 i i LB.
KRAFT PARKWAY Ol'marg-ne i
3 Lbs, for
49c
•A j f , T
Graham Flour 5 Lb. Sack
23C
Are-o-wax 1 Polish
Qfc.Can
?5c Orange Juice 46 02 Can
30C
$ta09 Ritz
Crackers Lge. Pkg.
2le
t
Defense Council The Michigan Council of Defense
i has anticipated the importance of agriculture in a defense economy. Dr. John A. Hannah, president, Michigan State College, was appointed on the council to represent \ the farm interests. An advisory committee has just been appointed to coordinate the efforts of farm agencies, and its membership includes W. G. Armstrong, master of the Michigan Grange; Clark L. Brody, executive seretary of the Michigan State Farm Bureau; Commissioner Leo V. Card; Milan Grin-nell, editor of the Michigan Farmer and federal and college officials. Another group, a state consumer's committee, is working under guidance of the defense council.
By themselves, Michigan leaders are helpless to curb a swing to inflation. Local protests on prices is only a symptom of the disease, the remedy for which must come from Washington. I t is obviously a national problem that calls for national action.
WANTED: Woman or girl for general kousework.
Mrs. Merwin Campbell ~~193"> Olas
mobile four door sedan in excellent condition. Inquire at
Loll's Tavern, J. E. Nay
FOR SALE: Osborne corn binder in good repair, Moline mower, A-1,35 yearling hens, walking plow* 7 shovel cultivator, Daisy hot water heater. O. Corey, 805 Main St. Pinckney
| FOR~RENT: Year around, cottage ' at Cordley Lake, White Lodge, 5
rooms, water, electricity. Mrs. 13. E. Warner,
~ T h e AVON Cosmetic Company lias a complete line of practical Christmas gift* and household necessities. The best in quality and priced reasonably.
I am the authorized representat i v e ^ this company for Pinckney and Gregory and vicinities. For a
r O R SALE: Chunk wood. Clarence Marshall, Gregory, Mich.
CIDER MILL OPENS
I have opened my cider mill for the season, and aai prepared to do custom work. Cider barrels and kegs for sale.
Ed Maas, One mile Pinckney-Howell road Wright 's Corners.
west of the at George
WANTED: Farms of any size, with or without stock and tools. Cash Phone 617 Howell or write or call buyers waiting for desirable farms, at my office, 112 State Street, opposite the Court House west.
L. HAROLD CRANDELL
Howell, Michigan
FOfc SALE__Water tank heater with furnace or cook stove connections. Inquire at Dispatch office.
FOR SALE: Mt-kinaw.
Good Green all-wool
Phone 94
free demonstration call Mrs. J. M. McLucas. Phone Pinckney 60.
343 S. Roger Northville, Mich.
W A N T E D T l t a w furs and 'h ides at market prices.
Lucius Doyle Phone 42
Registered Hampshire Boar to Cross Breed Pigs. Service $2.
H. Hiamparian
Will par ty who borrowed my extension bit please re tu rn same?
John Dinkel
FOR SALE: stoves cheap.
Two good heating
Wm. Darrow
Catscip 14 Oz. Bottle
IOC 5)
! & & i
YOU GET BETTER MEATS AT
Clarks
46,210 TAKEN IN THE DRAFT \
During the first year in which the d id l t has been in effect, 55,-042 men have been approved by local draft boards and of these 8,000 have been rejected at induction centers.
25 per cent of the reductions were for nervous or mental troubles 15 per cent for teeth defects, and I 14 per cent for eye trouble.
The 46,210 draftees plus 36,444 men who have enlisted in various branches bring Michigan's total of men in service to 82,654.
This includes 9,585 in the navy, 2,369 in the marines and 1,312 in the coast guard.
Of the 82,654 men entering the service, 32,031 were from Wayne county. 11,433 enlisted and 20,883 were drafted,
FOR SALE: Circulating Heater. Will sell cheap.
} Mrs. Lucy Dryer, 609 Main St.
FOR"SALE OR TRADE: Registered Black Top rams.
Russell Gardner
FOR SALE: Registered Hampshire Boars. Ready for Service.
H. Hamparian
FOR SAI4E: 20 feeding lambs and eight ewes, fine wools.
Ar thur Bullis FOR SALE: Used heaters and Circulators.
Howlett Bros. Hdwe., Gregory, Michigan
FOUND: H o u n d ^ o g . Owner can , have same by identifying and paying for ad.
NEW 4-H CLUB
We Deliver
At All Timi
A new 4-H Club was formed on Tuesday afternoon. There are seven j members. The name of the club will be Griffith Sunshine Circle. Meetings will be held each Monday at school. The dues will be three cents a week. Officers elected are President, Norma Jean McLucas; Vice President, Lois W a r e ; Secretary Phyllis Loll; Treasurer , Barbara Grahaman. ,
LOST off Frank Plasko'a t ruck, two loading gates. Finder please return to
Frank Plaako
FOR SALE or t raae io r a fresh cow: Two heifeie, 18 month old, bred. M. J. Hoiael
HUNTERS and T R A P P E R S !
I will be a t Leo Devine's garage in Dexter each Saturday from 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. during t h * season, to buy your furs, hides and pelts a t market price*.
Established 1865
I n c o r p o r a t e 1916
McPherson State Bank
Over Sixty-Eigbt Year*
of 5*f« Banking
THANKSGIVING
1620 - Pilgrims land a t Plymouth Rock and give thanks to God for a safe passage to the barren Massachusetts shore and escape from the persecutions of their homelands. They built homes and made a livelihood from the wilderness and in the years following they commenced the annual acknowledgement of the blessings of the years on a Thanksgiving Day. 1941 - Americans all, we can be thankful for peaceful lives, less insecurity than any place on the globe, bet ter homes, better schools, better churches, better wages better everything;. ' 194? - The next years ahead wil' not be easy, hut let each one keep in mind the blessings of America.
As bankers w e are thankful for our customers continued faith and confidence, we shall pewbjtontly * n v e to war ran t its continuance.
NcPflerson State Bank Money to loan at reasot*ole
; T * r e « p u d on Zuvitig9 Book. a iT Time Cert i f icate of Deposit
t f cPfonon Sta t* %^%
1AL deposit* up t* $5,000.60 to-
sored by our membership In Deposit Iastrnuw* ~
*
Federal
\