Pinckney Community j Centennial Committees March Term Of...

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r | OUR SUBSCRIPTION RATE * 1 IS $1.25 PER YEAR I Vol. 52 ;> Pinckney, Livingston County, Michigan Wedneiday, February 2fTl93S. No. 9 Pinckney Community j Centennial Committees Hall Opening i To Meet Monday Remodeled Auditorium To Be Opened: Publicity, Finance, Sport*, Dance and to the Public by a Band Concert and \ Dance Friday Evening.Joe Guinan'* Military Band and DeLux Orches- tra to be the Attraction. Parade Committees and Chairmen Are Asked to Meet at Board of Commerce Hall on Mon. March 4 I The Publicity, Finance, Parade, .... ., . , . , . . Sports and Dance Committees and Alter months of being closed, due,,, . u - , , . , ^, _ ' . their chairmen are asked to meet at to extensive repairs, the Community L. ,. i *•/" u n , f Tr , . ... , ^ . ... . / J the Hoard of Commerce hall on Mon Hall will be opened in fitting style on Friday evening, March 1st, One of (he best known musical or- ganizations in the country will not only give a fine band concert with a full military band but combined with this \^a be a dance orchestra that will come directly from Detroit to furnish the music for dancing which will im- mediately follow the band coagert. Pinckney, in obtaining this wonder- fully trained group of young musi- cians, will be furnishing a program day evening, March 4. On this occa- sion plans for the three day's obser- vance on July 4, 5, i\ will be discussed and the general program outlined. J u s t w h a t <lay the parade will be held has not been decided. There will be a Da*3 ball game each day and, !nj all probability, a dance each night On onp of the nights there will be a j play at the Community Hall. Besides these there will be two speaking pro- grams, Ferris wheel and midway. It is also suggested mat there be water to its peopleeomparabhroniytothose j events. Prizes will be given, for all, put on in the largest theatres. This military band, the Catholic Boys' and Girls' Band of Detroit un- der the direction of Mr. Joseph Gui- .ao, with hij wife, Mrs. Guinan, contests. A Miss Pinckney contest will also be put on by the merchant-;. The. general committee has been re- ceiving much commendation for tin- idertaking this lverae -. e.ni::r, t- ",i •<. : e.i- •V.,-1 d a b;..id here in Pinckney,' h' irom lho>.- ^ .! .-.1- ;.'•:• W h i l e Ilou,-..e k i r 11 ^. v '"'-' '' 'V . iii-.-T g a v e coi.ccr'.s j'orj A number of s r days at il:o Century of Progress, 1 *ocvivec' > played at the Toronto Exposition. March Term Of Court! ^eot Comment Court to Convene at Howell on March 5, But Jury is Not Called. Only 8 Criminal Cases and Short Term Is Looked Fcr. <v In the .state capitol at Landing Gov. Fitzgerald seems to be having similar troubles to those experienced by Gov. Comstock. In the.senau* a block has be»*n fornied among the Republican : senators, disgruntled, it is said, over The March term of circuit court patrollakr<<t l0 oppo , t . him> Iiy com . will open at J W li <>,, March 5 but; binin{ , with Uu . Dem0 crats t hev have the jury is not called for that date.; aIlva(ly , cored two victories over the Most of the cases ar** old ones whiejrf u have been postponed :: number ol times and a short session is pate<l. There are s criminal eases. Of thest two are fov capital offences.Clarem 1 * governor. Through their efforts the janumdmint to make the'supicino and- ' inlJn " j circuit court judges appointed by the governor for life was defeated. By getting two more senators appointed to tW i^uiujnjittee that handles all ap- j Frechette is to be tried, for killing j pointments, thT-^Tij7NH~ljio>ke(rjjirtro7i- | Robert Brown. George Hays i- charg- j age matters. A leading member of this Jed with negligent homicide as the re- anti-Fitzgerald block is Senator Harry ; suit of an auto accident in which Mrs. j Hittle of Livingston 'and Ingham | Minnie Wepman of Grand Rapids was J counties. The press report has the I killed.-George Jones and Win. Smyth j following to say about it: are charged with bastardy. Ernest) : Wellman will appear for sentence on \ Credit for the defeat of the istration bill to make nil -judge charge__o'f selliug oil stock—and th«i^ St;tt« 0/ I ." • . '. . i '-a ;. •. e ;i j;;. vitation will be mailed to ;.li of 'iu-se. If you have: anyone -you wish to rece- ive an invitation, you should hand their name to the secretary. •artwxxxMk-an?z?a They have become a civic institu lion in Detroit taking part in alt pa- triotic and religious program of prom- inence. In hearing this excellently trained] group of boys and girls, parents with T^iTluur^gTrTs - in mT~blihirTiore7^ar _J[5£ ^!>MIIc;yL_cjiuiity-cottvefltioit REPUBLICAN COUNTY Frechette Hearing The Weekly Church Program Set For Thursday i Catholic Church S e n i c e J \ Rev. Lewis M. Dion CONVENTION rnaks its debut. Pinckney is looking] c ' u forward to March is't. It will surprise Vu Pihckhey can realize the opportunity offerad the boys and girls of this community in the way of the splendid cultural development possible through] *.->• -uuier, uoss Keaa w. ri. Meyer the finest of all the 1 arts, music It i;, only a matter of a few months j County Chairman John Strick of with experienced and nationally! Brighton acted as chairman pro tern known teachers like Mr. and Mrs.! " n <l called the meeting to order. Hi- Guinan before our own band willl l ' arn Smith was elected permanent 'chairman of the convention. Hurry i /unGoTder acted ;;s secretary, "~~" you. Hear this famous band of boys j No resolutions were adopted except i and girls. You will marvel at their one calling for the re-.-lection oi" Mrs.] ' ability. Dance to the rhythm of a real Harold Crandall to the state-central metropolitan orchestra. A night of {committee as a representative from real entertainment and in store for you. The proceeds of this entertainment] H -'^ Johnson, Pontine attorney, was and opening will assist our own band introduced and in an excellent speech in Pinckney, 'which is now well or-| a - ske(1 that the convention endorse ikl- ganized and many of our'own boys ( £ a, \ Downs, 'superintendent of Fern- and girls will soon have the means of I dale schools, for the nomination ol Trunk Murder Suspect Ar>-aig:i?d at - Howell Saturday/ Jay fV-5w?-gncy " . Is Appointed Hi* A^torn^y was held at the court house in Howell, on Thursday afternoon, Putnam town-j Clarence Frechette, chaig - ship vas represented by Floyd Weeks,; the murder of Robert Brov. n a; n -ell On J a n u a r y 2'.'<, was anumged [fore Justice Glenn Yelland at H'.> '. Saturday morning. * FrecTrtte, it will be nme•.:'»•• lied to Cafifoinia with Brow and uas brougirt bat!: utter mile trip by Sheriff Fa /cAt, Inpii t.ovi'i) Ua.-Se.i {'.ml V\J.-' cuior *-t.i: v !II'I| V 'c'UlTTi hey :;n;v( 0. '.' e liir.'-iiev. A phot;. r Masses 8:130 A. M., 10:30 A. M. LVvotion to -Q^frr M o t h e r of IVrpct- •u -,L H e l p i i a i u i x l a y - a t 1:00 IV M , . Confes.Mons 7 :140 P. M. Saturday. Baptist Church Rev. B. F. Esic, Pastor Services each Sunday Morning worship 10:.'>0 ' Special and seperate services for the little folks. case of th • People vs. James an< Homer Rouse ,\il| be tried. This is an appeal from a justice court. Frank Bernier will al.-o appear for .-entence | on an oil stock deal. ' The issue of fact jury cases are as (follows: Curl Heinig vs. Leonard Herbst, -trespass; Charles Lee vs. I Robert and Ida Gates, trespass; Grace 'Lee vs. Robert Gates, trespass; Carrie 1 Lee vs. Robert'Gates, trespass. These I three suits are over an auto accident. ; Ralph Moore vs. N'unnaii l'itcairn. j assumpsit; Stanley .iierriman vs. W. (H. Smith, iissjimpsitC' Hunter Gaines | vs Hiram Watson," assumpsit; George I Hughes v-, .f'iii-LAWrwvp^i.ssimiiiKi 1 . idinin- in the ;jy the- iiy the Senator subject to appointmrtrt Governor, rather than el ctive [people, certainly goes to ; Harrv F. Hittle, of Landing. i Senator Ifittle, vlio norinaily ha-- i little to say, proved that lie \va.- very ; effective' when he did .-peak. In an ) address to the Senat * l;i.-ting l< is-tliun fifteen seconds ?H which he decl;ii - ed I that "the people in his di.-Arict wr-r • | better qualified A<v select theirTn^fav^T," | than was some (iovi-rnor who had • never seen the man lie was ahout in appoint to office, and the people are qualified to select their own judge if they so desire", li- undoubtedly killed this bill. Issue Public I^oun CO. v of .fact, non-Jury -cases, are \ _ Jt ^- r - - -—, " ,:,• , ., ' t , I Kchoes ol the Elizabeth Lazlo ; j . Fred Bobroskv vs. T. E. Moular. Ad-! ' , . v - ,, c. ti , VVf,, k m that stati option petition ol Joan Scott; Jon ^ A . . , ,, ,. ..,.,,. 'representatives ther( Johnson Co. vs. George Williams, as- , ., . ,- . . peal th< sump^itj^Liiwience Seliult/. v>. Jack'. . jlylein, trespa.v-; Whiteiuoie Lak< famous I'ennesee were when *ui i.(KS- refu. <•<[ to "Monkey" i '.'ij'-'l la i o! re- Sum!:.y School ..' .... 11.45 ——^htyycy~forr -«tH : Fir.-t N'atioral vs. Francis Tenm-y. National—11. ink—rrf- enjoyment isi the sixth district. \ 0 candidates v,ei( 'endorsed for the state"' convention. assisting, themselves w%+b bringing! f>»W«- tnstruetron. ~Mr. H^wns wiih hours of real enjoyment to others.* "(Jet behind this Concert March 1st. Help Pinckney. Help the boys and girls of your community. o • '• formerly associated with Highland! BUM illlitll. '! lew." 11 last 'i' ^.nd wo'iam w l'iter for lit • )'' 'i'^ntes were pi (sent and a aa--;i' ,- n-'psiiol.-- s • ' ( tak^n of tii-• which took place in the miiil \ Frecju tt ; ])led not gniity .'en! tice Y > Maiiu appoint' <I i ..-,- lie,., < Jay P. SwcLiiuv U> de|V>.AIhi in. healing ,vas set for Thuivduy, I"e my 2s., Tlie s •. it • of lhe«ciini"e lia.- m_^ beeAi definitely established. Fr- - : has repudiated his story that. B. Jv I"i V: .'< rii ; u r.- 1". 1 T i:;' Wor.-hip . i v< nmg prayer service .. 7:00 8:00 . S:00 It e) u i'ra ,i, Park schools and was twice eh cted mayor while th re. Mr."Johnson's r os-• shoo '* in ^ took pla( ' e on thr H: ' r ; olution- failed to be adopted. ^.. }.;. v load, Dmiles north of HowHl. Now Osborn, a rethed teacher, now livingl c ' ,nin ' s iL lla PP ( ' ,HMi on <;i ' :iM(l KlV SOPHIE HOFHANESIAN : Oceola, then took the floor and 2 m ' i] "* l ' ast ef Howdl n " :n ' lhf " U Sophie Hofhanesian, 14, died at the | ^ . ( 1 that li. M. Key vorth, superin-j f an \f, ^J 0 0 R ] L U ^ ^][ /' University of Michigan Hospital, Anni indent of Hamtramack - schools be. "* '"" "* '" '" , 'endorsed for the nomination fov on * 1 ,1sl:i ^'P" 1 ^^ sfc-.infr t h r n » . As th Arbor, Wednesday, of bullet wounds in 4-h-e-.h_ead received- iji the shooting- affair here' oa the morning of Febru- ary Id. The body was brought to Pinckney and the funeral' was held from St. Mary's Church Saturday morning. Rev. Lewis Dion officiating. Burial was in St. Mary's cemdteiy. Sophie was,a pupil in the 10th grade, Pinckney high school; Many beautiful floral offerings were 'rcco- lved. - ^ ' superintondent jjl public-44^4+-u<4-k>n.4-! This also failed so the Livingston county delegation will ^o uninstruc- ted. Twenty-two delegates wiil -be sent to the state convention at Detroit March 1. Rep, Chas. Adams will be chairman and there will be one from each county and two each from Howell, Brighton and Fowlervilb, They are as follows: Putnam, Floyd Weeks; Unadflla, Fred ROSP; Ham- l U U ^ I I V 111 L|l>. 1 one has reporte bullets went through his head undiu | bullet holes wore found in car, it i; not thought that he could have been kilted in.the car. 7 A large .crowd attended the 11«• -.i i'.v^,' and for this reason it was held in the court room. H)-.:10 P.ibl- Yuu invited j Lumber Co. vs Heiman Johnson, a- [sumpsit; Dennis Kelleher \-.s I-'ri.nre- rT<-nney, assiimpsi Hank of Brightoi misumpi it; Fiivt Brighton ^•s. W. D. Squire, assumpsit;, -Carl Jacobs vs Harold Finery, assump- sit; C. B. Monroe, receiver, \-s. Lvh- Glover, assumpsit; Joseph R<-nilnin vs Tho.s Leiih, assumpsi..; Anna Rasnius- sej| vs Win. Tuthill, assumpsit; (Jeorgi Hughe.s_\s C'ail Mi^rgan, trespa-.-; First .National Uaiik of 1! right mi vs Lee Bidwell, assiimjisit ; First National Bank of Bi'ightmi v.- liiny Bidws li, assumpsit; First .Nati-mal Bank of Brighton vs I)oiiakl Leitii, a^4im,h-t.. Chancery cases: Ferry and K* n n e t h I Cook vs Forrest B\ons, jorclosi.is ; School session at l.t *.30,A. M. j Kllu Robertson \> Tn-hy Duvni, pa;- uul your friends are cordially' tition ; Merrill Major vs Lottie Major. \ injunction ; John Kui'ems vs Karl Seitz, injunction; Win. Voight v.s Carl Napier, injunction; Win. Gallagher vs Win. Scully, 'foiclosure; Heary Wires miin vs Walter Glover, 1'orclosur'-; Austin Barney vs John llaiiis, for- who lur-.k law agan-t tnarhing f ''v6J\r- vot(- of <i7 to 20. \\'Idle ;hi.- (is what;,might have been expected ' from the Tennesfe Mountniner. 'have gf>n7 through life wit' tin- 1 ; of <ienesee on one knee aiai I on the oth' 1 'i' mi the othf i '. though t h e (»< lie.sis t h e o ' y o / c cannot be pi'o\'ed. neither c. ',in's theor> thai t.ie hui '•eiide<l I rom ;:pe -. n.mil n-iii 'li lie, D.;r- tie - Coi!?regatiunal Church Mrs. c . K. liaughn, Organist Rev. C. H. /use, Minister Ten; day evening, devotional half . V:.'b) to X;00; and T<-acher eh,- class from S:00 to 9:00. Sunday Semcos'_ _ .vini-Ming Worship with-sermon at A. M. A bill A-r-- pe : ¢.-. ilJI is b fot ..• t h e lejii; submit an amendment to the at the spring election providing f<< county government reoi gaaizateee This is .*M"inil.ir to the a.ra iinnu iA whieh was defeat d la t fail. T h e v<.t in tlie- Hi+Tt t-rmntie,s~Tv4lL_m; i 'i , ;d!i>: Lm- sufficient to again snow it under. ( r- ilt'V it most of the rural di.-trii '. vemhi lose their representation by In in;.: combined with more poptrlou,- <li-iri<A- - A large number of her classmates} attended the funeral and six of them, Charles Clinton, Marcian Ledwidge, Telc.sphoro Bourbonna|s, Robert Rich- burg, L. K. Queal; Iosco, Lynn Card ner; Marion, Wirt Smith; Tyrone N. Chestnut; Green Oak, Wm Dun- can; Brighton Twp., A. Shaw; Brigh- llies. was.<>4 years old. He w;is united in, marriage to M"yrta E'inch of Pinckney and she suiwives him with" one daugli- i . n .. 4 ,, , T1 , , , ,ter, Mrs. Shirley Ander.-.on of I;o ardson, William Meyers Jr. an'd Jack" ton C,ty, A l b e r t B o y l a n ^ J o h n S t n c k j ^ ^ . j ^ im , a KPandlJauffht „, The deceased lived here uiitil J DM) and was prominently identified v.iih village activities here. He learned th blacksmith trade under his father ami' conducted the shop following the lai- •tev ? !< di nth. He inluu'hluuV himnelf in public" affairs and served sr-veia' Reason acted as bearers. Fowlerville, J. K Munsell, C. C. Fen Sophie was a very good scholar andt ton ; Howell Twp., Don. Barrett, How- was well liked by her schoplmates. It| c]1 City, Hiram Smith, Fred Cronen- _is a pity that she was cut down in' vvett, Charles Adams; Conway, Cecil early life. 4fc -p— F>EMUCRA1 CAUCUS . Th.re will b e v a Democrat caucus V!d ;:t Jie Putnam tovynshJp_haTT~oii •.'dr.y, M a r c h - !), at 2:00 P. M. purpose, of nominating'town-j .-::"!>' officers and the transaction of nei, o.thur business as may-come be- J:..i-o it. . Com, »>. NOTICE , The regular irfeeting of the King's Daughters will be held at the home of Mrs. Wayne AtLee Thursday after- noon, March 7th. Luncheon at one o'clock. Bohm,; Oceola, M. E. Osborne; ."lelvin Hibner, Hartland; James Morgan,, Brighton; ivesiic L,atson, Genoa. LAST CALL TAXES Trrj last "~ Staurday, M.irch 2, is tlvj last day on which I shall collect Putnam town- ship taxes. During 1 that week I will also be at the L a v e y T7TT S t a t i o n on Wednesday, February 27th, to take in taxes. All taxes must be paid to the county treasurer after March 2. - Gorman Kelly, Twp. Treas. -REPUBLICAN CAUCUS The Republicans of Putnam, town- EMIL R. BROWN Kmil R. Brown, son of th<- lat • Christian and Harriet Brown, died at his home in Los Angeles, California, OTi F<'b, 2'*^after a year*s~Tl TT Pentecostal Gospel Missio 11 t!!0 \'. Fourth St., Ann Arbor. . Ca.-Ler' . C. Kapp Kvaiig- list D. Martin Sol vices Sunday'at M :00 P. M. and S ;00 P. M- Wednesday at 8:00 V. M. Kverybody Welcome Thf? church at the Coluser farm is <li. continue*!. A< 1 coi<lin.'r to press rrporf- Hauptmann jury is contemplating ing pn a vaudr'ville tour. Thi,- i,- m ing in on opportunity with a vcnivri Their death verdict seem- to -••I'm- ess indefilii'e REGULAR COMMUNICATION Thr- regular communication of Liv- ing.-,t.on L o d g e ^ N o . 7 f i , F. and A. M., will 'be held om Tuesday evening, March a. On this occasion a venison supper will be served at 7:00 P. M. A good attendance is asked. Bill 25c. Paul Curlett Sec'y UNAD-ILLA TWP. TAX NOTICE Wednesday, March 6th, is the lasi. day on which h shall receive Unadilla town-hip taxes as after, that date, I must Mitthr with Lhcrpminty treaJufrjrT ie can closure; Cecil lludkins vs V, e.dey > been more ov ] Tuley, injunction; School District, No. | pt;a , ha , ,„.,.„ lakl . n . J | M ) j t w ; ] ] J, fractional, vs Township Cl, rks of; ab!y b ,. ., yf . ar at | f , a>t h( , |!f/r(i , J'utnam and Hamburg townships; Fr-' nest Watson vs Toney Ilugi-, injunc- tion; James Boyajian vs Stanley Kor., injunction; Hunter Gallatian vs Verne Pilgrim, quiet title; Fdward Kuhlmam vs Hora< e Stowell, quiet tit!", John Becker vs C. P. Bush, quiet, title; Henry Montague vs John Bush, Lyl< Bennett vs^ATTT 1C te\ possibly go to the chair. The recent of the gold standard deri'-am F"h<:d States Supn me Coii.-t has been iuterpreteil .various and argued pro and con. point is that it Me(o\; K;tymoud (•ook vs Ira Sandfard, ijtiiet title. The divorce /cases are Mary Well- man vs Byron Wellman; Ralph Hop- \v;:\ - I'he in; in is no', lieces.-a.. y i <r make the-^Amerifin dollar 'etrl'i v 1 lu ^~ i in gold any more and that no h-e,a! [action to force the government to do this is possible. Kx-Gov. ('has - C. ,- '.lornev in a letter publish. -: m the De.- it.eit Free ]'Vf<* viv-.- i i n n aaj.1 ', kins vs Beth Hopkins; Ruby Davis vs Howard Davis; Guy Butler, vs Laurs j j t . He s- a .\> rhat th- . upr. n:e C,ae, Butler; Norma DeMond vs Alfred i ( a, 1M ot ask the' impo-^hh- Tmu ih -v DeMond; Jnnnie Vordakis vs Fstan-; j.,- not enough gold in existance to'r-- thios -Vordakis; Ida McFacheren v.s; (ilf . m a) j tno moru . y j n U M . OJ . pay ..jj, Arthur McFacheren; Florencr- -4)ttt^itJrp-oim«uir6ns and-as the gold obiiga- ield vs Otto Daniels; Kvelyn Lyon vs. t j on ig impossible it is without foiv<. DOfl' Lyons; Km ma (.'lark vs Charles j j n j a%v r terms as mayor of Pinckney. On th- occasion of the^ first home. _con:ui.'r [ j here- he "madtr the- address of wdeo." ; | ! aud })}'e,ented the key .of th- v e.e 1 Liu Howard Kearney. He was made aj member of Livingston Lodge, N o . ', ._ ' on January 20, JS'.Ji* r.mi -serve \ as secretary oi that organise. <:i f.».r many years. In middle life he decided to loo?: for easier work than blacksmithing and took a correspondence, course. All taxes not paid by that date must'Junior Clark be paid' to the county, treasurer. ABOARD OF COMMERCE MEETING The next meeting of the Pinckney 1 Board of Commerce will i>e held on Monday evening, March 4. On this . occflsioij^futthei j&um will be diacus- sed for the Centennial Celebration. All -fre-pTese»t if pogsTbTeT •).••• S«cwtary« Later he passed a civil service, exam- ship will hold a caucus at the. Putnam j i n a t , o n and obtained a position as EUCHRE CONTEST AT DEXTER Lhingston Lodge, No. 70, will go to Dexter Thursday night to take part in the fifth euchre contest. All those w h o ha_v*: no way to go please phone the secretary. , t Paul Curlett, Sec'y. » -o- CHOP S^EY Come and enjoy the Oriental-SUP- Mrs. li. C. UalRav Scc!y_J townslup haiL-oii--Saturaay, March •iM-rnt^tr";—vw-^wr-rs—^r-i— TP T i t ^ • * i •* -^ . L^ftiu^^M^ « . . . ^,, c j crlt the DetToit |tost office. In- p/ ; r served by Omental waiters iri an at 8:00 P. M., for. the purpose of nom-i ifti/i i ^ ^. A * r. * i . , -' l, • . , i^»e i . _. . -t ' . .... r .,' 1014 he moved to Detroit. Lat r -he ; Ortevtal .-.tmo'-'rhere Marcn '?.. inaUng township officerrf and to tran-L,, r , t \ • \t " v , , ! , , . - Itransfered n;s Ma.-omc n sact such other business as ma'y conie before it. ' Com, CARD PARTY AND DANCE There wjll be a card party and 11../¾ i Friendship Lodge, Detroit. About ten years ago he mw. California to reside and hi'.s" i> *-> committee members are asked to)dance at St. ; Joseph's Hall in Dexter on M,onday evening, March'4. Every- one invited. j"ma~dv- Ws home the i'c-11I VXiS X~ ted Michigan and "Spent xonv* with friends here'. Wc understanc the funeral and burial will be }u .Cul- itimlfk '' •i t< since: S ! '- time *.i\-it of t ;ck' >..;.* iit h.'. .'-old by ail member 1 ie Tbung. People's clar.s, 2bc. PASX-MATRON'S NIGHT Kastr-m Star CtuTpter~~No. 145 will hold their Past Matron's Night at their hall on Friday, March 1.' rettaJDHKngham, S«c'y •*»• •y ~i 7_ :c -Orr the night of Wednesday, Fel>- ruary 27, the National Commander of the American Legion will deliver a coast-to-coast broadcast over ,the Columbia Broadcasting System in which he will discuss vitally important matters concerning the legislative sit- uation with regard to immediate pay- ment of the Adjusted Seuvice Certifi- cates. The time of the broadcast will JUEANN£-ELY Fly, sixteen Jeanne ivly, sixteen year old daughter of Myron and Hazel Benha.a Ely, 724 Miller Ave., Ann Aibor, yielded' to Death last Thursday even- ing at University Hospital, after a long and valiant struggle again-t disease/ Endowed with 3'are talents, and.M" unusually attractive personality, Je.T i- ne had' made many friends- in this cuius, nii: n/iiu ui IJIU ui wjiuiaai J^*" . .^,.-..^.,.O*.. .: i. L bo 7i-m 11:45 to 12:00 mhtatcRt. ^ T T l ' T " ! ^ ^ . . 1 . . - t " guest of her cousins, Constance and eastern standard t.me.. I urge every Evelyn Darrow, ge every Veteran to listen^ in and Ietrrn—the-} true situation regarding'the so-called bonu.->. .-- Floyd Weeks, Com. ABOUT SO PERCENT COLLECTED Xh^.fhwnship troasurcra arc bo^in-imid 100 chickens at ^public auction AUCTION SALE FRi., MARCH 5 Mrs. Lillian Hassencahl will selllior personal property consisting of Z horses, ll_head of cattle, 21.shcop nin^ to settle with the county' treas urcr starting this week, Acc_ording to reports coming in about 50 percent *of the taxea aro being collected, %? ~V~.- ^ at her farm, 'south of Pinckney wf Friday, March 1 at 12:00 V^. VT. M v J. Reason, Clerk. ^ ^ ' Percy Ellis, Auctioneer^. A - •-—•*£**? / ' ^ 'i¥-!^ 9 V-

Transcript of Pinckney Community j Centennial Committees March Term Of...

Page 1: Pinckney Community j Centennial Committees March Term Of ...pinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1935-02-27.pdf · r | OUR SUBSCRIPTION RATE * 1 IS $1.25 PER YEAR I Vol. 52 ;> Pinckney,

r | OUR SUBSCRIPTION RATE * 1 IS $1.25 PER YEAR I

Vol. 52

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Pinckney, Livingston County, Michigan Wedneiday, February 2fTl93S. No. 9

Pinckney Community j Centennial Committees Hall Opening i To Meet Monday

Remodeled A u d i t o r i u m T o Be O p e n e d : Publ ic i ty , F inance , Sport* , Dance a n d to the Publ ic by a B a n d C o n c e r t a n d \ Dance F r i d a y E v e n i n g . J o e Gu inan ' * Mili tary Band a n d D e L u x Orches­

t r a to be the A t t r a c t i o n .

P a r a d e Commit tees and C h a i r m e n A r e Asked to Meet a t B o a r d of C o m m e r c e Hall on Mon. March 4

I T h e Publ ic i ty , F i n a n c e , P a r a d e ,

. . . . . , . , . , . . S p o r t s and Dance Commi t t ee s a n d A l t e r m o n t h s of be ing closed, d u e , , , . u • - , , . ,

^, _ ' . t h e i r cha i rmen a re a sked t o mee t at to ex tens ive r epa i r s , t h e C o m m u n i t y L . i» ,. i *•/" u n , f

T r ,. ... , ^ . . . . . / J t he Hoard of C o m m e r c e hall on Mon Hall will be opened in f i t t ing s tyle on F r iday even ing , M a r c h 1st,

One of (he bes t known musica l or-gan iza t ions in the c o u n t r y will not only give a fine band conce r t wi th a full mi l i ta ry b a n d b u t combined with th is \ ^ a be a dance o rches t r a t h a t will come d i rec t ly f rom De t ro i t t o furnish the music fo r d a n c i n g which will im­m e d i a t e l y follow the band coager t .

P inckney , in o b t a i n i n g this wonder ­fully t r a ined g r o u p of y o u n g musi ­c ians , will be fu rn i sh ing a p r o g r a m

d a y evening , March 4. On th is occa­sion p lans for the t h r e e d a y ' s obser­vance on J u l y 4, 5, i\ will be discussed and t h e genera l p r o g r a m out l ined .

J u s t w h a t <lay the p a r a d e will be held has no t been dec ided . T h e r e will be a Da*3 ball game each day and , !nj all probabi l i ty , a d a n c e each night On onp of the nights t h e r e will be a j p lay a t t h e C o m m u n i t y Hal l . Besides these t h e r e will be t w o s p e a k i n g p ro ­g r a m s , F e r r i s wheel a n d midway. It is also sugges ted m a t t h e r e be w a t e r

to i t s p e o p l e e o m p a r a b h r o n i y t o t h o s e j even t s . Pr izes will be g i v e n , for a l l , p u t on in the la rges t t h e a t r e s .

This mi l i t a ry band , t h e Cathol ic Boys ' and Gir ls ' Band of Det ro i t un -d e r the di rec t ion of Mr. Joseph Gui-

• .ao, with hi j wife , Mrs . Guinan ,

con tes t s . A Miss P i n c k n e y contes t will also be p u t on by the merchant- ; .

The. gene ra l commi t t ee has been re­ceiving much c o m m e n d a t i o n fo r tin-

i d e r t a k i n g this lverae -. e .ni : : r , t- ",i •<. :e.i-

•V . , -1

d a b;..id here in P i n c k n e y , ' h' i r o m lho>.- ^ .! .-.1- ;.'•:• Whi le Ilou,-..e k i r 1 1 ^ . v ' " ' - ' '' 'V . iii-.-T gave coi.ccr'.s j 'orj A n u m b e r of s

r days at il:o C e n t u r y of P rog res s , 1 *ocvivec'

> played a t the T o r o n t o Expos i t ion .

March Term Of Court! ^ e o t Comment C o u r t to Convene a t Howel l on March

5, B u t J u r y is Not Cal led . Only 8 Cr imina l Cases a n d Sho r t T e r m

Is Looked F c r .

<v • In the .state capi tol a t Landing Gov.

F i t zge ra ld seems to be hav ing s imi la r t roub les to those expe r i enced by Gov. Comstock. In t h e . s e n a u * a block has be»*n fornied a m o n g t h e Republ ican

: s ena to r s , d i sg run t led , it is said, over The March t e r m of c i r cu i t cour t p a t r o l l a k r < < t l 0 o p p o , t . h i m > I i y c o m .

will open a t J W li <>,, March 5 b u t ; b i n i n { , w i t h U u . D e m 0 c r a t s t hev have the j u r y is not called for t h a t d a t e . ; a I l v a ( l y , c o r e d t w o v ic tor ies over the Most of the cases ar** old ones whiejrf u

have been postponed :: n u m b e r ol t imes and a shor t session is pate<l.

T h e r e a r e s cr iminal eases . Of thest

two a r e fov capital o f fences .Cla rem 1 *

gove rnor . T h r o u g h the i r effor ts t h e j a n u m d m i n t to m a k e t h e ' s u p i c i n o and-

' i n l J n " j c i r cu i t c o u r t j udges appo in ted by the

g o v e r n o r for life was defea ted . By g e t t i n g two m o r e s e n a t o r s appo in ted t o t W i^uiujnjittee tha t handles all a p -

j F r e c h e t t e is to be tried, for ki l l ing j po in tmen t s , thT-^Tij7NH~ljio>ke(rjjirtro7i-| Rober t Brown. George Hays i- cha rg- j age m a t t e r s . A leading m e m b e r of this Jed with neg l igen t homicide as the r e - an t i -F i t zge ra ld block is S e n a t o r H a r r y ; suit of an a u t o acc iden t in which Mrs. j Hi t t l e of Liv ings ton ' a n d Ingham | Minnie W e p m a n of G r a n d Rap ids was J coun t ies . The press r e p o r t has t h e I k i l l ed . -George Jones and Win. Smyth j fo l lowing to say abou t i t :

a r e cha rged with b a s t a r d y . E r n e s t ) : Wel lman will a p p e a r for s en t ence on \

Credi t for the d e f e a t of the i s t ra t ion bill to m a k e nil -judge

charge__o'f se l l iug oil stock—and th«i^ St;tt«

0 / I . " • . '. . i ' - a ;. •. e ;i j ; ; .

vi ta t ion will be mailed to ;.li of ' iu-se. If you have: anyone -you wish to rece­ive an invi ta t ion, you should hand t h e i r n a m e to the s e c r e t a r y .

•artwxxxMk-an?z?a

They have become a civic insti tu

l ion in De t ro i t t ak ing p a r t in alt pa­

t r io t ic and rel igious p r o g r a m of prom­

inence .

In hea r ing this excel lent ly t r a i n e d ] g r o u p of boys and gir ls , p a r e n t s with T^ iT luu r^gTrTs - in mT~bl ihi rTiore7^ar _J [5£ ^!>MIIc;yL_cj iui i ty-cot tvef l t ioi t

REPUBLICAN COUNTY

Frechette Hearing The Weekly Church Program

Set For Thursday i Catholic Church Senice J \ Rev . Lewis M. D ion

C O N V E N T I O N

rnaks its d e b u t . P inckney is looking] c ' u

forward to March is't. It will surprise Vu

— P ihckhey can realize t h e o p p o r t u n i t y of fe rad the boys and gir ls of this c o m m u n i t y in the way of the splendid

cu l tu ra l deve lopment possible t h r o u g h ] * . - > • -uuier , uoss Keaa w . r i . Meyer

the f inest o f a l l the1 a r t s , music

It i;, only a m a t t e r of a few months j C o u n t y Cha i rman J o h n Str ick of wi th exper ienced and na t iona l ly ! Br igh ton ac ted as c h a i r m a n p ro tern k n o w n t eache r s like Mr . a n d M r s . ! "n<l called the mee t ing to o rder . Hi-Gu inan before our own band w i l l l l ' a r n Smi th was elected p e r m a n e n t

' c h a i r m a n of the conven t ion . Hurry

i / u n G o T d e r acted ;;s s e c r e t a r y , " ~ ~ "

you. H e a r this famous band of boys j No resolut ions were adop ted except i

a n d girls . You will marve l a t the i r one cal l ing for the re-.-lection oi" Mrs. ] '

abi l i ty . Dance to the r h y t h m of a real Haro ld Crandal l to the s t a t e - c e n t r a l

m e t r o p o l i t a n o rches t ra . A n igh t of {commit tee as a r e p r e s e n t a t i v e from

real e n t e r t a i n m e n t and

in s tore for you .

The proceeds of this e n t e r t a i n m e n t ] H - ' ^ Johnson , Pontine a t t o r n e y , was and open ing will assist o u r o w n band in t roduced and in an excel lent speech in P inckney , 'which is now well o r - | a - s k e ( 1 t h a t the convent ion endorse ikl-ganized and m a n y of o u r ' o w n boys ( £ a , \ Downs, ' s u p e r i n t e n d e n t of Fe rn -and girls will soon have t h e means of I dale schools, for the nomina t ion ol

T r u n k M u r d e r Suspec t Ar>-aig:i?d at - Howel l S a t u r d a y / J a y fV-5w?-gncy

" . Is Appo in ted Hi* A^torn^y was held a t the cour t house in Howel l ,

on T h u r s d a y a f t e rnoon , P u t n a m town- j C la rence F r e c h e t t e , cha ig -ship v a s represen ted by Floyd W e e k s , ; the m u r d e r of Rober t Brov. n a; n

-ell On J a n u a r y 2'.'<, was a n u m g e d [ fo re Jus t i ce Glenn Yel land at H'.> '. S a t u r d a y m o r n i n g . *

F r e c T r t t e , it will be nme•.:'»•• l ied t o Cafifoinia wi th Brow and u a s brougir t bat! : u t t e r mile t r ip by Sher i f f Fa / cAt , I n p i i t.ovi'i) Ua.-Se.i {'.ml V\J.-' cuior *-t.i: v

! I I ' I | V

'c'UlTTi hey : ;n;v( 0. '.' e

liir.'-iiev. A p h o t ; . r

Masses 8:130 A. M., 1 0 : 3 0 A . M. LVvotion t o -Q frr M o t h e r of I V r p c t -

•u -,L He lp i i a iu ix lay-a t 1:00 IV M , . Confes.Mons 7 :140 P . M. S a t u r d a y .

Baptist Church Rev. B. F . Esic, P a s t o r Serv ices each S u n d a y

M o r n i n g worship 10:.'>0 ' Specia l a n d s e p e r a t e services for

t h e l i t t l e f o l k s .

case of th • People vs. J a m e s an< H o m e r Rouse ,\il | be t r i ed . This is an appea l from a jus t ice cou r t . F r a n k B e r n i e r will al.-o a p p e a r for .-entence

| on a n oil stock deal.

' The issue of fact j u r y cases a re as ( fo l lows : Curl Hein ig vs. L e o n a r d H e r b s t , - t r e spass ; Char le s Lee vs.

I Rober t and Ida Gates , t r e s p a s s ; Grace ' L e e vs. Rober t Gates , t r e s p a s s ; Car r i e 1 Lee vs. R o b e r t ' G a t e s , t r e s p a s s . T h e s e

I t h r e e sui ts a r e over an a u t o acc ident . ; Ralph Moore vs. N'unnaii l ' i t ca i rn . j a s s u m p s i t ; S tanley . i ie r r iman vs. W. (H. Smi th , iissjimpsitC' H u n t e r Gaines | vs Hi ram Watson ," a s s u m p s i t ; George I Hughes v-, .f'iii-LAWrwvp^i.ssimiiiKi1.

i d i n i n -

in t he ;jy the-iiy the

Sena to r

sub jec t to a p p o i n t m r t r t Gove rnor , r a t h e r than el ctive

[ p e o p l e , c e r t a i n l y g o e s t o

; H a r r v F. Hit t le , of Landing. i S e n a t o r Ifi t t le, vlio norinaily ha--i l i t t le to say, proved that lie \va.- very ; e f f ec t ive ' when he did .-peak. In a n ) address to the Senat * l;i.-ting l< is-tliun •

f i f teen seconds ?H which he decl;ii-ed I t ha t " t he people in his di.-Arict wr-r • | b e t t e r qualif ied A<v select theirTn^fav^T," | than was some ( iovi-rnor who had •

n e v e r seen t h e man lie was ahout in appo in t to office, and the people a r e qual i f ied to select the i r own judge if they so des i r e" , li- undoub ted ly killed this bill.

Issue Publ ic I^oun C O . v

of .fact, non - Ju ry -cases, are \ _ J t ^ - r - - -—, " ,:,• , ., ' t , I Kchoes ol the

E l i z a b e t h Lazlo ; j .

F r e d Bobroskv vs. T. E. Moula r . Ad- ! ' , . v

- , , c . t i , VVf , ,k m tha t stati option pet i t ion ol Joan S c o t t ; J o n ^ A. . , , , , . . . , . , , . ' r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s ther(

Johnson Co. vs. George Wil l iams, as- , ., „ . , - . . peal th<

sump^ i t j ^L i iw ience Seliult/. v>. J a c k ' . . j l y l e i n , trespa.v-; Whi t e iuo ie Lak<

famous I 'ennesee were

w h e n *ui i.(KS-

refu. <•<[ to

"Monkey" i '.'ij'-'l la i

o! re-

Sum!:.y School .. ' . . . . 11.45 ——^htyycy~forr -«tH :

Fir.-t N'atioral vs. F ranc i s Tenm-y. National—11. ink—rrf-

e n j o y m e n t isi the sixth dis t r ic t . \ 0 c and ida te s v,ei(

' e n d o r s e d for the state" ' convent ion .

a s s i s t i ng , themse lves w%+b b r i n g i n g ! f>»W«- tns t rue t ron . ~ M r . H^wns wiih

h o u r s of real en joymen t to others.* "(Jet behind this Concer t March 1st.

He lp P inckney . Help the boys and gi r ls of you r communi ty .

o • ' •

former ly associated with H igh land!

B U M i l l l i t l l . '!

lew." 11 last 'i' ^.nd wo' iam w l'iter for lit • ) ' ' 'i'^ntes were pi ( s en t and a aa--;i ' ,- n-'psiiol.-- s • '• ( tak^n of tii-• which took place in the m i i i l \

Frecju tt ; ])led not gni i ty .'en! tice Y > Maiiu appoin t ' <I i..-,- l i e , . , < J a y P. SwcLiiuv U> de|V >.AI hi in. h e a l i n g ,vas set for Thu ivduy , I"e m y 2 s . ,

Tlie s •. it • of lhe«ciini"e lia.- m_ beeAi def in i te ly es tab l i shed . Fr- - : has r e p u d i a t e d his s to ry that.

B. Jv I"i

V: .'< r i i

; u r.-

1 " . 1 T

i:;' Wor.-hip . i v< nmg prayer service ..

7:00 8:00

. S:00

I t

e) u i'ra

, i ,

P a r k schools and was twice eh cted

m a y o r while th r e . Mr ."Johnson ' s r os- • s h o o ' * i n ^ t o o k p l a ( ' e o n t h r H : ' r ;

olution- failed to be adop ted . ^ . . }.;. v load, Dmi les no r th of HowHl . Now

Osborn , a r e t h e d teacher , now livingl c ' , n i n ' s iL l l a P P ( ' , H M i o n < ; i ' : i M ( l K l V

S O P H I E H O F H A N E S I A N : ' » Oceola, then took the floor and 2 m'i]"* l ' a s t e f H o w d l n " : n ' l h f " U

Sophie Hofhanes ian , 14, died a t the | ^ . ( 1 tha t li. M. Key vorth, super in - j f a n \ f , ^ J 0 0 R ]L U ^ ^][ / '

Univers i ty of Michigan Hospi ta l , A n n i i n d e n t of H a m t r a m a c k - schools be . " * ' " " "* ' " ' " , ' e n d o r s e d for the nomina t ion fov o n*1 ,1sl : i ^ ' P " 1 ^ ^ sfc-.infr thrn». As th A r b o r , Wednesday , of bu l le t wounds

in 4-h-e-.h_ead received- iji the shooting-a f f a i r here' o a the m o r n i n g of F e b r u ­a r y Id.

The body was b r o u g h t to Pinckney a n d the fune ra l ' was held from St. M a r y ' s Church S a t u r d a y morn ing . Rev. Lewis Dion off ic iat ing. Bur ia l w a s in St. Mary ' s cemdte iy .

Sophie w a s , a pupi l in the 10th g r a d e , P inckney high school; Many beaut i fu l floral of fer ings w e r e 'rcco-lved. - ^ '

s u p e r i n t o n d e n t jjl public-44^4+-u<4-k>n.4-! This also failed so the Liv ings ton coun ty delegat ion will ^o un ins t ruc -ted.

T w e n t y - t w o delegates wiil -be sent to the s ta te convent ion a t Det ro i t March 1. Rep, Chas . A d a m s will be cha i rman and there will be one from each c o u n t y and two each from Howell , Br ighton and F o w l e r v i l b , They a r e as fol lows: P u t n a m , Floyd W e e k s ; Unadflla, Fred R O S P ; Ham-

l U U ^ I I V 1 1 1 L | l > . 1

one has r e p o r t e bul le ts went t h r o u g h his head u n d i u

| bul le t holes wore found in car , it i; not t h o u g h t t ha t he could have been kilted in . the car . 7

A large .crowd a t t e n d e d the 11«• • -.i i'.v ,' and for this reason it was held in the c o u r t room.

H)-.:10 P.ibl-Yuu

invited

j L u m b e r Co. vs H e i m a n J o h n s o n , a -[ s u m p s i t ; Dennis Kel leher \-.s I-'ri.nre-rT<-nney, assiimpsi

Hank of Brightoi misumpi i t ; Fi ivt

Br ighton ^•s. W. D. Squ i re , a s s u m p s i t ; , -Carl J a c o b s vs Harold F ine ry , assump­s i t ; C. B. Monroe , receiver , \-s. Lvh-Glover, a s s u m p s i t ; Joseph R<-nilnin vs Tho.s Leiih, assumpsi . . ; A n n a Rasnius-sej| vs Win. Tuthi l l , a s s u m p s i t ; (Jeorgi Hughe.s_ \s C'ail Mi^rgan, t respa- .- ; F i r s t .National Uaiik of 1! r ight mi vs Lee Bidwell, assiimjisit ; F i r s t Nat ional Bank of Bi'ightmi v.- l i i n y Bidws li, a s s u m p s i t ; First .Nati-mal Bank of Br igh ton vs I)oiiakl Leit i i , a^4im,h-t. .

C h a n c e r y c a s e s : Fer ry and K* nne th I Cook vs For res t B \ons , jorclosi. is ;

School session a t l.t *.30,A. M. j Kllu Rober t son \> T n - h y Duvni , pa ; -uul y o u r f r iends a r e c o r d i a l l y ' t i t ion ; Merril l Major vs Lot t ie Major .

\ in junct ion ; John K u i ' e m s vs Karl Sei tz , i n j u n c t i o n ; Win. Voight v.s Carl Nap ie r , i n j u n c t i o n ; Win. Ga l l aghe r vs Win. Scul ly , ' fo ic losure ; H e a r y W i r e s miin vs W a l t e r Glover , 1'orclosur'-; Aus t in B a r n e y vs John l l a i i i s , for-

who lur-.k

law agan - t t n a r h i n g f''v6J\r-vot(- of <i7 to 20. \\ 'Idle ;hi.-

(is wha t ; ,migh t have been expected ' from the T e n n e s f e Mountniner . ' h a v e gf>n7 t h r o u g h life wit ' tin- 1

; of <ienesee on one k n e e aiai I on the oth'1 ' i ' mi the othf i '. though the (»< lie.sis t h e o ' y o / c

canno t be pi'o\'ed. n e i t h e r c . ' , i n ' s theor> tha i t.ie hui '•eiide<l I rom ;:pe -.

n.mil

n - i i i

' l i l i e ,

D.;r-t i e -

Coi!?regatiunal Church Mrs. c . K. l i aughn , O r g a n i s t

Rev. C. H. / u s e , M i n i s t e r T e n ; day even ing , devo t iona l half

. V:.'b) to X;00 ; a n d T<-acher e h , - class from S:00 to 9 : 0 0 .

S u n d a y S e m c o s ' _ _

.vini-Ming Worsh ip w i t h - s e r m o n a t A. M.

A bill A-r--pe

: ¢ . - .

ilJI is b fot ..• t h e le j i i ;

s u b m i t an a m e n d m e n t to the a t the sp r ing election prov id ing f<< c o u n t y g o v e r n m e n t reoi g a a i z a t e e e This is .*M"inil.ir to the a.ra iinnu iA whieh was defeat d la t fail. The v<.t

in tlie- Hi+Tt t-rmntie,s~Tv4lL_m;i'i,;d!i>: Lm-sufficient to again snow it under . ( r -

ilt'V it most of the rura l di.-trii '. vemhi

lose the i r r ep re sen t a t i on by In in;.:

combined with more poptrlou,- <li-iri<A-

- A large n u m b e r of he r c lassmates} a t t e n d e d the fune ra l and six of t hem, Char les Cl inton, Marc ian Ledwidge , Telc.sphoro B o u r b o n n a | s , R o b e r t Rich-

burg , L. K. Q u e a l ; Iosco, L y n n C a r d n e r ; Mar ion , Wi r t S m i t h ; T y r o n e N. C h e s t n u t ; Green Oak, W m Dun­c a n ; Br igh ton Twp. , A. S h a w ; Brigh-

l l i e s .

was.<>4 yea r s old. He w;is uni ted in, m a r r i a g e to M"yrta E'inch of P inckney a n d she suiwives him with" one daugli-

i . n.. 4 , , , T1 , , , , t e r , Mrs . Shi r ley Ander.-.on of I;o a r d s o n , Will iam Meyers J r . an'd J a c k " ton C,ty, A l b e r t B o y l a n ^ J o h n S t n c k j ^ ^ . j ^ i m , a K P a n d l J a u f f h t „ ,

The deceased lived h e r e uiitil J DM) a n d w a s p rominen t ly ident i f ied v.iih vil lage act iv i t ies he re . He l ea rned th b lacksmi th t r a d e u n d e r his f a the r ami' conduc ted the shop fol lowing the lai-•tev?!< di nth. He inluu'hluuV himnelf in public" a f fa i r s a n d se rved sr-veia'

Reason ac ted as b e a r e r s . Fowlervi l le , J . K Munsell , C. C. Fen

Sophie was a ve ry good scholar a n d t t o n ; Howell Twp. , Don. B a r r e t t , How-was well liked by h e r schoplmates . I t | c ] 1 Ci ty, H i r am Smith, F r e d Cronen-

_is a pity t ha t she was cu t d o w n i n ' vvett, Char les A d a m s ; Conway , Cecil

e a r l y life.

4fc - p —

F>EMUCRA1 C A U C U S . T h . r e will b e v a D e m o c r a t caucus

V ! d ;:t J i e P u t n a m tovynshJp_haTT~oii •.'dr.y, M a r c h - ! ) , a t 2 :00 P . M.

purpose, of n o m i n a t i n g ' t o w n - j .-::"!>' off icers and t h e t r ansac t i on of

nei, o.thur business as m a y - c o m e be-J:..i-o it. . Com,

»>. N O T I C E

, T h e r e g u l a r irfeeting of t h e King ' s D a u g h t e r s will b e he ld a t t h e h o m e of Mrs . W a y n e A t L e e T h u r s d a y a f t e r ­noon , March 7 th . L u n c h e o n a t one o'clock.

Bohm,; Oceola, M. E. O s b o r n e ; ."lelvin Hibne r , H a r t l a n d ; J a m e s Morgan, , B r i g h t o n ; ivesiic L,atson, Genoa .

L A S T CALL T A X E S

Trrj last "~ S t a u r d a y , M.irch 2, is tlvj last day

on which I shall collect P u t n a m town­

ship t axes . During1 t ha t week I will

also be a t the Lavey T7TT S ta t ion on

Wednesday , F e b r u a r y 27th , to t ake

in t axes . All t axes m u s t be pa id to

the c o u n t y t r e a s u r e r a f t e r M a r c h 2.

- G o r m a n Kelly, T w p . Treas .

-REPUBLICAN CAUCUS The Republ icans of P u t n a m , town-

E M I L R. B R O W N Kmil R. Brown , son of th<- lat •

Chr is t ian and H a r r i e t Brown, died at his h o m e in Los Ange les , Cal i fornia , OTi F<'b, 2'*^after a year*s~Tl TT

Pentecostal Gospel Missio11

t!!0 \ ' . F o u r t h St., A n n A r b o r . . Ca.-Ler' . C. K a p p Kvaiig- list D . M a r t i n

Sol vices S u n d a y ' a t M :00 P. M. and S ;00 P . M-

W e d n e s d a y a t 8:00 V. M. Kve rybody W e l c o m e

Thf? c h u r c h a t t h e C o l u s e r f a r m is

<li. continue*!.

A<1coi<lin.'r to press r rporf-H a u p t m a n n j u r y is c o n t e m p l a t i n g ing pn a vaudr'ville tour . Thi,- i,- m ing in on oppor tun i t y with a vcnivri T h e i r death verd ic t seem- to - • • I 'm -

e s s i n d e f i l i i ' e

R E G U L A R C O M M U N I C A T I O N

Thr- r e g u l a r c o m m u n i c a t i o n of Liv-ing.-,t.on L o d g e ^ N o . 7 f i , F . a n d A . M., will 'be held om T u e s d a y even ing , March a. On this occasion a ven i son s u p p e r will be served a t 7 : 0 0 P . M. A good a t t e n d a n c e is asked . Bill 25c.

Pau l C u r l e t t Sec 'y

UNAD-ILLA T W P . T A X N O T I C E

W e d n e s d a y , March 6th , is t h e lasi. day on which h shall rece ive Unad i l l a t o w n - h i p t a x e s as after, t h a t da te , I mus t Mitthr with Lhcrpminty treaJufrjrT

ie can

c l o s u r e ; Cecil l l udk ins vs V, e.dey > been more ov ] Tuley , i n j u n c t i o n ; School Dis t r ic t , No. | p t ; a , h a , ,„.,.„ l a k l . n . J |M) j t w ; ] ]

J , f rac t iona l , vs Townsh ip Cl, rks o f ; a b ! y b , . ., y f . a r a t | f , a > t h ( , | ! f / r ( i , J ' u t n a m and H a m b u r g t o w n s h i p s ; F r - ' nest Watson vs Toney I lugi- , in junc­t i o n ; J a m e s Boyaj ian vs S t a n l e y Kor., i n j u n c t i o n ; H u n t e r Gal la t ian vs Verne Pi lgr im, qu ie t t i t l e ; F d w a r d Kuhlmam vs Hora< e Stowell , qu ie t t i t !" , John B e c k e r vs C. P . Bush, q u i e t , t i t l e ; H e n r y M o n t a g u e vs J o h n Bush , Lyl< B e n n e t t v s ^ A T T T

1C

t e \

possibly go to the chai r .

T h e r e c e n t

of the gold s t a n d a r d deri'-am

F"h<:d Sta tes S u p n me Coii.-t has been iuterpretei l . va r ious and a r g u e d pro and con. point is t h a t it

M e ( o \ ; K;tymoud (•ook vs I r a S a n d f a r d , ijtiiet t i t l e .

The divorce /cases a re M a r y Well-man vs Byron W e l l m a n ; Ralph Hop-

\v;:\ -I'he in; in

is n o ' , l ieces . -a . . y i <r

make the-^Amerifin dol lar ' e t r l ' i v 1 lu^~ i in gold any more and that no h-e,a! [ac t ion to force the g o v e r n m e n t to do

this is possible. Kx-Gov. ( 'has - C. ,-'.lornev in a l e t t e r publish. -: m the De.-

i t . e i t F r e e ]'Vf<* viv-.- i i n n aaj.1 • ', kins vs Beth H o p k i n s ; Ruby Davis vs

Howard D a v i s ; Guy But le r , vs L a u r s j j t . He s-a.\> rha t t h - . upr. n:e C , a e , B u t l e r ; N o r m a DeMond vs Alfred i ( a , 1 M o t ask the' impo-^hh- T m u ih - v D e M o n d ; J n n n i e Vordak i s vs F s t a n - ; j.,- n o t enough gold in ex i s t ance t o ' r - -thios -Vordak is ; Ida M c F a c h e r e n v . s ; ( i l f . m a ) j t n o m o r u . y j n U M . OJ. p a y . . j j , A r t h u r M c F a c h e r e n ; Florencr- -4) t t t^ i t J rp-oim«uir6ns and-as the gold obiiga-ield vs Ot to Dan ie l s ; Kvelyn Lyon vs . t j o n i g impossible it is wi thout foiv<. DOfl' L y o n s ; Km ma (.'lark vs Char les j j n ja % vr

t e r m s as m a y o r of P i n c k n e y . On th-occasion of the^ first home. _con:ui.'r [

j here- he "madtr the- add re s s of wdeo." ; | ! aud })}'e,ented the key .of t h - v e.e • 1 Liu H o w a r d K e a r n e y . He was made a j

m e m b e r of Livingston Lodge , No. ', ._ ' on J a n u a r y 2 0 , JS'.Ji* r.mi -serve \ as s e c r e t a r y o i t h a t o r g a n i s e . <:i f.».r m a n y y e a r s .

In middle life he decided to loo?: for eas i e r work t h a n b lacksmi th ing a n d took a correspondence , course .

All t a x e s not paid by t h a t d a t e m u s t ' J u n i o r Clark

be pa id ' t o the county , t r e a s u r e r .

A B O A R D O F C O M M E R C E M E E T I N G T h e n e x t m e e t i n g of t h e P inckney 1

Board o f C o m m e r c e will i>e held on M o n d a y evening , March 4 . On th is

. occflsioij^futthei j&um will be diacus-sed f o r the Cen tenn ia l Ce leb ra t ion . All

-fre-pTese»t if pogsTbTeT

•).••• S«cwtary«

L a t e r he passed a civil service, exam-ship will hold a caucus a t the. P u t n a m j i n a t , o n a n d o b t a i n e d a p o s i t i o n a s

EUCHRE CONTEST AT DEXTER L h i n g s t o n Lodge , No. 70 , will go

to Dex te r T h u r s d a y n ight to t a k e p a r t in t h e fifth e u c h r e con tes t . All those who ha_v*: no w a y to go p lease phone the s e c r e t a r y . , t

P a u l Cur le t t , Sec 'y . »

-o-

C H O P S ^ E Y

Come a n d en joy t h e O r i e n t a l - S U P -Mrs . l i . C. UalRav Scc!y_J towns lup haiL-oii--Saturaay, March • i M - r n t ^ t r " ; — v w - ^ w r - r s — ^ r - i — T P T i t ^ • * i •* -^ .

L ^ f t i u ^ ^ M ^ « . . . ^ , , c j c r l t the DetToit |tost off ice. In- p/ ;r s e rved by Omenta l w a i t e r s iri an a t 8 :00 P . M., for. the purpose of nom- i ifti/i i ^ ^. A * r . * i . , -' l, • . , i ^ » e • i . _. . -t ' . .... r . , ' 1014 he moved to Det ro i t . La t r -he ; Or tev ta l .-.tmo'-'rhere Marcn '?.. i naUng townsh ip officerrf and to t r a n - L , , „ r , t \ • \t • " v

, , ! , , . - I t r a n s f e r e d n;s Ma.-omc n sac t such o the r business as ma'y conie

before it. ' Com, C A R D P A R T Y A N D D A N C E

T h e r e wjll be a card p a r t y a n d

1 1 . . / ¾ i

F r i e n d s h i p Lodge , De t ro i t .

A b o u t ten y e a r s a g o he mw.

Ca l i fo rn ia to res ide and hi'.s"

i> *->

commi t t ee m e m b e r s a r e a s k e d t o ) d a n c e a t S t . ; Joseph ' s Hall in D e x t e r

on M,onday even ing , M a r c h ' 4 . E v e r y ­

one inv i ted .

j"ma~dv- Ws home the i'c-11I VXiS X~

ted Michigan a n d "Spent xonv* •

with f r iends here'. W c unders tanc

the fune ra l a n d bur ia l will be }u .Cul-

itimlfk '' —

•i t< since:

S ! '-

time *.i\-it

of t ;ck' >..;.* iit h.'. .'-old by ail member 1

ie T b u n g . People ' s clar.s, 2bc.

P A S X - M A T R O N ' S N I G H T Kast r -m S t a r CtuTpter~~No. 145 will

hold t h e i r P a s t M a t r o n ' s N i g h t a t

t h e i r hall on F r i d a y , M a r c h 1.'

r e t t a JDHKngham, S«c 'y

• * » • • y

~i 7_:c

- O r r the n igh t of W e d n e s d a y , Fel>-r u a r y 27 , the Nat ional C o m m a n d e r of the A m e r i c a n Legion will de l iver a coas t - to-coas t b roadcas t over , t h e Co lumbia Broadcas t i ng S y s t e m in which he will discuss vi ta l ly i m p o r t a n t m a t t e r s c o n c e r n i n g the legis la t ive sit­ua t ion with r e g a r d to i m m e d i a t e pay­m e n t of the Adjus t ed Seuvice Cer t i f i ­ca tes . The t ime of the b r o a d c a s t will

J U E A N N £ - E L Y Fly , s ixteen J e a n n e ivly, s ixteen y e a r old

d a u g h t e r of Myron and Hazel Benha .a E ly , 724 Mil ler Ave. , A n n Aibor , yielded' to Dea th last T h u r s d a y even­i n g a t Unive r s i ty Hosp i ta l , a f t e r a l o n g a n d va l i an t s t r ugg l e aga in - t d i s e a s e /

E n d o w e d with 3'are t a l e n t s , and.M" u n u s u a l l y a t t r a c t i ve pe r sona l i t y , Je.T i-n e had' m a d e m a n y f r i e n d s - in this

c u i u s , n i i : n / i i u u i I J IU ui w j i u i a a i J^*" . . ^ , . - . . ^ . , . O * . . .: i . L

bo 7 i - m 11 :45 to 12:00 m h t a t c R t . ^ T T l ' T " ! ^ ^ • . . 1 . . - t " g u e s t of h e r cousins, C o n s t a n c e and eas t e rn s t a n d a r d t .me. . I u r g e e v e r y E v e l y n D a r r o w ,

ge e v e r y Ve te ran t o listen^ in a n d Ietrrn—the-} t r u e s i tua t ion r e g a r d i n g ' t h e so-called bonu.->. . - -

F loyd Weeks , Com.

ABOUT SO PERCENT COLLECTED X h ^ . f h w n s h i p t r o a s u r c r a a r c b o ^ i n - i m i d 100 chickens a t ^publ ic auc t ion

A U C T I O N S A L E F R i . , M A R C H 5

Mrs . Lil l ian Hassencah l wi l l s e l l l i o r pe r sona l p r o p e r t y cons i s t i ng of Z

horses , l l _ h e a d of c a t t l e , 2 1 . s h c o p

n i n ^ t o se t t l e wi th the c o u n t y ' t r e a s

u r c r s t a r t i n g t h i s week , Acc_ording to

r e p o r t s c o m i n g in a b o u t 50 p e r c e n t

*of the taxea aro being collected, %?

~V~.- ^

at her farm, 'south of Pinckney wf Friday, March 1 at 12:00 V^. V T . Mv J. Reason, Clerk. ^ ^

' Percy Ellis, Auctioneer^.

A - •-—•*£**?

/

' ^

'i¥-!^ ( « 9 V-

Page 2: Pinckney Community j Centennial Committees March Term Of ...pinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1935-02-27.pdf · r | OUR SUBSCRIPTION RATE * 1 IS $1.25 PER YEAR I Vol. 52 ;> Pinckney,

<• *

-A

STATISTICS SHOW USE OF TOBACCO

ON THE INCREASE

Are we a tobacco-smoking nation? Let's look at the record. Using the late war as a favorite starting point for all comparisons nowadays, we

-3>

SYNOPSIS

Theodore Gatlin adopts a baby. "Pe-find that in prewar 1916 we smoked nelope," in an effort to solve his matri-8,000,000,000 cigars and 2Ti.OU0.OUU.UU0 "n o T l i a l lr0,u*le* - f^ .hJ. 'r . £ ! £ . ?«a

; . .„„,. , , n .UUI never wanted her. and their a flair* end cigarettes. In 1930 we smoked C.OOO,- l n t n e d i v o r c e c o u r t . A t a baseball 000,000 cigars and 120UOO.00U.U00* game a ball strikes ten-year-old Pe­

nelope on the nose. Mrs. Gatlin spirits Cigarettes. In 14 years we bad lost some of our liking for cigars, but

* had acquired nearly five times our previous taste for cigarettes,

—' . EXaminTBgThe record more closely.

the child to Europe, (jatlin wills Pe­nelope all his money, and is about to begin a search for her when a motor accident ends his life. Some ten years later, in San Francisco. Stephen Burt, rising young psychiatrist, is presented

we find that the war itstlf, blamed b y D a n McNamara. chief of police, with for many things, was plainly respon­sible for doubling our consumption of cigarettes in three years—from 25,000.000,000 in 1916 to fl«.O00.000.(Mi In 1919. From 1922 to 19»J the con­sumption of cigarettes In the l'nited States agajip more than douhled— 65,0O0,0OO.O0O'"""aTfmiaIly grew 10=¾¾^ToT"San "~Quentin ~penJtenTiar^=-Natw»4 120.000.00U.0U0. The woman smoker escapes, although shot, and foes to U « J ~, ~,~ t„t, u„» „,,.„ Lanny's apartment, from which, by Mc-had come Into her own. Namara's orders, she Is removed to the

Three subsequent years of depres- chiefs home. From one of the men in

a "new patient—Nance Belden, a girl with a dual personality, for which her "saddle nose" is in part responsible. McNamara does not think she is a criminal and obtains Bart's testimony in court- Lanny, the doctor's office nurse, is also won over. Nance's crim­inal record outweighs Doctor Burt's explanation of her casaand she is sent

•Ion have been felt by cigarette mak­ers, production falling to lU.'iOOO.OOO.-000 In 1932. The use of cigars dropped to about 5.0U0.0U0.0U0.

We* have considerably * less than 100\000,000 arsons in the L'nited States of smoking age; but if we take that number for convenience we find a per capita consumption last year of W cigars and 1.000 cigarettes.. We also used up three pounds of. chewing or pipe tobacco per capita.

Are we a tobacco-consuming na­tion? Fifty cigars, 1.000 cigarettes, and three pounds of tobacco for each and every one of u«, is the answer. For every person we does not smoke,

the boat on which the girl escaped Mc­Namara learns that Nance's real name is Penelope Gatlin. He also discovers that she 4s heiress to $750,000. Fearful of McNamara, in his official capacity, Nance flees. Lanny finds her in her Apartment, sound asleep, curled up pn the . guest-room bed.

in Heviews'of Ileview, and World's Work

CHAPTER VII—Continued MDid-i*>uf 4»«n scout the street to

front of this house before pulling ftp In front of it?" asked ilcNamara sharply.

"Certainly. We circled the block twice."

'.'Feed our Nance. Lanny," McNamara someone else consumes twice the orged happily. "She's a smart girt. average quantity.—Howard Flora nee How's the shoulder, dearie?"

"Fine. It'll be O. K. in another week."

"So am'.I." Mr. McNamara grinned Swamp Reclaimed horribly. "Flynn's home eating his din-

A few years ago a region In Italy ner now. and Angelloti must be on frnown .-is T,irt"p-T«n*i «n uninimbit- , guard In that alley. Cm going to mis-. ed swampland. The government has take Angelloti for a suspicious charac-since reclaimed L by draining theater, lurking there in the dark—and put marshes and today it is all bemg a mark on him so I can recognize him

later. He just can't stand to mix It with me. and get recognized, of course, so when he runs I'll tire In the air. He'11 know, whOv-L am bnt he'lL never suspect I know who he Is.'!

McNamara bade Nance. Lanny and Stephen goodnight and hurried away ln a taxi. A block from his home he alighted and walked down the side of the street opposite his own house. He was whistling softly as he came altfeast

farmed with GO.Om) families living on it in modern farm hoino's. Lit-tori'a was received Into the Itajian empire recently as its D';iety-third provinces

CREOMULSION of Angeliotl's hiding place, where he turned at right angles, apparently with the Intention of crossing ln the middle of the street to his own holise. A step from the curb he halted, turned, bee_t his head In a listening attitude, then stepped resolutely Into the alley.

"Who's there?" he demanded. Re­ceiving no answer, he got out a small flashlight; he seemed to have some difficulty flashing it on. for he cursed softly, and suddenly a beam from the flashlight Illuminated his own face for an instant, but long enough, he decided, to permit the watchfulAngetlrrtl to reo ognize him. The alley was empty, but In a little garden strip a large syrlnga bush grew, and instinct warned the chief that his prey was behind i t So he walked past It, bis flashlight held close to the bush, and as be had an­ticipated, It was snatched from him.

WATCH YOUR KIDNEYS!

Be-Sure They-Properl^' Cleanse the Blood

YOUR kidneys are constantly fil­tering impurities from the blood

stream. But kidneys get function* ally disturbed—lag in their work-* fail to remove the poisonous body wastes.

Then you may suffer nagging . . * A , W1 . „ , Backache, attacks of dizziness, ' A s h e turned, one of his stout legs was burning, scanty or too frequent urination, getting up at night, swollen feet and ankles, rheumatic pains; feel "all worn out."

Don't delay! For the quicker you get rid of these poisons, the better your chances of good health.

Use Doan's PiTls. Doan'8 are for the kidneys only. They tend to pro­mote normal functioning of the kidney*: should help them pass off the irritating poisons. Doan's are recommended by users the country over. Get them from any druggist.

DOAN'S PIUS

jerked from under him by a man crouching low; so. before permitting himself to topple backward, McNamara dropped his good right arm to the level Of his knee and swung a short, stab­bing punch. He felt a cheekbone and the side of a nose; so he punched again, a little higher up, and then fell over backward. Instantly his assailant rose and fled like a doe.

"Halt! I'm an omcer." McNamara shouted, and tired into the air. But the running man-did not even hesitate. In the morning he sent for Angelloti for a report on - certain case, and was Charmed to notP :i faintly lemonlSh

I f YOU SUFFER FROM

STOMACH TROUBLE THIS BOOKLET WILL HELP YOU

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spot on-the Italian's left cheek and a very noticeable iridescence under the left eye. The chief grinned. "What does the other fellow look like. Angle?" ho queried Innocently. *'He couldn't have been more'n a flyweight or he'd Have done more damage! How come you iet some runt one-two you Ijke that?"

"It was a dame I picked up for drtrafeennessT*" AngeTToti lied with the glibness of long practice*

Following some discussion-of the re­port, McNamara dismissed bin> and aat down to decide what to do with Nance Belden. That Flynn and Angel­loti were keeping bis house under sur-velllance he knew p»»; undoubtedly

By PETER B. KYNE Copyright by B«H Syadlcal*

WJfU-Servtc*. '

"Dan speaking, Lanny. Tomorrow morning you had better buy our pet nuisance a lot of clothes, so she'll be all ready to get out of town when I send for her. I think I'll have to fly her out and down to Tia Juana, Lower California.-

"What will she do there?" "I don't know. We'll think about

that when she gets there. At least my two dicks won't be there 'and Tla Juana is one place where that saddle nose of hers won't surprise anybody. And when she acts rough and tough in Tia Juana nobody will pay any atten­tion to her. They have experts down

Jbere Jn^haXJine/' , _=_ _ T i l think that Tia Juana stunt

over," Lanny decided. MIt has possi­bilities. Is there a good hospital there?"

"I don't think so. Why?" "You numbskull, Dan McNamara!

We have to And a quiet hospital where we can have her poor nose operated on."

"Well, if we can get her beexer re­stored and change that black bob of hers to a movie-tone gold, she could take Flynn and Angelloti out to din­ner and theyld never suspect her."

"Stevie says her nose must be operated on first Her present state of dissociated . personality probably started in an inferiority complex, and the inferiority complex probably arose out of the knowledge*that her nose made her unlovely. When it's safe to bring her back to this city. Stevie will take her soul out and look at it, dust it off, put it back and do a Little Jack Horner."

"Can he do that?" McNamara's heavy voice was freighted with awe,

"He can. provided he can find a starting point for hi»investigation-^ her past life. There is always a rea­son for a dissociated personality. The ground for the mental shock that causes it is usually prepared long be­fore the psychosis occurs. Rebellious thoughts, unhappiness. brooding—all these eventually have a serious effect upon sensitive and highly intelligent people and particularly, women of the hysterical^ type."

"All women are hysterical," McNa­mara said with conviction.

"You're a dear booby, Dan. Eight women"uui uf ten cuu throw a fit. of hysterics as easily as you'd break an egg, particularly if there is a man to be impressed. They never simulate hysterfesvto impress a woman, how­ever, because they know better. ^How­ever, there are women who have hys­terics that are real, bur It has beet? the experience of this office thnt mos/ of these are Just a trifle balmy—neu­rotics."

"WeTTTyou get our"girl a trousseau and warn her to keep away from the window and not to answer the door­b e l l o r do any telephoning, or leave the house until she has mjr pernUf-sion, I don't expect she'll obey." so to­night when you go home have some hysterics to Impress her."

"Dan, deaf, I couldn't I'm hard as a picnic egg. Did you stage your little comedy after leaving us last night?"

"I did—and it worked out exactly." "CSood gracious. Well, I'm busy.

Good-by." Nance Belden's personalities were

a source of keen professional interest to Lanny, who regretted that for the present Doctor Burt was unable jto share her observations with her. She had, as yet, had no opportunity for ascertaining anything regarding the girl's past history, but she had a sus­picion that-Nance had had advantages superior to most girls.

Her hands were the very first thing (with the exception of her poor wrecked nose) that Lanny, had no­ticed. They were soft, shapely, small and well kepi, decidedly not the hands

Lanny knew that during the day a psychological door had opened and Nance Belden, otherwise personality B. the abnormal, had walked through it and emerged Penelope Gatlin, or per­sonality A, the normal. Also, she knew now that Penelope Gatlin prob­ably had more or less amnesia for her former personality as Nance Belden. Lanny had heard Doctor Burt discuss sucb rare cases and she glowed with

HOST ST0RIE|

• • •

By Famous People

Copyright by Public Ledger. IDA. WNU Service

Housewife's Idea Box

By ARCH SELWYN Theatrical Producer,

pride in the knowledge that at least«< A RNOLD ROTHSTEIN always he had secured a perfect specimen, / * * fascinated me, although be was j 0 ~~Rerire?e Scorch Marks From

"I decided we wouldn't have broiled a menace to organized society. I had Lines lamb chops, Lanny." the girl went on known him as a boy. He came from I r i s ' almost impossible to remove brightly, "so I've made a ragout" upright people, who felt disgraced g o o r c n fetalns from linen or woolen

"You mean, in good old Americanese, when he ran away from home, to fol- m a t e r j a i & However, the following you've concocted an Irish stew." low the career of a gambler^ I always m e t b o d 0 f j e n works on linen: Rub"*

"You're so amusing. Lanny. A stew, followed news of his career," related t n e g p o t w i t n a freshly cut onion, of course. The difference berween a Arch Selwyn, tiie theatricalproducer. L f l t e p s o f l b t h e materiai in a solu-stew-and- a ragout^Is entirely geo-"Rothsteln had a weird and flieftalte t i o p o f c p } d W&^F and B " ^ ^ r*r-graphia A ragout in France, an Irish premonition of fate that was going o s i d e T b e n w a g n t h e garment la stew in the United States." - to overtake his later career, and he . * Al _

**Have you lived ln France?" didn't run away from it." "Eight years. Lanny. Went to school I n j n e f a d i n g l w l U g h t o f ' a day,

in Switzerland and learned French w n e r e i n Mr> Seiwyn bad watched the there." rehearsal of his new play, "The Devil

•Are your people French? Passes," and wherein later be would "I think I was there alone." The w&tch i t s p r e m I e r e , h e n a d , t u r n e d from

girl appeared puzzled., "I don t r e - ^ j , o f t b e t h e a t e r t 0 t a l J c ^ ^ ^ member-my mother hut I had a fa- pe r s o n auties in the arena of dally life thtr. He was sucb a dear, but he s w h o U v e d a n g e r o u s l y , . a n d 0f the

J„. . 4. ' dangers,, seen and unseen, which pur-*\\ere^ou_happy there?'' fiUe ^ t No F was perfectly m.serable. UJ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ c o n t t a u e d <

"Because my father wasn't with me. " t h a t X w o u l d «**-**-••» a « r t a l »

the usual way. THE HOUSEWIFE.

Copyright by Public L*d*er. Inc. WNU Service

We'd been such pals.v

"But you must have lived with some-

ganfbling house where, jit was reputed the leaders of gangdom gambled with

Speedy Army Tanks The United States army now hat

a new tank, weighing eight tona which, in—demonstrations, has reached a speed of more than 00 miles an hour. It Is built "cater­pillar" style for difficult travel as well as ordinary wheels for use on more level ground. These new war machines are 12% feet long, 6¼ feet high and 7 feet wide. It takes four men to operate one of them. The tank was first used as an in­strument of war in the World war

i.

b o d v ., one another, and where fabulous sums "There was Laurette, the cook, and w e r e exchanged, in cash."

Babette. the maid:' Mr. Seiwyn is a good theatrical pro- flnd h^d & g p e e d o f g t 0 7 m i j e s an "Did you graduate?" • ducer and the sight of $50,000 in cash b o u r

"No. I left school when father died. l« » g°<> * B ° W . * v * n t 0 a -veteran the- ' _ _ _ ^ _ _ He was killed in a motor accident en a t e r m a D ' £ e admitted. ' route to Europe. I've always had a "Rothsteln promised to take me feeling he was coming over to see his to a private house in New York city Penelope. He loved me Very much, to watch the gambling. One night Lanny. He was adorable. He used to h» called me for dinner. A Mr. B.

rhnfr-Mvas all that,made his Joined oa-and Rothstein exacted-from-life bearable. Somehody-~I forgot us the promise that neither of us would who—told me he wasn't my real fa- gamble. "This gang," he said, "has ther, that I was a foundling he adopt- a code and a language all its own, and ed. I wouldn't believe .that at first, you fellows can't play with .it." but when I read his will I .knew It "Rothsteln started to throw the dice.

W!!?. BM-SAtf The first bet was $25,000. was so." ^

"WTiat sort of woman was his^wtfe s ^ ; g 4 a n indefatigable gambler, x

—or did he have one?" who,made large sums, but who was "I haven't the slightest Idea, but I I n t n e h a b l t o f letting them slip by, ; •

remember the will stated very positive w a g S 0 0 D gambling, despite Rothstein's ly that he had settled with her. t h a t ^ a r n l n g - Rothsteln scolded him, but • She had accepted the settlement ln full h e g t a rted to play again, and won $1,. — satisfaction of her dower rights, and fjpo H<> wanted to get away from the n\

•fives fatftaol relief from drrate% BDOTHBes, tftXESf i&i other (ErSIf irritation*. » And to stop a n«ir cold, take Lane's Cold Tablet! mtth* Ant •n—M*. * All drufgitts carry these time-tested remedies 30* *ad$Ot eJ*t»

KEMP A LANE, Inc. Le Roy. N. Y.

ne maae my income from the trust p l a c e There were too many'bruisers,' Just sufficient to support me decently t 0 0 m a n y desperate-looking characters until I should come of age. He said B t a r l n g a t h i s winnings for him to feel in his will that he did this not be- e a s y # Rothsteln commanded him to cause of any lack of affection for me. w a I t f o r n j m i b u t h e r e f u s e d . Roth-but because if he made me an exces- s t e l n t o l d b l m t o a w a l t n l m a t D i D t y

sive allowance, his divorced wife jf00re's would have control of It during my ... ' „,„„„,.,„,„ -T>~*W«J« . , .„ ^-^ -i» n _ .. i ^ , , L. .. In the meantime, Ttothstein was

i v n , ? » T't d e S P k S e d h r losing. In the end he lost'$300,000 to ttell. if she could have control of roen^Usuany these men in gang-

Uoair income during your minority, she d o m t h e 5 r g a J b l l n g n ! l / t t I TrrTmwr

Per Indigestion or CONSTIPATION CLEANSI INTKNALLY the foo-cue way. OorHeld Tea acts promptly, plaaiantly# MILDLY. Net a cure-all, but tejto Inly o«ee-

, I tiva hi roUevtnf / / ^ * contHpatlon* At

drug - stores—* 35c and 10c.

FREE SAMPLE Writ* tei

_of-a-factory- girl. While her voeabu-—But-sttll I*nf strong and healthy."

HotherGray* powders

a r ^ r ^ E S S ^

rorOiUdrwi . -^ea«neeiaa,r«ruaa»fte

beweta, relieve feveritaaeat, headache aad etonaca diaardata, A Mother Ora Writehtetber

they would enter his house at the ear­liest favorable opportunity.

The chief wondered what he would do if he stood in the shoes of his two detectives. T d wait for a night when I wouldn't be disturbed for a couple of hours." he decided-.- "What night would that be? Why, Thursday night, when the board of police commission-erg meet and 1 am In attendance there.

8—35 Stephen wHl make h4a usual early r evening call—and as soon as- he leaves

- # _ • . • - t n e bouse those two will slip into it. Tnift-K t n P Kind AY T h e cellar door, of course. I'll make l P B w n i i i H V » u e a s y f o r t h e m i , r u i e a T e t n e d o o r

unlocked." / * He concluded • that until then.

. — YOU'LL feel reaUr « home N a D c e w o t i l d b e »'• a t t*™?* house. •era. You are-eire of e frieodlr welcome tod In the-meantime, however, ne must ar< ix^x&x^^s&it: ss - ***** ? *<* ^ ^ ^ «an eod~»er»idor. You wdl tppreciate the trolr early date. The detectives were both good food inri reeionthle prim. abgom^iy IHtUl^d Uhny had once

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A WONDERFUL BIG ROOM ./% eA > eTaHoMdKnJcker-5 #^11

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. . booker next ttaaeyon • M M I B I eoub* to Chleacp.rou

NICKERBOCKER

lary was a trifle "salty," running at times to the Idiom of the ill bred and ignorant, her -oice was soft, with welV bred intonations. Her clothing, on the occasion of her visit to Stpphen Burr's office, had been, 1n Lanny's judgment, In splendid tastei rich but not flashy, up to the mode but not beyond It. Then, too, Nance had a slow, leisurely walk, she knew how to enter a room, she was sure of herself at all times without display assurance. To Lanny, the girl, in his abandoned moments, appeared to he amateurish, a bit of a showoff, unreal.

ffhus far she bad observed the girl only in this showoff phase of her per sonality. She was amazed, therefore, on coming home from the office after her conversation with McNamara, to flnd her a complete changeling. As she entered the house she caught the odor of cooking, and going Into the kitchen, she discovered Nance, with one of Lanny's kitchen aprons on her, preparing dinner.

"Good evening, Lanny dear.'* she saluted her hostess. "It occurred to me It must be a very great trial to you, coming home night after'night from the office, tired, and having to prepare dinner for yourself. I'm sure you're too tired most of the time to prepare more than a very sketchy meal, and that'Isn't good for you." She smiled. "So I thought I'd have a nice dinner

^orjm^'

must have been your adopted mother.' the practical Lanny reasoned. "And

In cash. This time. Rotflstetn could .. u . . . . . . . ,, , not pay in cash. However, he prom-

you must have lived with her following , . t

tte divorce. That's why you ataVt ses_A8e,r p a y ^ ° 0 ,

Carfitid Tea Ctw Dept. 12

Brooklyn, M. Y.

your father in Europe. You must have "In fifteen minutes, after B.'s de- GARFIELD TEA been there with your foster moTher. ****** Rothsteln called me froa-Laurette.'the cook, and Rabette, t h e s c e n e w h i c h , h a d '"""""edI me use ma|d, argue an establishment Do you a b l z a r r e f o r e i ? n 8 P, e c t a c l e - H e r u s h e ? remember "everything that has hap- m e t 0 D I n t y M o o r e 8 -penedXo you since that day Dan M ^ "There, in a panic, in the cold per-Namara Drought you to Doctor Burt's ^rat ion of fear was B. He col-office?" lapsed before us.

"Perfectly.* "'You can't imagine what happened "Ever have funny thoughts about It?" to me,* he whispered. 'When I came The girl stared at her shrewdly, down the steps, three fellows stuck

"How strange thatVou should ask that their guns ln me and ordered, "Hand question, Lanny. I do have funny over the $1,500." I never was so thoughts. Sometimes I'm horrified at frightened/ _ _ „ the memory and could die of shame; "'Didn't I teH you to wait for me?' *U*,~ tabiTor ilquidTlus'. ~A¥o^uiiu. JL at other times it seems perfectly all said Rothstein. Write Dr. Picrcea Cliaic, Buffalo, N. Y» right, but those are the times when • 'Yes* but,' began B. . I've been nervous and sleepless; some- »'You'll learn not to—gamble with | B E 5 ? 1 I | U A p i c p p » a ~' times I think there's somethJngXwrong guyg uke those.' . Rothstein admon- : H H S H B H A I R B A L S A M with me, because people often refer jghed. Then, seeing that B. was trem- B3^p-*IJnaiwiwDiiidigg^^Heh;faiBat to me as Nance Belden and to things bling, he said. 'Give back the money,' H K ^ | B e e W t o ^ y u d F ? d e d H a l r I've done and which I know very well t 0 the fellows in the corner whom he H a a B T ^ H t o e ^ c h ^ W * ^ 3 5 2 5 1 N.T. I haven't done. And yet It seems to n a d p l a n t e d o n t h e stairway to give B. " FLORLTON SHAMPOO>» Ideal toTSaeto me, sometimes as If I bad—just a a ficare cotmMttonwithParker'iHairBalaeiBJCakaathe ^altJLoLjnfimory like Rn old dream. ^ / r r g h T e h ^ ^ ^ ^

WEAK AND MISERABLE? Mrs. Lela Finegar of

604¼ Main St, Dan­ville, 111., laid: "After a aerious operation I had no strength. I had an ache in the top of my head, was awfully thin and hardly any color in my face. Dr.

_ PierceV Favorite; Pre­scription gave me strength, rid me of the run-down conditio., and the headache."

New size, tablets SO cts., liquid $1.00. Large S1.3S. All '

reun i nr i rung *m> neatmy. - ^ - ^ o f a s e q u eQce of affairs re-But a little given to spells of v o M l J a b o u t tnat" n l g h r 8 l o 8 S e 8 i a s

I was soon to learn. I had intended to go sight*seelng, but when one sight-sees in gangdom it is not the history

nervousness? "I'm moody." The girl seemed in­

terested In herself to an unusual de­gree. "Some days Mike to do things J ^ h ' " e"v"ent%ur "the"' i i t i » ramWca* that are perfectly Intolerable to me t i o n g t h a t h a v« ilgnlfleance for anyone on other days. Some_daya r"m so dem-_.hft • n e a r \ ocratlc 1 could go out to dinner with ° g * .' , V . T

? a s , ^

a garbage man-other times I can't w " T * 7 ™ D l h ? , a S f X . !"" l n ttJ bear to be with . anA-body but — Warwick hotel, where it happened nice people." She sighed "and turned to inspect her savory ragout "I wish

Rothstein had an apartment. He saw me in the lobby and said he wanted

Baby Cross and Fretful With

Eczema Jteffevedoy Cut/cure

"Our baby had eczema on her

given Nance sanctuary for a brief period; .trust them, "therefore, to keep an eye on Lanny's house. •

He-had ln his office a telephone line that did not connect with the private, exchange system in the central statlonf so be called Lanny on hS phone a*.] dread 'secret, Penelope. - When I'm Doctor Barfs office now.

"Now, 1-ctttl that reaTwe^r^Nance.H (autormrticaily, Ivanny thtwghty ir>"tt~ ^ » » wal foundation Of-tawefiFHfe" 'My name Isn't Nance, Lanny. It's

Penelope.^ ••Penelope tyhat?" "Penelope Gatlin. Silly old Lanny,

hotr could you forget?" ^'You've placed your1 finger on my-

tired my memory fail* me,*1

I knew what I wanted in life and r to.talk to me, - I f i about^those fel- fJ^J^f ^ d * ^ m ^ - ° ^ « t ^ T wish I knew somebody that wanted | °™ ' >*« ^ money to They sure * £ * • £ « £ J - the ^ ^ f g * me Of course I can nav mv wav h a v e b e e n 8 l v i K ? m e a rIde< l c a n l ? ^ lt BtBTt^ from a blister find .through life, but it's ^ l e V t o W " * T wil l laur, but I iiiun stall hept spread lug o w her face, He^ lonely, Unny." them off/ _ _ _ ^ l n was^ta ied-and-red . -and a b a -

She faced Lanny again. -Now. MWe went upstairs. The phone rang. « p t » irritated,from scratching so when i decided to cast myself on your Rothstein's premonition now haunted « « » . Sue was cross and fretful a hospitality. Lanny, it seemed to me the him. After answering it, Rothsteln, JJ;*" « " • « d could not sleep/well most natural thing In the world to do. said, 'It's those very boys calling me. , . 2 ¾ ° ^ . _ ^ . . . ~ But today I'm covered %vith confusion. They want me to come over to the *?* . ™ J 5 ^ ? * * b 0 T l t J*9

I've deliberately Imposed myself upon hotel/ %£^£SLl ^ G ^ C U r a S ^ your pence and privacy." .. -'Why do you go ?'I asked, f ^ L ? S ? e ? 5 a n d a f t e r B 8 i n i

"Listen here. Penny, my dear. You -Because If I don't they will think. no™tTlL^ZW£?*Z?? £«M aren'f the only lonely woman In thisr fa a coward trying to run away. £ ^ , s i 7 ? L ^ 5 J ? % ? S « * l world. Bel ize it or not, the first I know what it means, I must go / £ ^ , rj S 1 f l S c « * M 2 L 2 TenJ spring buttercup Isn't a bit more wel- . - ^ B l g h t Rothstein was fatally Soap J»& Ointment 1 ^ and Wfc vome.tn nld lady Lannlng's bouse than8 h ot . He had several chances to tell talcum 25c. Sold everywhere Otft' ?ou, a r e / ' who shot him. He refused. / sample each free^ Address* "Cutt*

The lost one beamed upon her. "I -There is nothing more ghostly or sura Laboratories Dept. R. Maiden, believe that Lanny. Oh, Lanny, when macabre than thus coming face to face /Mass."—Adv. ' rrJHnap^py I'm so happy and when I'm with a" consummated premonition ©f • wretched I'm so wretched.* violent death* 7

•'Yon think too much about that nose m of yours, my poor child." /

The girl's hand flew to that organ FowndaUow of Life Insurance

ft

she w quid hide 't. • "Isn't it terrible)" d u r a n c e and .of scientiflc annuities she quavered. "I'm so ugly nobody can w a » the publication in11771 by Bleb* ever love me.", ' ard Price of bis Northampton Table

• d o BE CONTINUED.) . of Mortality. In recent years this sye-' tern of Insurance haa been*vastly ex-

2,340 Acre* for. Graves tended because it enables even rela-London's burial grounds cover 2,34'tively poor men \o provide an Income

acres. . * for their dependents after death, or , ~+ thewaelves in old age. ..

i / •»

seaei

Page 3: Pinckney Community j Centennial Committees March Term Of ...pinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1935-02-27.pdf · r | OUR SUBSCRIPTION RATE * 1 IS $1.25 PER YEAR I Vol. 52 ;> Pinckney,

tr*9 •*!'.**"-• .»»r »*«.•**»>•

I'-

* - " The Piactomr DUpfctch Wednesday, Febr uptry

t

Complete Auto Service EXPERT WORK AT LOWEST PRICES WHEN YOU BRING YOUR CAR IN FOR SERVICING AT

Clark's GARAGE AND SERVICE STATION

ALL MAKES of cars are repaired in our shop. You are assured the same perfect skill as you expect from factory experienced mechanics at lower cost.

ALL PARTS used in replacement and repair work are genuine parts. We -use no substitute nor used parts.

WONCH BATt^RIES^OR^dbE "

GhaHes Clark

HOMBMAKBR'S CORNER by

H o n * Economic* Specialists

Michigan State College

"Children's clothing can be made cheaper at home" is an economic half-

27, 1935. STATE Of MICHIGAN

. The Probate Cotnft for the County of

| / . Liviifstoa.

; At a session of said Court, held a. the Probate Office in the City of Howell, in said County, on the 16th

>> !

= ttiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiifmiufiutufiisiHiiifiimiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiinmnniiirri

I PIRST NATIONAL. BANK f £ In Howell, Michigan S

| ,, * l ' I

| Member Federal Reserve System. Capital-

| Surplus Over $30,000.00. All Accounts In-

| sured By FEDERAL INSURANCE COR-| PORATION Up to $5,000.00 for Eacfc De-| positor. iTilllllllllllllllllllllUIIIIUIUtllHIUIHIIIIilllllllllllllllllllllMflllllllllllllllllHIIIItilllS

ROSE L A V E Y T —

Deceased.

M. B. Brady having filed in said court his final administration account ur.d his petition praying for the al­lowance thereof and for*the assign­ment and distribution of the residue of said estate,

IT IS ORDERED, That the 25th day of March, A. D. 1935, at ten o'­clock in the forenoon, at said probate office, be and & hereby appointeOTor examining and -allowing said account

truth, according to home Economics ^ of-February, A. D. 1935. clothing specialists at Michigan State : p**esent, Hon. Willis L. Lyons, College. It is quite possible to s a v e j * 1 ^ ^ of Probate. some money, if the mother has skill *n *he Matter of the Estate of in sewing and is willing to buy a good quality fabric, but the saving is not always equal to the effort.

The biggest advantage is nomemade children's garments is that "self-help and "let-out" features may be includ­ed. These features are not as common in the ready-made, garments. The ex­tra handwork touches, such as fag­goting and embroidering, to be found on little girl's dress, are less expensive when made at home.

Recent studies made by students in childi^nJs^otbjng_^^icJbiga^State-College on comparative costs of home­made and ready-made garments have shown that the piece goods depart­ments do not carry any fabric as cheap and poor in quality as that found in the cheapest price range of ready-made dresses and suits.

The project for each student in the class was to make a little girl's drejs and a little boy's suit. The finished garments were then compared wi.ii ready-maHe~garments of similar quul ity, design, and workmanship.

Ready-to-wear suits for the prr-school boy priced under one dollar were made Of heavly sized materia: which was not pre-shrunk. The fabric design in many cases was not pleasing and the garments provided no "self-

and hearing said petition;__ IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, That

public notice thereof be given by pub­lication of a copy of this order, for three successive weeks previous to said day of hearing, in the Pinekn*y Dispatch, a newspaper printed and circulated in said county.

Willis L. l»yons, kludge of Probate.

A true copy. Celestia Parshall, Register of Probate.

Buy a New Ford • Thru the

PARMER PLAN Payments timed to suit your income

LET me explain

A New 1935 Tudor DeLux is at your service

Ride It Drive It Phone 47 for a Demonstration

A few moments of JOY that you won't FORGET

t**viMvaa»A»e»e.

C. AtLee FORD DEALER

Pinckney, Michigan

I DRS. H. F. & C. L. SIGLER

PINCKNEY, MICH.

Office Hours 1:00 to 2:30 P. M.

JAY P. SWEENEY ATTORNEY AT LAW

HOWELL, MICHIGAN

U;••»•* MI Court Heoea

(

MARTIN J. LA VAN ATTORNEY AT LAW

Phone 13 ' Brighton

DON W. VANWINKLE - Attorney at Law

STATE OF MICHIGAN

The Probate Court for the County of Livingston.

At a session of said Court, held at help'* features or "let-out" features the Probate Office in the City of for growth. The suits selling at $l.£)b Howell, in said County, on the 18th were of excellent material, gearan-|<^y of February, A. D. 1935. teed color fast, pre-shrunk, of ample' _ ^^l1' " o n - W i m « L. Lyons,

. . i t . i Judge- of Probate. cut and good .workmanship, and sm-- ,* £ M«»» .» ~* A . P . * »- « . . . . , , ,, , / r . „ <, | n t h« Matter or the Estate of-—— eral resigns included "self-help _fja-j JOSEPH-tfc-BUSH; tures. The boy's suits made in the ' Deceased class compared, favorably in fabric,!' Lillie E. Bush haying filed in said design, and workmanship with t h e j c o u r t h e r final administration account $1.95 suits, and cost; on an average,' a n c i P e

ut i t i o" P a y i n g for the allow-

$1.26, a saving of 69 cents. The com- £ ^ 2 ¾ ^ ^ * „ ^ _ ,. _*- -*_ c ~ ^ ± _ J „_* ^*i. — a - v 4 n " di&tnbution of the-residue-ofsaltf

o f m a r k e r s i n t h e c o u n t y . S e e parative saving~on Sther priced suits , s t i l t e >

them at the lowest price. Try was 16 and 22 cents* i. IT }§_ ORDERED, That the 25th us. Plant No. 1, foot of Main St. Office 311 £. Liberty St Phone No. 2.

Monuments, Markers We carry the largest stock

Milford, Mich. s

Office over First State Savings Bank Howell Mirk.

PAT DILLON Plumbing Heating

Water Wells and Repairs

Electrical Work Phone 59-F3

AUTO FIGURES SHOW INCREASING TRENDS

The year 1934 saw more than a mil­lion passenger automobiles on the highways, again, according to com­plete—tables3\a& compi led— by the Secretary of States' office on auto­mobile registration figures. In 1933, total passenger car registration had

~ -dropped below the million mark for the first time since 1927, when there were 999,915 cars licensed. The total for 1934 wasX027 ,064; for 1933, on­ly OOGJJSAJKOre licensed. The year

*1929"1rtill marks the high tide In pas-

MORTGAGEABLE

DEFAULT having been made in the terms and conditions of a certain mortgage made by CHAKLha W. MEYERS, a married man, Mortgagor, to WILLIAM L. ATKINS and L \A E. ATKINS, his wife Mortgagees,, their legal representatives and assigns, da­ted the 1st day of September, A. D.f IViSii and tttvswi&i in the office of the

oi

The little girl's dresses which w*jre day of March, A. D., 1935, at ten o' made in the class were of color fast clock in the f oMshoon, at said probata

office, be and is hereby appointed

MILFORD GRANrrrcor ZS^J^J" !rL ™<^i

fabric of good quality, designed v.ith . ' . . . . . . . both "self-help" and "let-out" f e a ) ^ < * a m i ™ * . ^ a I ^ ' " « ? ™d ac

nt ana hearing said petition; , TT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ThaT

corative trim, such as fagotting or nublic notice thereof be given by pub-smocking. Their average cost was 'nation of a copy of Celt jnler. for $1.23 and compared favorably with' thr*;f! ™cce.«*We weeks previous to ready-to-wear dresses at $2.98. This l n u l ™+ o f h o a r i n ^ J" the Pinckney

. . . u ., i U .,_•, • , Dispatch, a newspaper pnr.Vrl and savjng is undoubtedly worthwhile if ,: r c u ! a t f . ,» ;, s n i d P O u n t y , p

the mother has time in which to make j Willis L, Lyons. them, and the ability to sew well and _ Judge of Probate. easily. [ A t n i f > c 0^v. —The-^alue of the t tew. i^keTr-fTTm^—^^-^ i a T;^11"11''

I ii^^ister of "Deeds for the Couiily

juJMiigstoii,- fctate of Michigan, VA i.ie

1st day of September, A. D. l lJ33, in

-L-JDer ion, or Mortgages, on -pagvs

said vvuiium L. AIKH.S and Ina rJ. Ai-Kjns, jiis wile, to W11L1AM h. LOLi,. Dy wnuen assignment dated the 18ti"i aay oi UcioOer, A. 1). l'.tSZ, and re­corded the 21st day of October, A. D. 11^33 in Liber 14C> of Mortgages,

I to power of sale, and the premises therein described a.s: The north sixty acres of the east half of the northeast quarter of Section fourteen (14) ; the northwest quarter of th- northwest quarter of Section thirteen ( 1 3 ) ; all in Township three (3) North, Range three (3) east, Michigan, containing one (hundred acres of land more or less, lying within, the Township of Handy, County of- Livingston and State of Michigan, will be sold at pub-lie ^u^4iofr-4o-th^-htghe^Hbn1deT^or cash by the sheriff of Livingston County, at the west front door of the Court House in the City of Howell in said County and State on Friday the

-twelfth day at Apr\V, ITOfir - *t - ^ r r o'clock in the forenoon of «aid (hiy. There is due and payable at.the date of. this notice upon the debt secured by said mortgage the sum of Forty-four Hundred Fifty-two Dollars and Eighty Cents ($4452.*0).

"r

other household tasks and the amount of effort required to make the gar­ment should be taken into considera­tion when the homemaker plans to make the children's ••vatdrefciB at home. Instead of saving by this means, she may discover that homemade gar-

Register of Probate.

NOTICE Or 8ALB Notice la hereby given that, fcy-rtrttte

fit a writ of fieri facia* issued out of the clrcmt court for the county of <fent«e«, State of Michigan, in favor of Harold If. Goldstein, against Hhe good* and chattels, lands and tenements, of William W. Mountain, in Livingston County, State of

NORMAN REASON REAL ESTATE BROKER

Firm, Residential Property and > :-ontage a Specialty. I Also

.-. ...• C'-iv Property to Trade. - 'j v . Michigan

GUS RISSMAN LICENSED MASTER PLUMBER

Plumbing anjd Heating We Do Plumbing and HeatiagVf All Kinds, We-Handle El—trle P « * W Septic Tanks and Water

Tanks 604 Washington Howell, Mich. Phon* 610 Repair Work of All Kindt

PERCY ELLIS AUCTIONEER

Farm Sale* a Speciality..

hone Pinckney 19-F l l

/

A

DR. G. R. McCLUSKEY DENTIST

(Successor to D?. R. G. GordanierJ 112½ N . Michigan

Office nours 8:3<L_12:00 1:00—6:00

Tuesday and Saturday evenings 7 : 0 0 — a ^ O ,

Phone 220 Fot7tD

sei.gcr car registrations, with 1,2*0,-Pinckney 8 4 8

There were approximately 2,000 more trucks'on the highways in 193i tlian for the year previous; traihrs ju.mj.cd to the highest number in th" stale's history with a better than 13.« 00 increase over 19.33's previous re­cord of some 70 000. Few people stop to realize thai a:- recently as io years ago, there were onlya about u quarter of a million pleasure cars in the whole state, and less than 40,000 commer­cial vehicles. ,

, Motorcycle registration is apparent 4y at about its—normai—Jevel^—with" about 3,000 licensed. Back in 1916, there were nearly three times-as many on the roads, many of them being mere power wheels attached to bicy­cles, , however. They have dropped steadily in number with the increasing use of automobiles, hut for the past ten years their number iaflJjeenjdrtu-ally unchanged annually*

While commercial vehicles increas-de only about 2,000, the increase in chauffeur's licenses show a gain oX more than 16,000, indicating that more than mprft QQmrner*i«\ f»f>dff f fr

„ . . „ .. , : Michigan, to me directed and delivered, ments are actually costing her more' i did, on the 19th day of January, A D than readv-made ones: 1 ¾ . levy-, upon and take a" of the right.

title and Interest of the said William W

LAVEY A MURPHY GENERAL INSURANCE

Phone No. 1 aasl S0P1 Pinckney, Michigan

FIRE, WIND INSURANCE Representing the Detroit Fire and

Marine Insurance Co.

c. w . HOOKER Pinckney, Micli. PUone80F8

L ^ipeknoy

C. ALBERT FROST JUSTICE_OP_THE-«ACE \

' Ijleiimlst

160 a year, Public Health Service and, J - ' T ^ T i ^ U ^ ' i ^ i , « Veteran's Administration. ! public vendue, to the hfghei

All States except Utah, Iowa, Ver­mont, Virginia, Maryland, and the ftJEtrirt n* ^ " T b i w hnw—received

than ready-made ones. 1 o

CIVIL SERVICE EXAMINATIONS The United States Civil Service

Commission has announced open com pctitive examinations as follows: '

Assistant statistical clerk, $1,620 a | year, departmental service, Washing­ton, D. C. v '

Chief dietitian, $2,300 to $2,900 a year, head dietitian, $2,000 to $2,500 a year, staff dietitian, $1,8Q0 to'$2,-

pages 2QH-D, said Livingston County Kecords, on which mortgage there is claimed to be due and unpaid at the dale of the Notice, the .sum of TWO THOUSAND SIXTY ' ($2 ,060 .00) DOLLARS for principal and intercut, and no suit or proceeding at law or in equity having been instituted ,to r> cover the debt "semrr"ffby ^aitt moit-gage, or any part thereof; Now, there­fore, by virtue of the pow<T of sale contained in said mortgage, and which has become operative by reason of said default, and pursuant to the statute of the State of Michigan in such case made and provided, notice is hereby given that on the 11th day of May, A. D. 1035, at 12:00 o'clock

William Fowler, Mortgagee Vdtcd: January in, 10,35. Don W. VunWinkle Attorney for mortgagee Bujinew Address: Howell, Michigan.

Mountain in ancfrto the folio wing "x de­scribed lands, to-wit:

The southeast quarter of the south­west fractional quarter of section nine­teen; the south part (10 seres) of the east quarter of fhe~B0utheast quarter of section 19; the southwest-quarter Of the southeast fractional quarter of section 19; the northwest quarter of the northeast quarter objection 80; the north half of the northwest frac­tional qunrter of section 80; the west half of the east half of the northerns! quarter of section 30; all being In township three north, range four east of the Michigan Merldhva, according Va the recorded plat thereof,-In LW-

less than their quota of appointments in the apportioned departmental ser­vice in. Washington, D. C. The dieti­tian positions are not affected by the State apportionment law.

Full information may be obtained from the Secretary of the United States Civil Service Board of Exam­iners at the post office or customhouse in any city which has a post office of the first or the second lass, or from the United States Civil Service Com--mTssfon, Washington, D. C.

' public vendue, to the highest bidder, at the front door of the court house, at How-

) ell, in said county, that being the place of holding the circuit court within -aaifi county of Livingston, on Saturday, the Hth day of March, A, D.4MeV«*-t~ clock in the afternoon of said day.

CLAUDE H. M. FAWCWT. Sheriff of said Livingston County,

this class of operator, was manifested, unless shortened industrial hours have necessitated employing more commer­cial operators.

One annually recurring item which never fails to attract attention in the Secretary of State's office is the nam* ber of duplicate operator's licenses issued. For the most part, they take the place of licenses lost or destroyed. In 1934, nearly 15,000-people lost or misplaced their operator licenses, and bought new ones at $1 each. I n 1 9 2 9 , more than 27,000 licenses were lost, for which duplicates were bought*

JUDGE BY D A T A B A N K _ BURGLAR BY NIGHT

i z ^ A ^ c t f r t p rp1ating^how*n man fear-^ e d by the cleverest thieves learned to

become a more efficient criminal than any he sent to prison. Read this ar­ticle hi The American Weekly, with Sunday'i Ditroi Tte*

Farley it Elliott, Attorney. 7tS F. P. Smith Bldg.. Wlat, Ifldalgu.

o — • STATE OF MICHIGAN

NOTICE OF MORTGAGE

FORECLOSURE SALS

DEFAULT having been ini'dr fnr more than tbir'.y days in the condi­tions of a certain mortgage made by Paul Itscll, a .'iridic man, mortgagor, to Mcl'horson State Hank, a Michigun Corporation, mortgager, dated May 27, 1020, and recorded in '.ho o i t i .c

noon, E&stern Standard Time, said of the Register of Dc<*ds tor Living mortgage will be foreclosed by sale at public auction to the highest bid-der at the west door Jo the Livingston

the County Building, in the Ci.ty of Howell, Livingston County, Michigan, that being the place where the Circuit1 P»'» inlerfat ar.d tax*"

ston .County, Michigan, on 'li.y 2S, lf)2fl, in Liber 127 of Mortgage/, u.; pages 570-57L on which U'crtyagy there is claimed to b(. due r.i.'.! u.i}uii<i at the date, of this n 'tici. i JV princi-

( t l>0 WJlOiC .

Court for the County of Livingston is' held, of the premises described in said mortgage, or so much thereof as may be necessary to pay the-amount due as aforesaid on said mortgage, and any sum or sums which may be paid by the undersigned at or before said sale tor taxes and or insurance oh said premises, and all ethrr sums paid by the undersigned pur­suant to law and to the terns of said mortgage, with interest there­on at 7 percent per annum, and all

(legal costs, charges and expenses, in-The Probate Court for the Ceunty of j eluding an attorney fee allowed by

Livingito*. ' jlaw, to-wit: AH that certain piece of

At a session of said eourt, held fttjland l o c a t e d i n V* Township of the Probate Office in Howell in said County, on the 4th day of February, A ^ . , 1086.

Hon.

oi said principal and interest l.^.ing now due and payable;, (he .«um of $931.21 and no suit or proceeding at law or in equity having_becn had OJL instituted to recover the debt Secured by said mortgage, or any part thereof:

Now, therefore, by virtue . ef the power 'of sale contained in said raort-

EDUCATION PROGRAMS FROM DETROIT RADIO STATIONS

Radio broadcasts over five Detroit stations are designed to present to the general public five distinct types of radio programs dealing with various aspects of public education. . Plans are complete for four of the five types of broadcast. A "Newscast" is beard over WJR from 6 P. M. to 6:15 P. M. on Mondays. A "Trave­logue" is presented on WWJ Wodnes-I batej>ffice, be and is hereby appoint- j days, starting at 2:4fr P. M. Dramatic programs from WJBK are on the air from 7:30 to 7:4B F. M. every Thurs­day. A series of radio interviews, dis­cussions, and speeches on educational matters are given over WMBC every Friday evening from 8:30 to 8:45. The Wayne University. School of the Air is presented over WXYZ and t!:e

Present .HrtonTwHlis L. Lyons, Judge of Probate. In the-Matter of the gXHafeH>T~

GEORGE HASSENCAHL Deceased.

Lillian D. Hassehcahl having filed in said court her petition, praying that the administration of said estate be granted to Lillian D. Hassencahl or to some other suitable person.

IT IS ORDERED, That the 11th day of March, A. D., 1935, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at said pro-

gage, and pursuant to the statute in" such case made and provided, NO­TICE IS HJtREnY GIVEN, that on Saturday, April f>, 11)35, at ton o'­clock in the forenoon, Eastern Stan­dard Time, said mortgage will be foreclosed by a ?alc~ at public vendue to the highest bidder at the Westerly entrance to the Court House in the

the*"city" ef | G e n o a ' County of:Livirgston, State of, aty e f Howell, Livingston County, m th« 4*h rfav Michigan, described as:;x The West .Michigan, (that being the place where

half of the west half of th* northeast t h e Cireoft Court for the County of quarter of Section 3 0 -m Township Livingston iu he^d), ul the premises

two 12) North, Range five (5} east, -Michigan, conlalntn]g" forty (40} ac­res of land, more or less. Dated: February^, 1935.

WILLIAM E. LOLL, Assignee of Mortagees.

Arthur Mitchell, Attorney for Assignee of Mortgages. 326 Lafayette Building, Detroit, Michigan,

MORTGAGE NOTICE

Michigan Network everV Tuesday. Child welfare problems are discussed A true copy.

ed "for hearing said petition. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, That

public notice thereof be given by pub* lieation of a copy of thiHwder, for three successive weeks previous to said day of bearing, in th* Pinckney Dispatrh, a nswtpaper—jsripted and circulated in said county*

Wiflis L. Lyons, Judge of Probate, '

' Default having been made in A>he eonditiens ef that certain mortgage dated „he seventeenth day of Decem­ber, 1930,executed by Wesley Worden

jLnd Annif Worden, his wife, to Wil­liam Fowler, ifiled for record in the effiee pt th» R»gi«t»r nt TWrir *f

over the s|tme chain on Tuesday morn-i n f i f t ^ s l f . . • <; r -

'i

n t s

Celestia Parshall;

~ W Utar t f IVobait,

described in said mortgage or ?o much •thereof as may be necessarj .o pay the amount due en said mortgage as aforesaid, with 7 per cent interest thereon and all legal costs, charge^ and expenses, including the attorney fees' allowed by law, and any ^ m or sums which may be paid by'the un­dersigned mortgagee at orbefore said sale, necessary to protect its interest in the ©remises. Which premises are described as: / ' "

NeVth half of Northwest'quarter Section Nineteen, Township Two North, Range Four East, Michigan, West of the North and South Road called the Pingree Road, conta in­ing 54 acres of land, more or less, Marion Township, Livingston Coun-i ty, Michigan.

J Livingston County, Michigan, on the seventeenth day of December, 1030, in Liber 135 of r.ojlgagcs at pagee 192.198 thereof.

Notice nTKereby given that said rtfrtgift wiU >t tMtjottd pujMMfti

McPherson Stata flank,

Mortgagee, Dated January 8, 1,935 Shields A Smith, "

Attorneys for Mortgagee; \}'?%:-

ltfsil*t Addrw jimli, n vi • \ ' ,

r 1'>:

M\"

Page 4: Pinckney Community j Centennial Committees March Term Of ...pinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1935-02-27.pdf · r | OUR SUBSCRIPTION RATE * 1 IS $1.25 PER YEAR I Vol. 52 ;> Pinckney,

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• * * •

The Pipckney Dispatch Wednesday, February 27, 1935. r

0 ^ 0 0 C 0 ^ 0 ^ ^ 4 <

TilK IIOWKIJL T H E A T R E ! The Playhouse of Livingston County ' a Livingston County

;>'^-»

X •

• : *

Wed., Tl iuic , 1'n;, February 27, 28, March 1.

"LIVES OF A BENGAL LANCER*' With

Gary Cooper, Franchot Tone, Richard Cromwell Sir Guy1 Standing, Kathleen Burke

From the Novel by Francis Yeats Brown . \ ,. Sponsored by Sophomore Class

Comedy News

Saturday Qc.i;,, M.>rch 2. Matinee 2 P. M. 10c and 20c POIT .LE FKATI/RE PROGRAM

"GIGOLETTE" With Adrienne Ames, Ralph Bellamy, Donald Cook

Also * "SECRETS OF THE CHATEAU"

____. with Claire Dodd, Alice White and Jack LaRue

Cartoon •' -

Mr. and Mrs. F . E. Gauss were Mrs. Ida Knapp. Sunday dinner guests- of Mr. and Mrs.! Mr. and Mrs. Charles Smith of De-Dan Lantis of Stockbridge. t troiti^ visited Mrs. Smith's p a i n t s ,

UIIIRIIIJUIIIIIIIIIIIIIUI iiiitiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiHHimuniuitiiutuiiiiiitinuiuiiitmra

Sunday, Monday, March 3, 4. . Mat. Sun. 2 P. M- Cont.

B£RTWHEELERarwiBERT WOOL5EY

Miss Maggie Paterson of Detroit spent the fir.st of last week with Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Roberta- and the Week end with Kathryn Robeits .

o «•

Hamburg Hamburg Hive, No. 392, Lady Mac-

j cabees met in regular session a t I. 0 . J 0 . F. hall Tuesday afternoon with the

commander, Mrs. Gladys E. Lee, pre­siding. Official and committee reports

} were given by Mrs. Nellie E. Haight, I Mrs. Carrie E. Sheridan and Mrs. j Myrtie R. Smith, Mrs. Bertha Winkel-haus was elected trustee for a term

' of three years. I t wcus voted to give ', a dancing party Friday evening, ; March 8, a t I.O.O.F. hall, with Mrs. ' Pearl Sheridan, Mrs. Norma V. Mer-! rill and Mrs. ETnily Kuchar as com­mittee in charge. For the good of the

Con: i I. \-

in "KENTUCKY KERNELS"

Petty Poop Cartoon News

Tuesday, f.J.nrch 5. 15c with Merchant's Ticket

"GREAT EXPECTATIONS" _ With

Henry Hull, Jane Wyatt, Phillip Holmes

i Co2!Mii >j;i Teanmv No. 7 N e w s

T::U;-

I'OJ

i"r:d., M a n n 6, 7, 8. 1)()1 }ilA'. FEATURE PROGRAM

" 6 DAY BIKE RIDER with Joe E. Brown "HAPPINESS AHEAD" with Dick Powell

n ye sJNew:

I order, Mrs. Pearl Wovman and Mrs i-Myriie—R^-Smith contracted a--besm-j—Mr.-and—Mrs. -Henry -r>.

guessing contest, the prize winner be­ing Mrs. Minnie Puckale.v on a tie with Mrs. Bertha Winkelhaus ari'dser-

t ved'candy. Those* who will act for the

Igood of the order at the next meeting to b e h e l d Tuesday afternoon, March 5, are Mrs. Elsie Gray and Mrs. Ella Moon.

Mrs. Earl C. Lear was hostess at a surprise party Tuesday evening in honor of her husband's birthday anni­versary. Cues'.s were: Mr. and Mrs. John D. Moore, Mr?. Almira Bennett, Charles I. Bennett, M,r, and Mrs. Cleo

V

Coming Attractions— -; " "Rhumba"

- "Flirtation Walk" I ' . * • • ' • * •

«&*:

Mr. and Mrs., Estes Boring Sunday. Miss Loretta, Loi-d and Ray Doyle

and three other friends, all of Detroit, were Sunday dinnei* guests of Miss and Messrs. PoyJe's aunt, Mrs. Alex T. Labadic and Mr. Lubadb, at. "Bob White Beach" 'Strawberry Lake.

Mr. and Mrs. Herber t Busse a-two children, Peter and Ruth, of De­troit were at the cottage a t "Bob White Beach" Sunday. They also called on Mr. and Mrs, Henry M. Queal,

I t was reported last week that Mrs. Flora Saunders Jones was moved to Beyer Memorial Hospital at Ypsilanti. It was expec ted that she would be moved .Sunday morning, then the phy­sicians decided it would be unwise as the arm is suspended by pulleys and weights, the leg is in a cast. She is a t Deaconess Hospital, Jefferson Ave., Detroit.

Pryer, m company with their ^on uiid daughter* in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ben E. Pryer, of Ann Arbor, at tended the funeral of their cousin's wife, Mrs, Wilbur Todd, at Diamondale Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Todd were former residents of Ham­burg.

-Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Winkelhaus'are the parents of a son, born Saturday, February 23. ' '

— o

Hardware Needs | We are prepared to supply the Hardware Needs | = for Pinckney and vicinity. We carry a full line of s | shelf hardware in cooking utensils, cutelry e t c |

1 PAINTS—We carry the Bradley-Vrooman line of |

| and also supply parts for them as well as furnaces s § and steam heating outfits. .5

I t BUILJMNaSUPPLIES-.We handle all kinds of | | builder's hardware, also roofing and eaves trough, i

| MACHINE REPAIRS—We service all kinds oi S farming machinery and can get parts for you.

r =

Marion

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fTO#T9P

The West Marion Ladies' Aid will Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Henry B. Pryer, be postponed to April on account of Mr. and Mis. James H. Hayner, Mr. the Community Banquet held in the :ind M n . Ralph Winkelhaus, Mr. and church basement on March 15, Friday .Mrs. Clayton Johnson, Mr. and Mrs.: Worker's Class. Kev. U. H. Savage. Floyd W o m a n , Mr. and Mrs. Harry evening at 0:30. Given by the-Willing Miller, Mrs. James W. Featherly, the radio minister of the First Bap-

J 1 ' w ^ ' v ^ T V ^ T n ' M * i * c U i e t i r t ^ \ ° lt ^ " l i a c ; " i U b ^ ^ | K n a P p ' s son, William, at the U. of M.

. Haight, Dan Dickinson and Amos speaker. Tickc'.s 3oc and loc , sold by , Hospital in Ann Arbor Saturday. Jickctt . The cven,ng wa>- spent play- the Class and teacher, Mrs. Alfred M L s g C h a r l o t t c H ar re l l was a Sun ing progressive euchre, r i r s t prizes I'fau. Anvone* interested see them. ,•__. m , f . n f M J , . ,

A , Ar »-, , i i » . t , a J guest oi JJISS June Lamb ¥-^e-Fe-w<m-by Mrs. Featherly- and Mr. M^^-and-M**. Www-MiUci- ate S u n - j p /

day dinner at the,.George Liand home. Marjorie Huff is entertaining the

£ MmtUllllllllltlUIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllirUlllllllllllHllttlllllllltJIfMIIHIIIIIIItl i

J Tecple Hardware f

.> *

pi >.

x

There's your motoring question! Answer it with -goad_hrake&t_ajjd* let us furnish the answer,, We

have compleLe brake machinery and '' skilled mechanics for service on all makes of cars.

r

You Want- Gooi.. Brake The slippery hi?i!iv/ays of fail and winter and the hea7y tiaffic demand that you have the protection of efi icic'it brakes. Failure to be able to stop your car properly WTII lead to damage with oftentimes human faialitie.<

Welding and All Kinds of Auto Repair Work. "

Slay ton & Son • <'<>•• C- o -o <><sn><& <o

i Johnson; consolation by Mrs. Bennett | and Mr. Pickett."A delicious midnight

luncheon wa>"'.served. * i Mrs. Hx'a Moon entertained at a

birthday- party at hr r home Saturday -veiling in honor of her son, Bert Moon. Guests were Mrs. Moon's nieco*' Mrs. Ida Knnpp and son and daughter-in-la.v, Mr. and Mrs. George D. Knapp and Mr. and'MivCK. Clyde Dunning. The evening was spent in playing p.dro. Refreshments were served.

Mr. and Mrs. James ,T. Hayner vis­ited their son, linssell Hayner in De­troit Friday. He is a ^senior at the: Detroit College of Medicine. i

Mr. and Mrs. Edgar G. Mayer of :-fr-Vnn Arbor spent Sunday with^ Mrs.

Mayer's parents, Mr. anTTMrs. Henry •B. Pryer at Hamburg village.

Mrs. Floyd Worman. Mrs. Cleo Smith, Mrs. Nellie- K. Haight and Mrs. Willard Haumbaum attended a shower

""trr-honor of Mrs. Womian's niece, I Miss Helen Holmquist at the home of ; Miss Holmquists' motjhrr Mrs. Theo­dore Wolfe in Ann Arbor Thursday. The wedding will bo held sometime in March.

Mr. and Mrs. George VanHorn of Carr and friend of Ann Arbor, John Howell called on Mrs. Van Horn's Schramm of Detroit, Mr. ana Mi>. mother, Mrs. Lucy Leece, at Hamburg Mylo Kettler and children. Yvonne, village Saturday. Mrs. VanHorn's Patsy and MaryJo of Howell. niece* Mabel Hammell, who accom- Fred Bross J r . and Mrs. Fredie panied them, visitedTiei- grandmother, Knapp and children called on Mrs.

Pinckney. Mr. and Mrs

at

Roy Housel and daughter, Sally, spent Saturday in Detroit and Ann Arbor.

Robeil Dilloway of Pinckney was a .veek end jjuest of Alger Lee.

Mrs. Ida Imus and son, Jo t , were called :.o Howell Saturday by the death of Mrs. Imus' son, Fred Imus.

Frank Wither* of Detroit is spend­ing' some time with Mr. and Mr-. Nel­son Imus at Strawberry Lake.

German Measles. Mrs. A.' R. Pfau and Mrs. Alfred

Lang'e and daughter, Virginia, were in Owosso last Wednesday.

Mr. Harvey Cooley Avas given a complete surprise Saturday night by the neighborhood, it being.Jiis birth­day.

MT?-and>..Mrs. A. R. Pfau, Mr. ami Mrs. Alfred1 Pfau and son spent the ;

week end in Detroit visiting relatives] and friends. -

Mrs. Orville Holme * of Conway un derwent a serious operation at the] Miss Genevieve Briney of Ann Ar-Henry Ford Hospital last Friday. Hei i bor, and si.-t"r, Miss Dorothy Talbot, mother, Mrs. John. Redinger Sr., o f 'o f Farmington were Sunday dinner Howell and the Holmes "family spent. guests of Mr. and 3Ti-s. Waller Hit ter .

Mrs. Loreena Ruttmcn and Mi's. Arnn_CnriiliiUi.\Ycre in Deti-oit Wred-ne.dav.

(Jeorgi'

Iosco

Sunday her. - "

in Detroit and r e n t to

1

Lakeland Downing and Mr. . *pint Satunlffry— ia

Mrs. Robert Don Swarthout Ypsilanti.

Mr. and Mis. Harry Lee entertained at dinner Sunday for Miss Dorothy

i m i f i i r ' i

I Miss Bertha Watters is visiti ;g tvi-end^ in Ann Arbor. v

Mr. and Mrs. Charley Rickets and son visited Mrs. Ricket 's moi.u-r Lt Detroit over the week *ttd*—— ——

Mr. and Mrs. Roy Brown ,\;»vc moved on to the Dr. Lamboreaux farm and expect to work for the Dr. this summer.

T f t « South losca Aid Society was well attended Wednesday at tlv_ horn,-of Mr. and Mrs. Frank WaUers. Pro­ceeds $13.00. New officers were elec­ted as-follows: President-Mr*. Grace Buckley; Sec'y . and Treas., Mis. Loreena Rut tman; Organis., Mi.;. Jessie Carson.

Mr. and Mrs. John Roberts and guests, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mi'.chell, visited the former's daughter. Mrs. Daisy Butler, and Mr. Butler, in De-, 'troit Saturday.

_ - M r s r Kthel Embry- and d a u g t i e r -

and Mrs. May of Unadilla r.m.l M»•.•*. Hannah Foster and Mrs. Jan•«>.< Fy--tr. . attended the Aid Society (i .eier t Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wattcr.i \vedne;• day.

Will Bruff visited his brot -r near Owosso part of last ve k.

Gila,

Kirkland's Sunday School j Class enjoyed a coasting party Friday nitc ;it the 'lome of Mr. and Mrs.

r Claude Jacl.-son. M r s . - S o n e wai a Thursday caller! ^

of Mr., M:„y Whitehead and Mrs. r A B O M T H A N ^ Anna Dunn, CARD J F THANKS

Lloyd Shafer of Webberville visited We wish l o % a n k all t • friends his parents Sunday. j and neighbors for their ki <ln ss dur*

Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mitchell of: i n g our recent bereavem: n : A'.- ' Boyne City are visiting Mr. Mitchell's! Rchpol for the beautiful l*o- il offer-sister. Mrs. John Roberts, and Mr. UnJSs« Roberts and family. • * ' — TheJ£ofhan^sian l-V.mily. :

Plainheid . /

/ Ml". Oi'la Wal te r . - i-.ii-.-ti ^.,: .!;;;.• u\,

M r . M a * Dy.^r. Ml.-. Lf-ttie ( "i,-.i: c>.- v. a a Sa;ide.y

gue.-t of he r .-en, .J a a • - -. a a d i':mii-y r^TT7^VT%tr r r f r t^^ — ,- , '

\ - a iuo »> a l t . r > i- i !• <;' i i; i- .: ' , f o i Mr . l''.'i-<\ I l o a , v.'ao :] :.- h. •. •• -H!< ;1I-pa.-t week .

M r . ' a i . d :1:-:. Vv>-:\ .•!;.;'•. 'i -Pi^yne C'i.v a:< -. a a i a ; : : '..• a . li :; M;-s Ji.'im I!.>!i- . l> a ad fa a: iiy.

Mr. and .Mrs. S a m (';..-:• <•;' 7 ; ], W ( - . - . ' \ V < ••!< ( ( - : . ( 1 ' . - ; ! ( 'i [ ;•;• ; . i . i'. ;-

M r a F. K. C . n i ^ . ; ae i ;?••, ( . aa" . ' A a a a i a .- . ...,: :( • ••,. ;,.. . .,; -:,

'•l!'ii:i:r !ae •'. 1. : • . ... :", .'<. i< : - v

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There is n o substitute

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a_ Toe-'-.-! , m . .' . a-ei e:' liiiv;:

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Ci ty . !>K;t'):-, ;| {;, I)., kKt ^"lli-^aV C visit 'Mr. aad aire. 'J^-): V. ill- .

Word wtia ree. iv.d >';:';•.;' :;.• la;:'.! Mrs. E. X, Ural.-y .a^s conifer..ahb in a hospital at IJ.y;a.«;M !'.. ;,.

Mr. and M..-:.' 1K : !;;, .\ ;;,. • r - „ ; t , v o

.sons of I>ttrO('t" v.-{ ie .- c :s ./:-1 cuo.-l * at the parent:al hoi^e vf Mr. *and

. Mrs. K.'L. Topping. / . I Mr. and y\rs. Glad-t^iv i:}V\ familv'

of Lansing w ^ r e ^ u r ^ a y l ^ r : ^ ? r.Ii-.' , and Mr.s. A. J. Hoiincs. \

Mr. Steve BiuVer came hoTne u-ith1

Roy. Swadling/AV dnt^day; and spent • the.night. 7 • {

TtfTs. Welton -arrd" eTiltdmn ,nl^.t the I ' " . p a s t week with her, dan; :.t: r ,, tuid '

family, Mr. and Mrs"./)ire - fPon t i ac ! '* -. Mr . A. J, Holmes i.-; tionfm?d to t h e ! botise with a hard cold

, Mr. A. L. Dutton and MrJ C. O. Dtttton were in H^jweTKone^di iy l jas^^

for the services of your

Eyesight Specialist!

Ax eyesight specialist can lengthen the life of eyes young and old. He also knows that correct lighting is essential to perfect vision* Unless yon run exactly tht right nmirunt irf light for each

•mll .-mfr.

seeing task—unless yon have enough light for comfortable, EASY SEELNG-eyestrain will re. f +

f ^

rvMv / > i ® r aX-.

suit and your eyes will be injured. We suggest these four simple rules to guide yon in obtaining good lighting for your home: (1) Use correct tise lamp bulbs—"WATTS". (In table and floor lamps, use 40 watts in each socket for 3**ocket lamps; 60 watts in 2-socket lamps; 100 watts in 1-socket lamps.) (2) Use SHADES on ail lamp bulbs to prevent GLARE. (3) Use shades with Eghbcolored linings to get the most fight, wide shades, open at the top, are best. (4) Have at feast one-tenth as much light in the rest of the room as you have on your book, newspaper, sewing, e t c

TfariDetroit Edison Company 'V

1 ^ ^ > -Mr. and\Mrs. Waldo Watters witer-fatmA":- tamed their card party last Thursday

" i j ' - ' ' ^ . - : - '

J"TP**^

s * •..-*-

-*•

Page 5: Pinckney Community j Centennial Committees March Term Of ...pinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1935-02-27.pdf · r | OUR SUBSCRIPTION RATE * 1 IS $1.25 PER YEAR I Vol. 52 ;> Pinckney,

i4t*i^ .rrtfcAi't.<•»*«>

The Pindoiey Dispatch Wednesday, February 27, 1935.

miuiiiii;tiwitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiimiuuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuii^ Thp PkpkllfiV^ DlSDSsich

M S

IMF ore JfALJ

Entered, a t the Poatoffice at Pihcknoy, Mich., as Second Cia>.- .Mailer.

Subscription $!/J5 a year f'n Afivai'Cf!.

5 PAUL CUHLETT PUBLISHER *—p

Kodak Film

"'s in v Vpsilanti on]

• ay

, Saturday, March 1,21 i 10 lbs, SUGAR, Bulk 1 APPLE BUTTER, %. Jar I HOWELL FLOUR, 24 1-2 lb, bag

41c J 15« I 89c |

| HOME BAKER FLOUR, 24 1-2 lb. bag 97c 1 • 1PILLSBURY FLOUR, 24 1-2 lb bag . r G O L U MEDAL FLOUR. 24 1-2 » bag

| FELS NAPTHA SOAP,, 10 bars . 1 BIG FOUR SOAP, 10 bars I F . 0. M. SOAP CHIPS, 5 lb. box

= %J

I RED & WHITE MILK. *3ULriMAGAR0NI2lbs .

QUAKER SALT, 2 lb. box lllfLLARS COFFEE, IGREEN & WHITF COFFEE lb.

tali can

pkg lb. pkg.

$110! S113

43c i 25c I 26c 1

5c! 15c 1

5c! 19c I

3U B I MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE, lb. can I HAND PACKED TOMATOES, 2 No.2 cans 19c 1 jSUNBRi rE CLEANSER, 2 cans n §

| All Prices in this Auv. akc Subject to Mich. 3 o|o Sales Tax

I C. H. KBrsllM&DY

9c I

S. K. .iwarthout was in Howell on; busing.-:. Saturday.

hyr.n Gi.ulnor of Iosco called upon Pinckney friends Friday.

Bort Harris attended the community -auction dale at Howell Saturday.

Mr*. Roy Henry of Battle Creek Jias returned from a tr ip to Florid*.

~ Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Elliott of Vpsi-fan'.i called on the Haze Sisters last Thursday.

My. and Mrs. James Greene of Lansing' were Sunday guests of Mrs. Sarah Carr.

Ih \ and Mrs. Clare Skinner of Oc­t ro i . vi.-iUd aF the home of^ Ernest ]•><. t S i r l a y .

Hoy /.'•^.-OM c-f Lansing spent Sun-is l day v:i'.\ Y'>.i parents, .Mr. and Mrs.

Cla :d<- K1 ;,-(Ji. c i Mr. and Mr^. Bronson and family

of Yp.'.ih.nti, .spent the week end at their home-here.

Mr. and Mrs. Jame* Andres (Doro-ihy Cuidot) of Detroit, spent the week end-at Portage Lake.

John Hasscncahl has not rented the George Has.-cneahl farm as first un­polled, but hi\.< rented the Henry IUcc > f a i n . i

Mr. a i d Mro. Fi d Bowman audi grandson, Russell, visited Harrle4. .Bowman, at the University Hospital, Ann Arbor, Saturday afternoon.

Glen Slayton and Irving Richardson attend* d a meet ing, of the Michigan Mutual Insurance Co. at Lansing last Thur.-day night.

M-rs. Don Swarthout is taking a . p e c : I < our-e for teachers a t the Yp-iU,:iti . \ormal on Saturdays.

Eu^ v.') hhelian, who is employed by thc-st:.'i* highway department, was homo from Hamilton over Sunday.

Sunday pncsU' of Mr. and Mrs. Jaiiic * Martin were Mr. and Mrs. "I^oboit r^rvr-rof Detroit arrchMr.and Mir-. Joy "dartin and daughter of Flint.

Mr. ur.i Mr.;. M. F. Darrow, daugh-t •!•.•>. ('oh;:..nee and Evelyn, Virginia Darrow and Margaret Curlett attend ed tin.' fu.'i.iai of Miss Jeanne Ely at Aiiij Arbor Sunday.

daie aionjr an extra roth

i

We handle the Eastman line of films, the kind that take the best pictures. Before you start on a trip stock up with these reliable films and be ready to snap the beauties of nature.

films Developed and Printed Here—Prompt Service

FLOYD WEEKS Prescription Druggist

+ * +<0<*O*O<4*4>*

* — -

Moving! Hauling! We have trucks making regular trips to Detroit.

Let us haul your stock, cream and produce.

No Trip Too Long No Job Too Big

W, H. MEYER light & Heavy Hauling of All Kinds. Moving

n »

4:

| PHONE 23F3 WE DELIVER § .:.,UI^!lliftlltlllllllUtllllllllltlUIEIfliriIlltlllfllilltlltllllJlllllllllllllUIJIlllllllll|t|||J|l|||||tia|||tllllllllllllMtll

The Pinckney Dispatcli $1.25 per yt\ 1

= »*! £^Miifiitisii:^aiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiititMfiitifftiiiiiiiiitiififiiitifiiiiffiiifftftiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiifiiiiiii|ifiiiiiitiiicii|iiitiuiiiiiiiiiiiih

I o : d Lamb was in Detroit on

I.; in a Spears visited Lansing

Mi. Monti-

Mr. _fne;- . . i . la. y.

Mrs. L. G, Dovefeaux spent several days ihi.- week wi'.h Detroit relatives.

Miv. H. C. Vedder,"Mr. and Mr.s. P. II. Swarthout were in Ann Arbor Monday afternoon. •

Mr. and Mrs. John Sullivan of •CheL-u ..cie Monday visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Grerncr

Mrs. Mary Fick and son, ftaymond, .Mrs. H. C. Vedder, Mr. and M r s P. H. Swarthout were in Howell Satur­day.

MKss; Mary Jane AtLec was home from Ann Arbor Sunday and had as her guest, Balfour Augst, of Grand Kapia.s.

Mrs. Mao White had as "Thursday dinnc;- .guests, Mr. and Mrs.' Bert Hoff . : H r . e l l , Mrs. Will Cooper a n d '

Jimmie Nash wa's home from Lan­sing the week end.

Miss Fiances Bullis was home from Ann Arbor 'Saturday.

Mr. and Mrs. George Reason were inDc' .roit over the week end.

Mrs. James- Roche spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Roche in Lan *ing.

Mrs. Nellie Briggs, of Howell spent Sunday and "Monday with her father, R . G . W e b b .

Homer Milliron and wife of Fow-

Dave Kelly was, home from Dctroi. S the week end. • ' 5

Miss Helen Prcdler was home no; / . :£ j . Monroe the week end. * [ S

Edward Stcptoc of Dexter v i i iud s Mrs. Mame Shehan Sunday af'.ei,noorrr-|5__

Mr. £.nd Mrs. Wm, Bov;i of Detroit 5 spent last week at their cottage at j B Rush Lake. <E

Mr. andT~Mrs. Will Shehan spent | 5 ' the week end with Dr. and Mrs. Har - , S lowe Shehan in Jackson. j s

1

FRI., MAR. 1 SPECIALS SAT., MAR., 2

Mrs. Walter Glover and daughter, j s lerville spent Sunday with Mr. and Edith, of Fowlervillc, spent Sunday 5 Mrs. Will Brown. v !\ith_MEi_and'Mrs. N. Pacey^ [ g

Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Pat-; Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Hendee a n d | g rick Kennedy were La Verne Kennedy daughter, Marjorie, visited Mr. and and wife of Detroit. , 'Mrs . W. J. Nash Sunday afternoon.

Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Miller of Mar-1 M r s - Wayne AtLee, the Misses Con- = ion were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. ' s t a n c e a n d E v e j y n ^ ^ Margaret Cur- s and Mrs. George Bland.

PEPPER 2 OZ. PKG.

SALT IODIZED

24 OZ. PKG.

SAUER I^RAUT NO. 2½ CAN

10c

• • *

i e t t were, in Ann Arbor Saturday af-1 g temoon.

Mr. and Mrs. A, L. Nisbet had as a Sunday dinner guests, Mr. and Mr?. S

I RED SALMON,- Fancy Sockeye 1 LB.CAN 2Ic i

-3ffc [y.e Harris.

•HI M:

were Fr:;r."k.vJ. Culvert I guests of Mr. r,::d Mrs. Morris Smith.

' - . J .Park wer? Sun- Mrs, (;Uy C-.1.^-. :13, of Haw*! vouiLin, Mrs. Norman died r.t her h.omc ti _-.<o 'Mondav. kS,.;..;

• » * . ' •

Reason. - i leaves hor Husband and a .*•-, Mv<k-Ruictli Livermorc' oi old daughter.

» The Misses Florence and -Mildred several

evening. Those at tending from rH«sfe-[days last week and the^week-efld-wit < aey were, Mr. and Mrs . Norman Rea«\thc Read families.

Larry Stackable of Lansing was a Saturday caller at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Stackable Sr. , _ . „ . ^ T . . , . „ , . >

Mr. and Mrs. Ferr is Smith and G , ° ^ n » e s t e r ' D r ' D r u d & * w " 1 W l f e ri

S u n d a y ' 0 1 D c t r o l t '

DESSERT, Nation Wide

Any Flavor 4-Pkgs- 19c

children—o~f—Ho-'.'eM

1 M'

1

Rva..'

Mr

Club

Rl CE, • n > ;

j , l a

c hosts, to their Bridge [ pot-luck dinner Saturday!Crabb of Grand Rapids spent

.rts*» attendine- from rH«sfe»!days last week and tho week a

•oft, Mr . Walter Clark, Mr. and Mrs. t J M pnwi^.,,. *!»•- nnri i lr t r.l^nti Slav-A n TI and Mrs* Ford Lamb. .

^ ^ T ; rcn Cushing.of Dexter, who has %eer» U^ching m Vandyke/ Wayne eoui.^y, has been hired as principal in Fowlen*Uie high school t o replace Li>i • Dcacaat^iecently resigned. Mr. Cu?I;i-i^ic will' assume his duties March 1st.

S v / r c i Bergin, who lived alone on his f . t r . in Occola, was found dead in a stall in the b a m back of h i s^owc-Mon«:uy. Ke had not been seen since Saturday. He leaves two son, Ralph and George, of Pontiac and a daugh* t e r , "Mrs . Cecilia Moore, of Detroit,

. v

" WALTER PAPWO*Tfr Wal te r Papworth, 1h died at his

home at Howell Feb. 2 l . Me tollowed the occupation of gardner and was well known in this county. His wife died several years, ago..SurvHrfnt'*** two sons, Logan, at hbmcy.aBd Alfred of Alma. The, funeral was-held Sun­day from the Prcs^yte^an «hw«h> fter. Koble officiating. 2 Btt4*l »

Mr. and Mrs. George Greincr had as Sunday gnust*. Mi«« Arfith Atlnnl

Mr. and Mrs. George Kingston a n d : ! M A C A R O N I , daughter:-- of Jackson wore week end 5 <• iiitoro a t the home of -Mr. and Mrs. —

John Fitzsimrn'ont. Misses Virginia Darrow an<I M:.r-

garet Curlett attended the funtrai o, Jeanne Ely at Muchlig Chapel, Ann Arbor, Sunday afternoon.

Miss Lucy Harris , Miss Florence 5 Murphy and nephew, Phillip, o>f Jack-; 5

t son were Week end visitors a t the ; s

EIBow ttST aa Fancy Blue Rose Lbs. 23c I

/

I C R A C K E R S , Hekman'» Rainbow Soda* 2 L b - B o x IQC |

home1 of Mn. W. L. Ahwphy. son, Edwai-d Sullivan, Jbe^sTeimer and. -,». M - . A — T> -J J n o t. „ u * r^ \ •* The Misses Ann Reidy and Berna

George-Roehe ^ ^ n g ^ r o t n - f W ^ ^ Ieml le to t h ? J L. Roche farm hete. Mr j p D o y l e w 3 s called to Crc

Jmwe Doolittle broke a bone i n ' ^ , , ^ ^ o f ^ ^ b

h,s ngh t a m whde c a s t i n g Sunday., i o u g ^ ^ o f w - ^ ^ Mr. and Mrs. George Gnener wU! , T h e f r i e n d s D i n k e I

JtXXX

SUGAR

LB. PKG, ^ &

DEL-MONTE

CiRAPR FRUIT

2 NO. 2 CANS 2 S J C the ser-

DEL-MONTE

GRAPE FBMT JURE

2 NO. 2 CANS 2 ^f- I

attend the wedding of Miss Adith At -knson and Harold Sullivan at t he Guardian Angel Church in Detroit Saturday. f

Mrs. Mae White/ Norman White, Dan Driver, Will Roche, Mr. and Mrs. Ben White were among the guests at a birthday dinner for Basil White near Howell Thursday evening.

The Isham and Fish families recent-

I NORTHERN T4SSUEr 3 Rolb I 7 c i

Mr, and Mrs. Edward E. Sloan, who are spending the winter in Clermont, Florida, and vieiting'other points of

will be pleased to hear tha t he is slowly recovering from the injuries he received in his recent accident.

Miss Janet Fiedler was home from YpsUanti the, week end and had as her guests, Miss Betty Sommers, and Har^ old Turaan of the Normal College. g

M. E, Harrow and family, Virginja a Darrow &n$ Margaret Curlett were g

I SARDINES, VAN CAMP'S- Lb. Oval Can I O c

1 TUNA FISH, VANCAMP'S 2 7 0z. Can

- ,__„ .. ., ... ., . dinner guests Sunday evening of Rev. g l y m e T v ^ T O M r g < w , „ s l m m o n J t ftt B r i g n t o n . |

Mrs. Will Kennedy spent several a days last week with j c r daughter* Mrs. • S tTscar Bec1C~m~T5etrirhV re turn ing : §

A L S O M B A T S P EGIA LS

interest in the South. Dr. Lucille Lam bird of Chicago,

Mrs. Jack Nanry e f Aiu/Arbor and Df. GerakklfeCJaskey o i Howell vtei-tedvtbeir mother, Mr* Ella McClus-k e y , ^ the Piritkney Sanitarium Fri-

4 * V .

edy, who spent• s Sunday there. ' i a

Mr. and Mrs. Russell West and ! children of Angj^rbor were. Saturday supper guests of Mrs. James Roche.

August Strew of Detroit spent last WW* at a l l a o U i f t at Bush Lake*

QaaUty Rules at Our Market

REASON c< i PHONE *S;F3 All Prkas Subject to Mich. ro|o S»ki Tax ^¾ Dfi iyiev

— - X-*'' - - ^ i . . , - - . •V m.

! -P.

^V^S :^^-:

liatAaaMikiei

Page 6: Pinckney Community j Centennial Committees March Term Of ...pinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1935-02-27.pdf · r | OUR SUBSCRIPTION RATE * 1 IS $1.25 PER YEAR I Vol. 52 ;> Pinckney,

r

^ ' • ' • f f ^

The Piflcjtgey Qtotelch WeAiasfiay, February 27, 1935.

>**? 1 UCTION

5»*r---

r

I will sell at Public Auction on the George Hassencahl farm, located 1½ Miles South & x/2 Mile West of Pinckney on the Patterson Lake road, the follow ing personal property on

Friday, March 1 *

SALE STARTS AT 12:00 P. M. SHARP

* - .

11 HEAD OF CATTLE 11

2 Cows, 6 years old 1 Cow, 10 years old 2 Cows, 7 years old 1 Cow, 5 years old 2 Cows, 8 years old 1 Heifer, 2 years old 2 Heifers, 1 years old

*~2 HORSES 2 1 Bay Work Horse, wt. 1500 1 Bay Saddle Horse, wt. 1000

21 SHEEP 21 Fine Wool Sheep

21

100 CHICKENS 100

75 Plymouth Rock Hens Number of White Leghorn Hens

HAY AND GRAIN

_Quantity_Q-f-Alfalfa and Timothy Ha^ 100 Bushel of Corn 150 Bushel of Oats

FARMING IMPLEMENTS ETC. 1 Set of Double Harness 1 Set of Single Harness 1 RubbervTire Buggy 1 Set of Scales 1 Fanning Mill 1 Two Horse Spring Tooth Drag 1 Three Section Spring Tooth Drag 1 Two Horse Drag 1 Two Horse Cultivator 1 Riding Cultivator 1 One Horse Cultivator 1 Mower 1 Hay Rake 1 Manure Spreader 1 Bean Puller 1 Wagon and Hay Rack 1 Side Delivery Rake 1 Set of Bob Sleighs 1 Pair of Wool Horse Blankets Forks, Shovels and many other articles too numerous to mention.

Neighbe^fng Notes There will be no city primary at

Howell as not enough candidates filed for the city offices.

Mr. and Mrs. Claude Pemberton of Howell have moved to Lansing.

Don Knapp has been appointed

1" justice of peace at Howell to succeed

Tom Scully, resigned. The district state high school basket

ball tourneys start this week Friday. The ones here are at WHliamston and Chelsea. <

A 4H Club has been organised at Fowlerville with 12 members.

W. W. Blakely, retired Detroit manufacturer, diea suddenly afc- his home at Dexter 'February 19. He was also president of'the Loch Alpine golf course on the Huron River, east of Dexter.

The Springport Signal has been agitating that that village celebrate ifa^ contenrriah^hm- summer h»t has failed to find much enthusiasm.

The Michigan Co-operative Associa­tion which recently *put up an oil station at Howell, is paying its mem­bers a 12 percent dividend.

Two tubular fire escapes will be added to the Dexter school.

The South Lyon high school has been placed on the accredited list of the University of Michigan.

Roy Hams, formerly of Pinckney, is a candidate for mayor of Chelsea on the Independent "ticket.

A fund is being raised to send George Woods of Chelsea to Washing­ton D. C, to see if a factory cannot be obtained for the vacant factory buildings at Chelsea.

*•.»!•> ^ ~ V ^ - .-V----

B*" * • »_« r*, • ••fU^-^g,**

* t/

/

ION ,¾ NC

SURPRISINGLY LOW

TERMS CASH

HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE Oak Dining Room Table, Chairs and number of other articles of furniture.

Mrs. Lillian Hassencahl M. J, REASON, Clerk PERCY ELLIS, Auctioneer

Notes of 50 Years Ago iTHpntih'67 l-VbrriTTTKKo "

Tomm; I7^n i:> t-Lrking for John Mt'CiuilK'.- .- i .

John T<r pic has RuiThufied a Hol-st'jin cow and calf of-Pontine parties.

Mi.-,' ifallie Smith, daughter of Mr. aml-M-rvfJns SmiTh, was' married to J»li,i Mulholland of Superior Feb. 23 by Kev. Caiteledgc.

Mr;. Wm. Watson dropped' dead 'Feb. ^0 of dropsy. Funeral at SC. Mary's Chu'ch Monday.

The result- of the donation party iit the; JJonitov-Itou^-Uiy; evening a-iriQunted' to ?(i» for K:.-v. Cartulodge.

, The firm of McGuiness and Tuo-mey has been dis.olved, John Tuomey selling his interest to Mr. McCJuinm.

Friends of Mr., -and Mrs. David Hodgeman helped thprn celebrate their 10th wedding anniversary.

A second concert will be given at the Cong'l church on March o. The following is the program:

1. Opening Chorus—Choir. 2. Hraso

tion. 3. Duett.

A lyceum has been organized at, TRAFFIC ORDER NAMED the Hause school with the ^ l o w [ n j ^ L _ i ^ | t f o m o t e _ M r f e r driving cot i l lons " ™ — . P r c s ^ T T e n r y like; Vice \ o n the trunk Jine highway system, Pres., Wm. Hendce; Sec, Miss Eva; which totals approximately 9,000 Hendee; Chairman of Res. Com., H.j m ! j e 8 ol, r o a d, an acting traffic en-Swarthout; Chairman of Literary gjneer in the State Highway Depart-Com., Bert Cordley; Com. of Order, m e n t was named today by Commis-Wm. Chambers, f sioncr Murray D. VanWagonef; - F- • Evermore has rentedthc-White! - ^ K; Tlefron, formei'ly assistant Oak store conducted by . A. Yocum. maintenance engineer, was made act-

Howell has a woman notary public, jng traffic engineer, responsible to Miss Ella Rriggs.' t h e maintenance engineer, and Lloyd

B. Reid, formerly assessment district engineer, is taking over the duties of

i assistant maintenance engineer. The Department will no longer have an

1 assessment district engineer, since the work in this office has been gradual-

[ ly diminishing. 1 "With the increasing speed and I volume of present day traffic ana the I resulting growth of accidents and fa-

Quartetto Grand Soke-

It i,s rumored that Jay Gould will buy the Ann Arbor railroud bnd es­tablish a through line- to New York City.

Notes of 25 Years Ago Dispatch of March 3, 1010

Dr. A. ft. Green has purchased a dental practice in Jackson and will move there from Stockbridgc.

Perry Towle has sold hist farm to' talities on the highways," safd Com-H«rt Naah and will move to Pontiac. | Riissioner Van Wagoner, "I feci it is

Will Dunbar will hdd-air-auction. o f utmost importance for the—State .sale of, stock and farm tools on the' Highway Department to take further Durgess farm next Thursday. I precautions to safe-guard motorists.

' The child bom to Mr, and Mrs." "The duties of the acting traff

SCOUT EXECUTIVE PRAISES LIVINGSTON SCOUT WORK

Full Schedule of Activities Being Planned for Spring Months

"I am delighted with the high standards of Scout work being carried on in the troops of Livingston Coun­ty," Walter MacPeek, new Scout Executive of the Washtenaw-Living­ston Boy Scout Council, said yester­day, "Everywhere I go I find an en­thusiasm on the part of Scouts and Scouters todCmore and better work. Your Courts of Honor sessions have been'well attended. The presence of many of your troop Jeaders at recent Training Courses for Scout Leader." has been most encouraging."

Mr. Ralph Weeks of Brighton is Chairman of the County comnvttec, and Dr. H. M. Noble of Howell i*-Scout Commissioner for the District. Committee chairmen of this Northern District, which includes al lof Living-ston County are: Coutf «f- Honor, Supt. John S. Page of Howell; Fin­ance, John MacDonald of Howell; Camping, Winfield Line ef Howell; Troop Organization, Paul Kingsley of Brighton; Civic Service, Rev. W. H. Simmons of Brighton; Educational Publicity, Wm. Can*field of Ho>?ll; Health and Safety, D. J. Noecktr of Hamburg; Older Boy Activities, (..{'• vin Gatesman of Howell; Reading Program, Troy Clawson of HarMn'rdj and Dr. H. M. Noble of Howell. Each of these committee chairmen pk.wn *o develop a county wide committee with one or more representatives from each community on that committee.

A meeting of the Scout Leaders of the county will be held at tho Howell High School on Monday evening, March 18th.

for during the NIGHT fours

(between 8:30 p . m . and 4:30 « .m.) yon can. call the following points and talk for three minute* for the rates shown. Rates to other points are proportion­ately low.

Night Statka-te-Statie*

From PINCKNEY to: *?' CLEVELAND, OHIO 45c MUSKEGON - 45c BENTON HARBOR 45c CLARE • 40c SOUTH HAVEN 40c GOSHEN, INDIANA ..'.. 40c

The rates quoted above are Nla£t Statfoavlo-Statlon rates, effective from 8:30 p . » . t o 4«$0 a . m . In most cases, Night Sutton-to-Staftai r i t e i ire^^proximately 40% less than Day Station-tc-Station rales.

For feutett $*rviee, gite the apsressr the tele­phone number of the per$on Vf*™ eoltthf

M I C H I G A N B f. l e. T E L E P K O N E C O

* QUALITY BABY CHICKS Now starting the 1935 season. Place your order

early with us to get those early broilers and early laying pullets. —'—— v - :

SQUIRB HATCHBRY 218 S. Mich. Ave Howell, Mich.

4 Doors South o£ the Post Office ^ M » * '

, Itouben Wright Feb. 22 at Flint ajULi_g»SJ!Iggr_gJLI be to deal with the prob* f . 'a i»irl ins:tfead of a boy. ~ ^ lams of saiety, traffic signs and sig-

Feb. -23. n a I s und other similar measures. As instead of a boy.

Kric P. Campbell died Sykcs. . J Eric P. Campbell died Feb. -23, 4;• Cornet and Piano—Safe in the gaed 84 years. He was bom in Mon« assistant maintenance engineer, Mr.

Arms of Jesus—Fantasia—Mr. and r o e county, N. Y. He is survived by Hofron devoted a considerable par*, of Mrs. G. W. Syke.>. ' three sons, Charles and Eugene of h i s t i m c to traffic matters."

5. .Sonjr and Chorus—Buiy Mc pinckney and William of Ontario; « iN'ear the Old Homo. t and a sister living in New York.state. PLAN FOR INSPECTION OF

6. Piano Solo__Mrn. A. T. Mann. - x i i e funeral \ras held Saturday at the F I R * HAZARDS PROMOTED" 7. liass Solo—(comic) The Bull- Cong'l church, Rev. Gates officiating, i T i l e National Board of Fire Under-

frog Am No Nightengale—Mrs. C. L Collier.

8. Bass Quartette — Diantha —, Messrs . SykPt " m t TnPiift, W Q f f nnr , .

Mann. (.K Quartette, Vocal

"arul .Choir.

10. Cornet and Cornet Polka— A. T. Mann.

11. Piano Duett. Miss Mary Mann.

The Midland Colored Jubilee Sing-; l i t e r s has prepared a short inspec ers will put on the last number of the tion'form to be used in checking fire lecture course on March 9. * hazards in school buildings. General —Will Hams Hals sold his homc~hDre vwe of the-plan,--with-8irerTn^IfTca='

tions of detail as may be needed to meet local f HiHfn'j in rprnmmondrd

HAS CAPTURED TEN MCOSE ^gcordjiTg^ to~ r bulletin issued by

the Michigan Conservation Depart­ment, Paul Hickie, who is spending the winter on Isle Royale in Lake SnpHriftr stndy^ng »h^—mooec herds,

to John VanHorn of Pettysvillc. The Unadilla skating yink igj'unn

Piano—Andante4 ing ^ d e r 0½ management c?A. C. fry-t^'^epartmenrof Public Instrjjfir C. P. Sykes, Mrs.! Watson and Q. A.-Pyper. t i o n- Copies of the appraisal blank are

• ' . ! , The following1 program will be put be»ng mailed with the current issue A. T. and! o n a t t n e Cong'l church Sunday night: o f t h e "News Letter."

I Song Miss Kice Th<J National Board of Fire Under

ha* captured ten moose in hU coral, They have quieted down and Hickie is optimistic of being able to carry them through 'he winter. They are being fed balsam, birch, poplar cedar, red osier, dogwood and moun­tain ash tops as hay, also grain. However, they cat only a small a-mount of hay and no grain to speak of. They report many moose in the vicinity of their camp up to date have found only tea dead ones.

YOUTH PROBLEM CONSIDERED ~^27^-^1.^-^ MEET|noon and may also provide tha*. the

.Mrs.

12. Quartette, Vocal—Choiv—'Tis( j ) u c t Orville Tupper, daughter, Fern writer* suggests that best results are Thou Oh Joyou&_Lark. ; Quartette Mixed Voicea^ > t a i n e d w n e n t h c monthly inspection

The following ar- the real estate' p a p c r CI el la Fteh i s m a ( t e jointly by a member of the -transfers for last week: Wm. Caffrey| g 0 i 0 K jvfiss Burehell ] o c a I fire department and a represen-to George Sigler. lot in Pincknoy,| Two-Minute Talk Rev. Exelby tative,of-thtr*cno©] staff. Each* in-\lt500'r Chas. Hollister to W. P. VanjD u e t Misses Swarthout and Peters, 8 P e c t i o n *hould be foHewed by a re-V/tokle, lot in Pinckney, $500. I Two-Minute Talk /Rev. Gates P o r t ^..the .superintendent of schools

L. C. Kice had his ears frozen while; D u e t MisJ, K i c e ^ Mr< Xupperjby fche c h i « f of the fire department coming from Ann Arbor Tuesday. I R0IJ Q^I '. ! with roch recommendatioiiB as the

0 . ^ . Rolison started for New Or-' Mfspah i f i r e department consider* necessary Jeans,. La., last week. \fl „ , m • i to minimise the fire hasards.

The Pettysville mill was flooded one Buried A^ve! HOW a Lover's1 The National Board of Fire Under- _ day last week and the farmers had to Kiss Wakened Prom Death_a Young I writers, 85 John Street, Naw York | , , 0 ^ ^ ^ ^ , *offo.Ji**hv f w l S

^ ^ t h e i r ^ a M of four ^ - ¾ ¾ ¾ *'ie. > Red About This Strange True Case sufficient supply of the school inspec-

lon. Wm. Ball of Hamburg has in the American Weekly, the Maga-, tion blanks for the current school •been appointed a delegate to the Na- Una DUtributed With NEXT SVN-|year. The application should indicate

"—In response to the widespread in­terest in the Youth Problem of- Amer­ica, thc American Council on "Educa­tion is sponsoring a conference on this subject at the annual meeting' of the Departments of Superintendence at Atlantic City. A small number o peopTe'who are in a position to make a contribution to the discussion have been invited. Assistant Superintendent Paul Crewman will represent Michi­gan. Dr. George F. Cook, Director of the American Council on Education, has issued the call fyt the meetings.

CENL MOTORS OFFERS COURSE FOR TEACHERS OF MECHANICS A special four week's summer'

tiooal Agriculture Convention at fcew DAY'S CHICAGO HBBAtir AND the number of fcbool buiidinff to-Qtawillli^'taW^ Ftot, l K xxamnm.

w. I volvei-

mechanics. The tuition and levying coats have been reduced to a minimum FofTurth'er information ada ress,

VILLAGE ELECTION ,

Notice, is hereby given to the Qualified Electors of the Village of Pinckney, State of Michigan, -that the Next regular Village Election will be held at the To vn Hall, within said Vill3.#p on

MONDAY, MARCH 1.1. A. D. IMsj f.SSC8Sed * I " " ! ' * ' S " ? ^ ™ At which election the following

Village Officers are to be elected, viz.: 1 Village President; 1 Village Clerk; 1 Village Treasurer'r also 3 Trust'-es for two years; 3 Trustees for 1 year; 1 "Assessor. ~ Relative to Open in* and Closing

of the Pell*. Klection Kevisions of 1031 No.

410_Chaptei Section 1. On the day of any elec­

tion the polls shall be opened at seven o'clock in the forenoon, and shall be continued open until sir o'clock in the afternoon and no longer; PROVIDEp That in townships the board of in­spectors may, in its discretion, ad­journ the polla at twelve o'clock noon, for one hour, and that the township board in townships and the legislative body in cities and, villages may, by resolution, provide that the polls shall be opened at six o'clock in tho fore-

Commission shows that the total .-mount of property tax' levied ij»-school districts for the current ytar i* approximately the same as thai ui! 1933-34.

The new levy is approximat 1./ $30,000,000 less than the amount

t i i

(the average tax rate for 19341110 i s -

offstt by a decrease in valuation. The report further shows that many school districts include within their allocation under the-15-mill limitation levies _for_ debt-se*vice which mig t have been levied in excess of the Ih.w-

ftation. The school property tax levy for.

the eurrert yeai^«_<^ta2i',g<MMi» ar compared with the total sum , of $49,443, 035.11 in 1933-34, Open-tion-levies increased- from $84,001»,-402.81 to $37,998,648.69.

While the debt service, levied above the 15-milI limitation, decreased fro.n $14,553,632.80 in 1933 to $22,8r-V 580.80 for the current year, thc de­crease is partially accounted for by the inclusion of debt service levies ia many i n s ^ c e s within,the 15-mill* m-lotted-ta the state,-county, tov/nTr^ and school districts. This inclusion of iw jome dobt ^^^^^VtMn *hr 15 in liu F tnairer possible a lowering of the t^t 1

polls shall be kept open not later than t a x ****** *Y ^te ^«9ol di.tfict. iu>-. eight o'clock in the evening of the nowna^expenditures for doot scivwe same day. Every qualified elector I " " ^ ^ ^Wigatiens which total present and in line at the polls at the : v i S ! 7 1 ? ' J nv*™ ijprwimatcly hour prescribed for the closing t h e r e - ^ 7 ^ 7 ' i f yCIV t w »rh'^li ^ 1

of shall be allowsd to vote. £ £ £ l f * ^ 7 1 2 ' 8 2 2 ' 6 W ^ ° "

open at 7 o'clock - - - « : * ~ i * * * * 7 * * * * • » ' * * • »««*• Shows a. m., or as soon i Thereafter as may be, and will remain j op en until «r o'clock p. ni., Eastern Standard Time, on said day of election Dated February 1st, A. D. 1935.

Nellie.Gardner, t Clerk of naid Village.

CARD Of THANKS 1 wish to thank- all hiy friends for

the many kindnesses shown-me-my recent illness.

Bessie L, Smith. o-

' ^ r-m'-- •> • VTW

3CMUUL5 3HUW INCREASE IN PROPERTY LEVY FOR li$4

• r#W rtooji a/ t t fttffr 1

SUfat laeroaM Although the total kvy tor all pur-

poses on general propefcfcy fe reduced from $159,450,980.75 in 193 ; \o $lfc&i«3M34.85 in 1934, the t do-crease in valuation, is from $5,821,-072,889 in 1958 to $5**5,2CW,349. While the average tax rate for the atate which ia laed to determine tho

«xea Inltt a e Primary School Interest Pund is increased from $2.7.39 to $87.7$ this rise wiD not materially af-#ett Omaiiiuulil ©J the Primary School

W*T to be

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Page 7: Pinckney Community j Centennial Committees March Term Of ...pinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1935-02-27.pdf · r | OUR SUBSCRIPTION RATE * 1 IS $1.25 PER YEAR I Vol. 52 ;> Pinckney,

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"fhe Pinckney Dispatch, Wednesday, February 27, 1935

JUST RIGHT FOR WEAR IN KITCHEN Prints Gay With Color Now Arrive Powerful Light Rays Looked

PATTERN »84« By CHERIE NICHOLAS

This "kitchen ensemble" would make a delightful present for some member of your family—that Is, if' you don' t decide to beep it yourself, a f te r It is finished. The apron, made especially to fit the frock, Is cut amply full for protection, and boasts a convenient patch pocket and slen­derizing half-belted waist l ine. The frock has a disarmingly demure ruf­fle to emphasize its nice square neck­line, and cunning puffed sleeves to se t off pret ty arms. Vert ical tucks a t the waistl ine keep it t r im, yet provide comfortable fullness in bod­ice and skirt . Both the apron and t h e frock are included in one pat tern .

P a t t e r n 9S40. may be ordered only in sizes 14. 1G, IS, 20, 32, 34, 3G, 38, 40, 42 and 44. Size 1G requires 4% ya rds HG-inch fabric and %* ya rds contras t ing .

SEND F I F T E E N CENTS in coins o r s tamps (coins preferred) for this

, pa t t e rn ; He sure to wri te plainly your NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER and SIZE.

Complete, diagrammed sew char t included.

Send your order to Sewing Circle P a t t e r n Department , 232 West Eight­e e n t h - S t r e e t , New -York.

Upon as Coming War Weapon, Both Offensive and Defensive

The enemy planes swoop down In a night at tack upon -the sleep­ing city. Suddenly, before they reach their goal, blinding flashes of light strike each plane. The blinded pilots lose control of their machines and in a moment the planes spin to earth and destruction.

On the ground, * enemy troops charge over the toil • Advancing but a few steps, they Suddenly stop in their tracks. Some^ fall to the ground, others stand rigid as though hypnotised. So immediate is the effect of the gigantic blinding beams of light focused on the charging troops by the defending army.

Is ^tUis__tiia way ^xdties-JvUL-repel- -eomjiruetiom The fHat-eriiri - thai the a t t acks of enemy airmen and troops in future wars? ' Will such walls of blinding light, like the death rays recently proposed by the scl-

And, Instead of lasting for only a second, its Hash lasts for as much a s 12 seconds. Eyes exposed ro such a powerful light, it is said, a r e actu­ally injured and merely blinking several times will not accommodate the eyes to this terrible light as to less intense light.

The retlector on an auto headlight or photo lamp is hut several inches in diameter, hut In the Chris tmas lamp it may he as much as lu<> teet in diameter. This immense retlector thus casts gigantic blinding flashes of light miles Into the sky. The de­vice is of light weight, easily mov­able and reported to lie of simple

T O O MUCH F O O D They tyid not seen each o ther fat?

IS months. Bill, the sliorter of the two, asked,

-How's tjie world t rea t ing you these days?"

"Rotten," was the reply. "Peop le are becoming too distrustful. ] hav« not had a penny in my pocket for a week. I go up to a fellow who looka likely, and ask him If he could give me the price of a meal. Wha t doee he do? Instead of slipping a coin-into me hand,- he takes me round t o a cafe and watches me eat t h e meal."

"What are you growling about ; then?" asked Bill. "If you get meala, you can't complain."

•'Can't i : " replied the other. " I 've had "Time meals today '"—Smlth 'a Weekly. '

burns" so brilliantly is a carefully guarded secret.

In defending a city from air raids and bombardment ihe lamps would

VSSi- _•*•>*-""..' | ' . . ~ l ' ~ ~ ~ - - . - — - - - . t -

entist Telsa. be the means of making be stationed on different nights at

D L A Y I N G the game of fashion, the * next move is to acquire a bright simple dayt ime wearable frock which has the freshness of the new season in its looks, to wear under your fur coat during lingering snows and depart ing wintry chill. Eater this gay little gown will companion admirably with a chic Hght -wool t opcoa t - t a - r e fe o f - a^smar t springtime ensemble.

If it Is your custom to buy ready-mades a casual saunter through lead­ing dress depar tments will be your budget 's undoing, for the new between-season's dresses are not to be resisted. A most exciting feature about the early spring arr ivals in the shops Is the abundance of frilly ornate neckwear which lends a delightfully feminine a ir to the new modes. .

The woman who Likes" the fun_of_

§nntfs OLD S T U h F

"I see," said Smith, " tha t a famous man has been saying that four hours sleep Is enough for anyone."

"Pooh! " said Brown.*"That 's noth* Ing. I 've a two-year-old boy at home who knew tha t a year ago."—El Paso \Vrorld-News.

making her own simple daytime frocks will find inspiration-phis fn.the spring fabric displays which in their gay col-orifigs have turned winter Into spring within sfore walls. Walking through the. aisles and aisles of fascinating, joyous-looking prints and. the ro wis. .and. rows of voguish linens that flaunt their vivid peasant colorings before enchant­ed eyes, and the novelty cottons which were never more novel, no mat ter how conservative you may have been up to this season in mat ter of colors and pat-ternlngs you will throw discretion to the winds and Indulge to your hear t ' s con­tent in the giddiest, prettiest , most flat­tering mater ia ls you have known for this many a day.

As to the new pr ints the arrival of the first robin In your garden is no surer sign of spring than Is their ap­pearance on the style horizon. You will be delighted, if bewildered, by the

surprising variety of colorful materials that are just as practical as they are good looking.

* The three frocks shown here illus­t r a t e but-ff fraction of the perfectly beautiful washable pfTnfs" tha t are in good tas te now for wear under a coat and for later on when no coat is neces­sary. These a t t ract ive dresses a r e made up in rayon chulla crepe, in the brightest of colorfast colors.

Fo r eamprre-or office wear or for re? sort wear with 4ight accessories, the tailored frock to the left, of print in a spaced conventional dot design with its ascot type scarf, and cuffs of self-fabric, is both smart and practical. There a r e no fussy details or tricky places tha t your iron cannot reach in a hurry, and you probably know that you can' wash and Iron these chulla crepe frocks with no more special care than fine cottons.

The frock with the two-tone tie will carry you through TT'dnv that ihcTuUes shopping, luncheon, matinee, a»d tea. The lines are becomingly simple, the better to accentuate the beauty of the design of colorful leaves against a dark background. It is tasy even for the amateur to work with this crepe it stays so accurately in place as you cut out the pattern, with no frayed or curled up edges as you baste it to­gether.

The print that fashions the dress on the seated figure is stunning. Solid black dots together with white dots that a r e cross-lined with fine red and black lines stand out boldly against a bright red background. The button fastening and the touch of knife pleat* ing are important style details. As you see from the smart models pic­tured, you do nor*ha-ve to. sacrifice any style points this spring when you look for washable dresses.

C Western Newspaper Union.

countries invasion-proof, and thus make war" futile and put an end to it?

These are the questions French mil i tary 'men, it is reported, a re talk­ing about ever since they recently completed tests on a device' invented by one Edmond de Christmas which generates blinding flashes of light of millions of candle power.

If you have ever passed an on­coming car with glaring headlights, or had a plot lire taken at night, you know how blinding light can he The glaring headlights, momentarily blinding you and causing you to lose control, might send your car hurtl ing off the road, While the quick bril­liant burst of the photographer 's magnesium flashlight has you rub­bing and blinking your "eyes for Sev­ern] moments before you can see acain.

Essentially, P e Christmas ' device is such a , .super-flashlight, but its brilliance is said to ho'several thou­sand times that of the photog­rapher 's light or auto headlight.

Tulip: HasWon Popular Favor

By GRANDMOTHER CLARK

different sections covering a large area", in the center of which would be located the city. (Hie night they would he blinding the sky In sov-. em! of the.se sections. On the fol­lowing night they would he oper­ating elsewhere. By such maneu­vering it is said that the a t t ackers would be confused and led astray n's to the actual whereabouts of the city.

For troops smaller models of the De Chris tmas lumps "are being con­sidered. A hand lamp variety has been tested out. Instead of hullets and grenades, the charging soldiers would focus their lamps on the ene­my troops, rendering them blind.

Of. course the enemy, too, might get hold of such lamps, p l anes might carry a nurdilied form and use them to light up vast ureas of land below to reveal troop nnd mu­nition position.

If such lamps should he developed to the extent where the at tacking country could get nowhere and both •sides would he impenetrable, wars, some believe, would he futile and there would be no more.—Washing­ton Post.

A CrfttW lAXATWE SHOULD BE LIQUID

(Ask any doctor) For your own comfort, and for you? children's safety and future welfare, you should read this :

The bowels cannot be helped t o regularity by any laxative t h a t can ' t be regulated as to dose. T h a t is why doctors use liquid laxatives.

A liquid laxative can always be taken in the right amount. You can gradually reduce the dose. Reduced dosage is the secret of real and soft relief from constipation.

The right liquid laxative dose give* the right amount of help, w h e a repeated, instead of more each t ime, you take less. Until bowels are mov­ing regularly and thoroughly without any help «t a!!.

The liquid laxative generally used is Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. I t contains senna and cascara, natural laxatives tha t form no habit — even in children. Us action is gentle, b u t sure. It will clear up a condition of biliousness or sluggishness wi thout upset. Every druggist has i t .

SYRUP PEPSIN

Now Relieve Your Cold "Quihk as You Caught It

For Amazingly Fast Results Remember Directions

—inJlhese^ioiplejactiizsM

Take 2 BAYER Aspirin Tablets. Make su« you -get the BAYER

Tablets you ask tor.

• * * • * * « - , • *».

Puzzled "How Is your boy Josh ge t t in f

aloDg a t college?" H e h a s us puzzled," said F a r m e r

Corntossel . "He's a football player

TAFFETA TUNIC By CHERIE NICHOLAS

nnd also a femalo Impersonator in t h e d r ama t i c club. We don't know w h e t h e r to t rea t him like a rough­neck or a lady."

Always Undes i rab le Weary Waggles—Why shouldn ' t

I get a hero medal? Didn' t I Jump in to de wa te r and rescue de chi ld?

Secre tary (medal associat ion)—Btit t h e w a t e r w a s only th ree feet d e e p !

W e a r y Waggles—Wot of da t I Wa­t e r is wa te r .

^Taffeta silk for tttolo, tor olewse, lo t t h e l P o c k ent i re? for t r imming touches is the grea t hne and cry for spring. The kn^ee-lengtB- tunic-blouse pictured U of pr inted taffeta ra exotic' coloring. The skir t is black crepe and thet-ac-oessortes a r e black, introducing white

iSti tchlngs bjT^hoes and, bag. The hat Is a very modish sailor of shiny black

NEW STYLES SHOW — -GREEK INFLUENCE

The Greek influence on current styles has spread «o that .now it Is to be seen in furni ture and clothes a s well a s in the lines of the feminine figure. The popularity of the flat Greek rear profile has made the figure idfcal of the Greeks an established v o g u e 1

/ -The Influence of this Greek Ideal Is to be seen In Mainbocher's recent introduction of a gown modeled on the robes worn by ancient Greek dancers. This" filmy, graceful garment herald? a turn from the " impor tant" gown, with" Us stiff formality, to the softness o f net atrd tulle. Its s t ra ight skirt to short In front and to the ground in bai'k. There" Is" a*~garland of fruit or flowers around J he waist. Very au thea . tlcally Greek. And very revealing "of

The tulip adapts itself so well to applique and quilting designs that it is made' use of quite frequently. This combination, showing the en-

; tire potted plant, gained popularity Immediately after it was released. Tulips In bloom always form a beau­tiful color scheme, and this tulip pot is also brilliant in prints nnd greern applique*' These stamped blocks are IS inches, and twelve are required for a quilt ahout 70 by 07 Inches, you use a nine inch border and four inch s t r ips between blocks. Strfps-

" a n d border widths can be changed to make a quilt any size.

Send ]oc to our quilt department for one of these stamped blocks. No. 96-F.L| and the stamped applique pieces ready to- be cut out. Work this up and see what a beautiful

' quilt can be made of this design. A set of s is blocks will be sent for 75c, postpaid.

ADDRESS, HOME CRAFT CO., DEPT. D., Nineteenth and St. Louis Avenue, St. Louis.

Inclose a stamped addressed en-', re lope for -r¥ff ly"wlien w r i t i n g - for " lanyThforrnat ion. -^

> Drink a full glass of water. Repeat »* treatment in 2 hours.

the s ta te of one's figure. Hips must be slender, small breasts uplifted In youth­ful silhouette. The flat Greek rea r profile was never more important than v

to this new and slimly molded style.

To complete the picture, a great vogue for classical Greek furniture Is predicted for this spring.

Dr. Pierce's Pellets are best for liver, bowels and stomach. One little Pellet for a laxative—three for a catbarticv-rAdx^

. N « . t l y Summed U P The miser, like the hog, does

good till he dies.—Exchange.

The simple method pictured here is the way many doctors now trea t colds and the aches and pains colds bring with them I "

It is recognized as a safe, sure, QUICK way. For it will relieve an ordinary' '"cofd-almost as fast as" "you " caught it. •*

Ask your doctor about this. And when you buy, be sure that you get the real B A Y E H Aspirin Tab le t s . They dissolve (disintegrate) a lmost instantly. And thus work almost in­stantly w h e n you take them. And for a gargle, Genuine Uaycr Aspirin Tablets disintegrate with speed and completeness, leaving no irri tat ing particles or grittincss.

BAYER Aspirin prices have been, decisively reduced on all sizes, so there's no point now in accepting other than the real Iiaycr article yott , want .

N O W

3 If throat is sore, crush and «tir S • BAYER Aspirin Tablets in a third

of a l ta» of water. Gargle twice. Trni eases throat torencM almost instantly.

PRICES on G*nulrf Bayr Atpiria* toaiiull/ fiadund un Ait

METROPOLITAN GRAND OPERA direct from its New York Stage

3-Hour Broadcast by

L I S T E R I N E announced by

ueraiame tarrar Every Saturday all NBC stations

Ney Fur-Lined Slippers Slender at Satin Pumps

The fur-lined slipper is probably one of the grea tes t joys the modern woman has ever known. And because it is fur* lined, doesn't mean tha t it Is bulky or clumsy looking. Not a t all. It Is as sleek and slender as the sheerest satin pump or sandal , but the sole of the foot is protected against ccld pavements by . a thin, but ,wa.nn, layer of rabbit or^

The s t rapless brassiere Is another boon t o smart women. For evening It has certainly become an indispensable item -in t h e society woman's wardrobe.' Because of its clever, construction of the sheerest and most clinglngvfabric* it s t a y ! perfectly in place without the bothersome need of t t r a p s over the shoulders.

s ^-v~~,

:!>?••'&{'. * • • * » *

-_* . ^ k . A r > s . . - '"

Page 8: Pinckney Community j Centennial Committees March Term Of ...pinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1935-02-27.pdf · r | OUR SUBSCRIPTION RATE * 1 IS $1.25 PER YEAR I Vol. 52 ;> Pinckney,

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The Pinckney Dispatch Wednesday, February 27, 1935. ^s~.

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S.1 "Mal i ce to A l l — C h a r i t y to, N o n e

The One Stop Thi ,

Service Station 1 GREASING 75c =

2 t o I ' M |)OU4?

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J J3ATTERIES $4.95 up §

1 A L C O H O L E V E R R E A D Y P R E S T O N E §

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Pinckney" School Ylotes Philathea Notes

C O U N T Y C O R N - H O C M E E T I N G

F o l l o w i n g is a schedule of m e e t i n g to be held in i . i \ j n g s t o n Coun ty t o

goiag to be . -hoi t , -br ief a n d | i n t r o d u c e t h e li>35 C o r n - H o g P r o ­g r a m : - ,

Fowlerv i l l e O p e r a House March 5th at ii :30 A. M

Howell High School,. March 5th a i 1 :30 P. M.

P i n c k n e y To An Hal l March 5th a t 1:30 P . M.

B r i g h t o n T o w n Hall March 5th a'. 7 :30 P. M.

H a r t l a n d High School March 5 th a t 7 :30 J'. M., j

These m e e t i n g s have been* a r r a n g e d : so t h a t you m a y come to the m e e t i n g , tha t i» mos t conven ien t for you . j

N o t e t h a t one day is be ing given t o this t y p e of mee t ing . If it is impo.-:-| sible for you t o ge t to one of thes. ' i mee t ings , it will be necessa ry for you j to come to the office a t some la te r ' da te if you ca re to en' .cr this p r o - :

i i

SCIENCE A N D SENTIMENT The work of the funeral director presents an un­

u s u a l blending of s c i e n c e and sentiment. In h b technical capacity he must be skillful and eff ic ient; in his ministry to the bereaved he is cal led upon to show

-* i-are qualities of tact and sympathy. W e have a lways endeavored fry.-/keep fully abreast of technical advance­ment, without sacrificing the personal characteristics which are equally* im­portant, p

P. H. SWARTHOUT . FUNERAL HOME"

P.NCKNE5HONg"Qffi

FORSALEft gram.- ^ ^ ^ ^ ^^

M a n y i n q u i n e s j i a v e _ b e e n rece ived , | j , y y C ^ H f l ^ W ^ - i F ^

F O R S E R V I C E : A Duroc J e r s y Boar . / F e e $1 .00 . \

George ( i r e inc r . Tii o u r off ice p e r t a i n i n g to " p o u l t r y ! ;ils a n d m a n a g e m e n t s . It is impossible j F 0 R SAL>:__Daled H a y and S t r a w . n c l T f c , , A -TT*"I~M . for th is office to m a k e individual calls | 1>. K. Hoey & Sons . , . [ ' J * S A L L : A ^ U l « ^ ™* « ^ «

on i ach and eve ry person t h a i s e n d s ; 0 X t C > J i Mich

in a r e q u e s t so we have a r r a n g e d t o j o G e o r g e Reason .

-o hi'.vc a one day pou l t ry school. Mr. J. M. Moore , a p o u l t r y extens ion pecial is t , will be th^ speake r of the

I \ j " l . LI)

• ' • '. • i i ; ' . i •

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U

; • ' . : . . w a . ' . . . . i ; , :

I i i . ; i • . i>(, i, 'i , .

a uoul a ' : . •.••?»< ;. ;;' ;.

' i ' ) , . ' - \ a ! e r i < Mi !. • )•; •

. a i a : y i N - ' l . o ; • •': i : : ;

i'^t'a-.1.- I!. . f i a , :. I,,-

ArcliaJaJu.' a a a I.at-;- r'-o:';v h a \ ' r i'i I ' ! i !i M ! ' !l " j [ ;. .¾ • ;• :

ab>t tnv ,

Mai'j;;.:-! : /'.. • : . ,[] : ' :, a l ; K - t 'i i v l i , ;• •. i <>•',1,,,1,

T ! v - PK- 'P - ( i . - i VI. l i y < 7 ; ; ; lv; . j ,

( • o a i p i > ' ? c . | Li.* , M o y <ii , . » , ( • ; , , . : i i ; f i

b ^ i n n i ) - ' in, , ' !MV ,,f ]u">.p- ftioia IJt-i)ovl i -a 1-(1.-. v. ill I) .^i\-<i] <,ui I

day. ;

•j-iir I'liilath..-; s jo ined with t h - n-.-t • ".ua-; in • a ( i , - i ' - ! • y. a

id' :!.•• r m i i v h - g o i n g folks in anjoy- i.-,';-

!•:• ai «»|' li:i- litih- Suutju-rn p ine tr.-e- , , , « ,.,-

ia ()•;:•!•• J)\- y\r. ai d .Mrs. F u l e j - f ro ! . . ,•:,••,',; \

\ . M-K.

T;;;: ravpHt.Rsow OIL WELL ' j ' , •;.!«' ' (Jf tr.i (;- ca 'iV i:'.on lime

. i :_ - . " , ; i-ijuaty l'o;- oi! >[ ' ;v< d lia.- \>'; i-k v> iv. ii a

1 v .• l-i 1 ia thf- bo t tom of

d a y . Mr . Page has mad.- it possible for

•his m e e t i n g to be held in the Howell

W A N T E D : All k inds of b u t c h c i i n g . * F A R M F O R R E N T _ J 8 p l c n d i d Ia igp At y o u r hon c o r mine . | f a r m wi th 160 a c r e s of w o r k land,

J o h n M a r t i n , P h o n e -33F-2 no t equipped. Cash r e n t

IK

High School, March 7 th . The m o r n i n g . . , ^ . , , l jri\ < eges oa

m e e t i n g will s t a r t a t U:}10, the a f te r - y. 0 J . .j V(._Uk-_

Oi l K E \ T _ 75 a c r e f a rm with <J room hou>c, full basenus i t , bu i ld ings in g >od condi t ion, lake in r ea r . Full

th c lake . Will r e n t for

' \ i e k Co ius tC-n

l. : i a

<•: V. i

1 la nintn - , ::<J.- i fij ::. lii:.u- a ; i ; : j v

spear, s* "Juliu.- < 'ar-a-ia'; tla,- w< :

T-b»^ Hf-e wHtra^r—r>:a: :u iT-i , t;;Trrnv On Ib'UtllS, AllLuliV :;iiid (' a.- .-! i i 1.

. ;-..-al t rip South , and wla •:' c,- i a ..• pa: •»-i iieaj' the pulpi l <.t the iiov. ','[, ;.ia;y ...>i -ning Ma-vice. ' j ,

'i a- : a I oi-'s -erinon and t h " M M M t; a-.

•.M i' a1 ,a-i»pi iate to "la season -..I :• , .-".-. .'. ] : \ M r , p ( T t to the " F a t h e i «1 t': '•

• :' i i" •. 1 1 . T i i ; . . " " - I - ( :

. A ' I - . ' / M M - had cla-iree o f the i n t e r a r : . i.

i-sniu' S u n d a y ' School le.-.-ri:: >n i. t '•I 'et ;• IU a!- a Laiae .Man." Le»\- ' a ; ' i 'i • e ,,- ! ' ' i :i . . ie \ t Suada \ ' . aad loj':- -..u >-, . |.; >• ('(i.i • idei- how "Pet i - r ,L'imia.-k.> i-;ti- - : '. a < 1 nod and Hypoci a-y." Two in.- tai.i'• • • <'1 •

:;.e " i \ e n In Ai'ts 5:l-f! and Acts . j t • • -1' iaTf i ' • Tehh-H-itt-mt^-nr • pa rffrufaa - 'trr-*

y e.ood a. given ia '.la- Q u a r t ' i l \ . . • ;. '.

noon m e e t i n g a t 1 :30. H e r e is a real o p p o r t u n i t y for any­

body that~rra?r a"iJoUTrry"pTobT: Tn^'as * a i j t a po r t ion of the school will be given

]- '' ' ' v i l , i | over to ques t ions for discussion. W e ! « m l L a v " > * u ' m fyom n o w o n b - ti-an--uuti; of | v v o u ] ( 1 be -ve ry glad to have you come | .-^-(^1 at the Iw Lavey Oil S ta t ion ,

ind b r ing you r f r i ends . * -.l'A]] rem wa!a. v/iil be p r o m p t l y t aken

I n q u i r e a t Dispa tch Office.

F O R S E R V I C E — P o l a n d C h i n a boa; $1 .00 . Also 2 5 lambs for sa le .

John ' Spears ' .

N O T I C E j F O R . S A L E _ F i v e Barred Rock roc

The inMirance bus iness of M u r p h y ters fo r breeding:, f rom l a y i n g sto< '

V a n H o r n Hillside F a r m .

,' ;•:>{ (< ;•'. ai M how ttiuch .a v'yM '.', 'i I ( ;.u e, how-•j i ! i :: ,.,.1,1 i- d i rec t ing

I cai e of. I I.av<-v.

\\ i o c a ; [ M \\ e \>c-

D A N S V I L L E W J N $ L E A G U E , j C H A M P I O - J S H 1 P J o

P y d e f e a t i n g O k e m u s high . -hoc! '>' wr iU. :i with the cloying of t h e

Id to 15 Dansvil le high schou! '. a; year'. '

i i <

;e'L{ If w - live u p to o u r mot to : " L o o k

look fo rward and

••-i '- '.- and deei) i i ,- i r , v l ' ' - ' l 'v ' '^ ' ' " ^ u ' - ^^ -1 t oa ruaaae i r i not back, look out and not in a n d l e n d <,-• , , , 1 - , . , ' I this week • T-htH-'sdav. The five nu-m-. a ha i a l " . we mav wr i te : "W<iU d o n e . "

. V ( . ; ; . i . v i;( (.:1! (],•;;;. | bei-s of the t e a m a r e David l.)iehl,| T h e member sh ip of the circle is 2 8 .

• \u[,.{ j , ' ; , ; , . ,,,. .,,,,,1 | A u h u r Burners. Phi l l ip Moran , Alfred1, Th» rrc ipts for th:> y e a r were $227 . -

.;' iV.- p i o j e c i ! - ! , ( 1 IJ 'glwm Coun ty high school b a k e i l U w - live u p to

i t > ( ] . . ; . , ' v i e w i 1 i ' J U ^ league championsh ip . Tiv. y play j up ami no t down,

F O R S A £ E ~ O R - T R A 0 E tnrsimlU-f a rm or house in town, 121 Ti' a c r . ., improved, 4 miles S. W. of P i n c k n e r .

Walter G r a v e s .

T

< * * •

•«MK# n <w. i - c - » -x i t , - »••- » . » -• -rsr-

i • • • • O ' ->« i>0- ><*<><

Friday Mar. 1

Specia for i a e | H a y h o liml A I f ^ Smnlh-y a: •_ a i ^ s s . (•NperHiituie^ 177-JiiL D u r i n g - t h e -T ^ r ^ r f ^ - - " 0 ^ ^ MoTmt ls~ii b rd lhc i - 'o f ,1a-JH•:;; y ea r Ilfi g a r m e ' U s have b"en made

j Moran» f o r m e r P inckney La.-e ball j for t h - I n i v e i y i - y Hospi ta l a t A n n

i pUcher . I.Ai-boi-, •' ^ bed jackets w e r e m a d e as --ggKr.-i.iaJM j

1 ° _ Chri^ tmns uil'ls for p a t i e n t s a t t h e ( • C O ^ O ^ O * ^ * ^ ' ' * i ' , . I f . " f M. lioMatal. T w o qu i l t s and

*- ' i ' - A r e g u l a r mee t ing of f!:e J . Kav, . , , , . . . . . ,t . ^ , , . , , , ,. , -7 , . * h :aak" t s . -hoe.-, c lo th ing, k i tchen u t en -V I Koma dy Post of the A m e : lean laaxion ' ., , . , , . , , • ..-ii i u i J \i- : - i -M . .... I •"'^ ; | , 1 ( ' J<>r:>(i irivfn to the needy . ^ v.ill be held Wcdne.-dav, March fi'.h. ; . . , , ; . r i . , .,, , ', , „ . , i >'•' •) ^-:1-- i;-ivi"i tv

J *h" con \ ' a le^ f ' ^ ( • , A Jeed .wi be s . rved and S ix th ' <• a .- n A .1 V i -• i * i • I . . , , - ( f u n d : so .00 to th - Educa t iona l f u n d ; 4> Ld.-a.net Commande-i ' Li o Peck oi Lan-^ j . - i n g has been invited to tii mee v Please be presen t .

• i 0

\

Highest Cash Pricts F O R

Good Used Cars Service Chevrolet Salts

D E X T E R , MICH.

Es tabl i shed 18G5 I n c o r p o r a t e ! HMJ

CHHJ-SAUCE SNIDER

14 0 2 . BOTTLL 23c

GRAHAM , FLOUR

5 LB. SACK 25c

s.'.OO to the Ped C r o s s ; $5.00 for

*•*"'-' ci- innbd ehiblr-m. .C'S.00 for toys for i

•chi ldren at the Stat hosp i t a l ; .^3.001

\ \ M A R R I A G E L I C E N S E I S S U E D f , , ) ' 1 , o o l > ; ; t t h < ' S t a l ( ' «^ " ' t J ' i i um

t . . " / ' A m a r r i a g e l icen-e has been i-ssue-d >]<U) r"y t u b arulo.Ms s t amps . Six _ . , , . = m.,^ M ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ F ; v k ! , v . | 1 ( i ; b a - k e t , :;iven to th:- needy , a b o u t 50

m n * r . o I L B . *& c\r •I"-"1 "alPh Ha,l(''' -M- ^ ^ ^ , : 1 . : n i : i ! i ; i : ; ; - , l l ! , ; : : , , a n l s s " l t t o ; h u t ; i I /\#v mllffftirf Jf -f^\£^ h{ *-• • ^ . 'in.-, - i i : , to ami a . - i s t ance r e n d e r e d

1 C d . * O l l l i f i l S n j / f £ " £ t / V • I A N N U A L R E P O R T OF L A K E L A N D J i>:-gi"vin'.r «-aim ta imm -nt at the coun ty C 5 r I S . U . B n ^ ' ^ C I R C L E OF K I N G ' S D A U G H T E R S ' i'>1-"irnmry. flowers and af iuH sent to

O v e r Six ty-Seven Y e a n ¢( S*l« ^ " I r i n j

• V v

5 LB. SACK 21c M n K i T a . « n

{VINEGAR 10 OZ. J U G

0 .05c

I Apple Butter

i

QT. JAR 19c 4 LB. 25c

4 LB.

CHERRIES,

Mix'd Veget'e

£

ORANGES

SWEET

QT. JAR

; Th - King 's Daugh te r s . Wha t is i t? I- l?if <--.it-k. :U) h a v - been sent to Jurrti A I It is a society of wom<-n engaged in <*!i>"p. We l-,a\-e a h i d o r y of -our circle. I Chr i s t i an work, endeavo r ing to c a r r y ; W - ' sponsored .a h c t u r • course by Dr . / ^ I ou t the t each ings of Chr is t . It is m>r' ; MacKa-^e of •]]•• S t a t e Hoard of j

b l e . w d to give than to recei\ 'e , P-nd- j F-Iv.ilt 'i. Two ia. -mbei-s p r e s e n t e d ' ing a he lp ing hand to the 1 • ast o ' v l , u ' ( ' i l v l •' , i t : ' ;1 beaut i fu l quilt , two these . I o the r s wit!) a ^caaary . and cage and

W e ar> n e a r i n g t h e Golden .labih-e | u , ! l , l ' ° T v / i ' n :; h ; i : ' < 1 embro ide red pair

of the found ing of th order , f o u n i i e d ! o f bii''ov.: ''<•>'..

" In His N a m e " by a l i f l e band of u > J T n ' ' >J*•'"•">• r i l ' ( ; ' " ?w a m a s q u e r -womej-i b d by M a r g a i e t l .o t tome, i.i a ( ' ' 1J;' : y '<> v.'hich o t l v r J u n i o r Cir-ISSfJ. Wh'-n these ten fronv n organ* ] c^( s : ;M< ' g',(»^"nupf; vci- invi ted, rais-J iz''d t h a t f i r s t circle m a r l y a h a l f ' " ' ' ' b ' v . - r i rg bulbs- a ; Iau-tcr g i f t s c e n t u r y ago, think you they" had a i r / f o r tin- - irk. held a picnic a t the l a k i ,

^u-eptH>n_p_f tiiai-.-c+eHt-ioiu. by th - ni^nt |mxa. .uni ia-a4i i^«wl-d4spoi4n^-of-•

iceds sown a t tha t f irst nK'-tihi.Cw7thTa_<inilt, a iade ;--crap books and filled

a-eesj o r b r a n d i e s now enc i rc l ing t h e ; ; ° f "* ' i ' a a s boaes for chi ldren a t

•-voiId? Su re ly g r e a t oaks from Utile. I"- »f M. Hospi ta l , held ca fe te r i a s u p -

•a'orns have g rown . I nn-s and bake good- sri1e<r held n

WcPhersofi

State Bank

Howell , Michigan

i Capi ta l «500 ,000 .00

Su rp lu s $75,00!) 00

The Banking Industry

EXTRA LGE.

SIZE, DOZ.

- P u t wha t of ih- new year jiR~ge"t-, Christ ina^ p a r t y with a Chr i s tmas

u n g u n d t r w a y ? \VV have ti:r«e fJ ;- ,,- e. ~t which C h i i s t m a s carols were

ic\v pages in the 1.- d g e r 0 f lfd)5 ; what | , a n g . r ec i t a t ions given and g a m e s .

will the ba lance sho- t show when finis p]Hy d. Thua ctvle th the c h a p ' e i

IPORKLWER - 25c PORK CHOPS

l & J E E E

r-BONE or SIRLOIN STEAK CUT, LB.

CHOICE

You'll Get Better Meats at

Phone 51 Clark's T H E H O M E OF HIGH Q U A U T Y MfeATS

PINCKNEY, MICH.

W e Deliver

at all Timet'

•«

Attention Have you the requirements for the

V *

*

i, \

This f lank 's in te res t and tha t of it-;

p r o s p e r only as its customers p r o s p r ;

c u s t o m e r s a r e ident ical . The ttunk can

and p ro f i t only if, and when, t h e y

prof i t . We know of no other birsih e. i

* j which i l lus t ra tes so forcibly t h a t b-..-

4 [h ind t h e e n d u r i n g insti tution aj*c suc­

cessful cus tomers .

— ^ T — — " : S I n t e r e s t paid on Savings Hooks an-1 W

j C<; r t i f ica tes^L£g£Osi t . Money to l<»aj

r—'f

I

State Motor Vehicle Laws Have the Proper Insurance

on your automobile or truck? Check your insurance now for

Public Liability and Property Damage If in need of any kind of

Automobile Insurance * Let u* give you an estimate

. ^ t •>—• t •• " ^

Glen Slayton^ Irving Richardson

S - . . . • ' ' -

r ~ A g e n t s for Michigan Mutual Liabi l i ty InsuraiMs Co. •

a t r ea sonab le r a t e s . Deposits up t->

$5 ,000 .00 insurcd by o u r inemfc/rsh: >

in t h e Fede ra l Deposi t Insurance Cor­

p o r a t i o n . Y o u r business al\vtt».< r.p-

p rec i a t ed . * <

; f )

•w

McPberson Stale Bank Eujfcne Campbell visited h.'s v/if c

who M ill in Detroit last -oek. i We are , informed that Ermiv t t

Murphy brother of Mrs. /,oa MonksT formerlSr of Pinckjiey, recently died at ML Pleasant. I

Harvey D. Doutfas of Oak (U/»v> announces that h* will bf-?r "sfirn"' rf eandtdate against Alma Ghanv irr schol commieaioner ut; the spring *U

\

jy^j-: y *L

r.

• . V . , - 4 ^ ••' V ••«*•