PINCKNEY DISPATCHpinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1924-11-12.pdf · mi in.iii«i(i.jAHf .^fi| :C...

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mi in.iii«i(i.jAHf . ^ f i | :C WW VV1 PINCKNEY DISPATCH f IL,," ••'« ^ a. i Vol. 41 Pinckney. Liyingston County, Michigan, Wednesday, November 12 \924 No. 46 m m ANN ARBOR ESTABLISHED 1857 It is such a pleasure to make your own dresses by the new system, which is a time saver. Free booklet of explanation will be given to every one buying material for a dress this week. SERGE FOR TAILORED . PRESS Fine french Serge r >4 inches wide in dark blue and black for $3.00 a yard. WOOL CREPES FOR AFTERNOON FROCKS Wool Crepes in checks and plaids 40 and 54 inches wide special at $2.19 a yard. fe MAKE CHILDREN ATTIRE OF CORDUROY Corduroy is a delightfully warm material for child- ren's attire and bath robes, comes in all shades at $1.00—$1.19 and $1.25. (Mack's First Floor) ass HOWELL MICH. DIAMONDS- JEWELRY-WATCHES-CLOCKS SILVERWARE-HIGH GRADE CUT GLASS TOILET AND LEATHER GOODS, ETC. Ygur Favorite Jewelry Store for Over Forty Years WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED MANY OF THE LATEST AND MOST ATTRACITVE STYLES IN GIFT ARTICLES Wc extend a cordial invitation to residents of Pinckney and vicinity to visit our store while in Howell W« »r« Howell'* Leading and Original Victor' Store NEW'VICTOrV RECORDS EVERY FRIDAY CHAPELS W' I GO TO BARN ARD'S FOR SHOES Mens Work Shoes Boys Work Shoes Boys Fine Shoes from $2 to $4 3 to 4 3.00 to 4.50 * Call and see the * Edmonds Arch Supporting Shoe Childrens andMisses Fine School Shoes Boys Outing Shoes 98c * &WS- "X Call and tee Saturday Specials All tales cash •w •omeeeei &?: ; y PINCKNEY 14 FOWLERVILLE 7 •x _ Another victim was added to Piiuk- rity's 19li± record of I0<> p e r c e n t ^nc irun victories when Howlerville retired from the name last Friday, outplayed and defeated. Pinckney fans had been dreading this contest and many predictions were voiced that 04> a c c o u n t of their Miper- lor^'ei^ht and football experience, Fowlerville would prove too much for the home hoys. At lirst the pessimis- tic prophecies seemed about to be re- alized -Kowlerville's heavy weights took charge at the very start and be- fore the locals were aware the bi^ r IV lows from Qclurkston had made touchdown and kicked j;oal to t!ie turn of seven to nothing. Continued on Last Page CHURCH DEDICATION The Community Con^rc^atiiiinl j church will he dedicated ne\! week. Full particulars in another column in this issue. Tuesday eveninp, November 1Mb, . supper will be served in the new dm iiiK hall to which the public is torcli.il!> 1 invited and this imitation is extendei to I'verv meeting of the week. TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY, OBITUARY K\,i Klizabcth Teacliout wis horn l.viulon township, Washtenaw counts Michigan, November 21, 1S0T, an de- parted this life, October .'ill, 1 !)J I ;\izvi\ 2<> years, II months and fi d a \ >. .She was the eldest daughter < • •' I ;'\ \nis anil 1 .uella ( Howe ; 1'iekel). She was united in marriage -n Bruce Teachoiil, March L'Stth, I'M' To this union were born four child;-.'), Robert, W.iMic, Klcanor and ltolurt. At an early ;ij_*o she jrave her h<'art to JCMIS and united with the l'resln terian church of I'nadilla of which she was a faithful member. lle-u'dcs her husband nad children, she le.ve-. I" mourn tbeii' loss, a mother, a brother. Ki'.'.ovy I,,, a sistc, Nellie H. and ho-.t of other relatives 1 rxl C ri'aiil lice fat her prceedi (I her to the (.1 ,-e , f'< \ ond .lamiarv lb. IM'J h The f 11 rieral MT\ ices were In -Id last w inula v a f t ernoo;] from the I 'rcshv t e ; ia n elm re b. I'l. : dill a, iui r.a 1 i •' 0 i< 1 1 ,,. •.'. i; v .eti'iv , S< ockhr iilye. Tho ] end a life. ' ,:icli tu 1 tied here, but Ci• o• I knows best. 0 ! ! ci .1 a i"i s !' itch u , is born ()i t obe i- j 'j'2. |ss? mi the farm owned bv Imr j mini Mcl'laskev 01 i l n n b u r g township ! I >nrm u ins 1,1' I T \ nut b and e.-i r!; manhood I .ce has held various \,u a tional pnsitioiis and wide enrnute fron Detroit to spend the week end in !m I 1,. te home lie met" with a fa tal aeciden ! that instanly transplanted him to h'sj I'.temal Home October 1 I, liUH. at f!m '; a;;c of '-17 years, 11 months and 2 1 'j tlays. To mourn the loss of this kind a:i-t thoughtful son and brother, there are bis mother and brother .Joseph at home, two sisters, Mrs. M. Munsell of Fowlcrviile and Mrs. Clarence Dixon of Detroit, numerous relatives and host of friends won by I.ee's bmtherlv love for his fellow men. The largely attended funeral ser- vices were held from the St. Mar\- church Wednesday morninjr and ihe remains were laid in the family lot in the Pinckney cemetery. Humbly bowed in this great sorrow, To our loving Father's decree, We uncomplainingly resign ourselves To that which was to he. SECOND LYCEUM NUMBER NOVEMBER 22ND NOV. 11, 12, 13,14 The Biggest Picture Ever Shown at the TEMPLE «7 .ti HOWELL NOW SHOWING NKJ "THE SEA HAWK" Walter Heirs "FAIR WEEK" More fun than a Circus! Brass Band! Pink Lemonade! Pnt on your Glad Rags! A if OUR GANG COMEDY SUNDAY, MONDAY, NOV. 16, 17 Remember Thomas Meighan in "The Miracle Man" ? Well, here's another one. THOMAS MEIGHAN ' 'THE CONFIDENCE MAN" A Gold Mine of Entertainment NEWS "HODGE PLODGE" You'll see t le bottom of the sea a 1 TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY NOVEMBER 18, 19, 20 Cecil B. De MiiSe's Successor to "The Ten Commandments" FEET OF CLAY " The Newest Paramount Picture by the Greatest Director of Them AH V VERA REYNOLDS ROD LAROCQUE JULIA FAYE RICARDO CORTEZ THEODORE KOSLOFF & r.W The .second number of the hi^h school lymmi course will be given Sat- urday evening, November 22nd. Joseph Oouell, who is a specialist in monologues, character ;ind inijx'r- sonations, wilL be the attraction. Judg- ing from the first number given re- cently this course will prove to be a good one, and the next corning num- ber should attract a good attendance;. SUNDAY SCHOOL NOTES The Flower, Girls were entertained i SHturday afternoon by Miss Lucile Kennedy. The Phihitheft Class nre being enter- tained this Wednesday nfternoon nt the home of Mrs. Gladys Lee of Lakeland. There will he no Sunday School next Sunday, owing to the Dedication Services at the churvh. Cash Specials :'\t 1 At Kennedy s i ^ 10 Bars R n M or P & G Soap 45c 25 \h Pure Cane Sugar $2.10 3 Cans Sunbonnet Pea* 25c 3 Large Cans Milk 27c 3 Cans Campbcirs Tomato Soup 27c Jello, per Package 10c 12 \t> HERSHEY'S COCOA 17c SHREDDED WHEAT, per pkg. lie DIED IN AN AUTOMOBILE Morricc Amburgey, 16, while being taken from the home at Anderson to R Jackson hospital for treatment for dlabeten, died in the automobile near Gregory. Tbe funeral was held Tuesday. NOTICE A curiam dder mill 6 miles north and one mile west of Pinckney. Sweet cider for ule. Ed. H. Maa«, Howell, Mich. Chef Red-E-Jell 8c •B 7 rolls Toilet Paper 25c •K) I Try our Bulk Tea. None Better Per lb. 43c C. H. KENNEDY r<P* >"4,- ^¾.. %4 rt, i {

Transcript of PINCKNEY DISPATCHpinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1924-11-12.pdf · mi in.iii«i(i.jAHf .^fi| :C...

Page 1: PINCKNEY DISPATCHpinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1924-11-12.pdf · mi in.iii«i(i.jAHf .^fi| :C WW VV1 PINCKNEY DISPATCH ^¾ f IL,," ••'« ^ a. i Vol. 41 Pinckney. Liyingston

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Vol 41 Pinckney Liyingston County Michigan Wednesday November 12 924 No 46

m m

ANN ARBOR

ESTABLISHED 1857

It is such a pleasure to make your own dresses by the new system which is a time saver

Free booklet of explanation will be given to every one buying material for a dress this week

SERGE FOR TAILORED

PRESS

Fine french Serge rgt4 inches wide in dark blue and black for $300 a yard

WOOL CREPES FOR AFTERNOON

FROCKS

Wool Crepes in checks and plaids 40 and 54 inches wide special at $219 a yard

fe

MAKE CHILDREN ATTIRE OF CORDUROY Corduroy is a delightfully warm material for childshyrens attire and bath robes comes in all shades at $100mdash$119 and $125

(Macks First Floor)

ass HOWELL

MICH

DIAMONDS- JEWELRY-WATCHES-CLOCKS SILVERWARE-HIGH GRADE CUT GLASS

TOILET AND LEATHER GOODS ETC

Ygur Favorite Jewelry Store for Over Forty Years

WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED MANY OF THE LATEST AND MOST ATTRACITVE STYLES IN

GIFT ARTICLES Wc extend a cordial invitation to residents of Pinckney

and vicinity to visit our store while in Howell

Wlaquo raquorlaquo Howell Leading and Original Victor Store

NEWVICTOrV RECORDS EVERY FRIDAY

CHAPELS W

I GO TO

BARN ARDS FOR

SHOES Mens Work Shoes Boys Work Shoes Boys Fine Shoes

from $2 to $4 3 to 4

300 to 450

bull

Call and see the

Edmonds Arch Supporting Shoe

Childrens andMisses Fine School Shoes

Boys Outing Shoes 98c

ampWS-X Call and tee

Saturday Specials All tales cash

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PINCKNEY 14 FOWLERVILLE 7

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A n o t h e r vict im was a d d e d to P i i u k -r i ty s 19liplusmn r e c o r d of I0ltgt pe r cen t ^nc irun v ic to r i e s when Howlerv i l le r e t i r ed from the n a m e last F r i d a y o u t p l a y e d and d e f e a t e d

P i n c k n e y f ans h a d been d r e a d i n g this c o n t e s t a n d m a n y p r e d i c t i o n s were voiced tha t 04gt a c c o u n t of the i r Miper-l o r ^ e i ^ h t a n d foo tba l l e x p e r i e n c e Fowle rv i l l e would p r o v e too much for the h o m e hoys A t l i rs t t h e pess imisshyt ic p r o p h e c i e s s eemed a b o u t to be reshyal ized -Kowle rv i l l e s heavy we igh t s took c h a r g e at t he very s t a r t and beshyfo re t he locals w e r e a w a r e t he bi^r IV lows from Q c l u r k s t o n h a d m a d e t o u c h d o w n and k icked joal to tie turn of seven to n o t h i n g

Cont inued o n Last Page

CHURCH DEDICATION

T h e C o m m u n i t y C o n ^ r c ^ a t i i i i n l j c h u r c h will he d e d i c a t e d n e week Full p a r t i c u l a r s in a n o t h e r co lumn in th i s i ssue

T u e s d a y e v e n i n p N o v e m b e r 1Mb s u p p e r will be se rved in the new dm iiiK hall to which t h e publ ic is torcliilgt1

invi ted and th is i m i t a t i o n is ex tende i to I verv m e e t i n g of the week

TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY

OBITUARY

Ki Kl izabcth T e a c l i o u t w i s horn l viulon t o w n s h i p W a s h t e n a w c o u n t s Mich igan N o v e m b e r 21 1S0T an deshyp a r t e d th is life O c t o b e r ill 1 )J I izvi 2ltgt y e a r s II m o n t h s and fi da gt

She was t h e eldest d a u g h t e r lt bull bull I nis anil 1 uella ( Howe 1iekel)

She was un i ted in m a r r i a g e -n B r u c e T e a c h o i i l March LStth I M T o th is union were born four child- ) R o b e r t WiMic K lcanor and l t o l u r t

At an ear ly ij_o she jrave he r hltart to J C M I S and uni ted with the l r e s ln t e r i a n c h u r c h of I n a d i l l a of which she was a fa i thful m e m b e r lle-udcs her h u s b a n d nad ch i l d r en she le ve- I m o u r n tbeii loss a m o t h e r a b r o t h e r Kiovy I a s i s t c Nellie H and ho-t of o t h e r r e l a t ives 1 rxl C riaiil l i c e fat her p rceed i (I her to the (1 -e flt ond lamiarv l b IMJ h

The f 11 rieral M T ices were In -Id last w inula v a f t ernoo] from the I rcshv t e ia n elm re b I l dill a iui ra 1 i bull 0 ilt 1 1 bull i v etiiv Slt o c k h r iilye T h o ] end a life icli tu 1 tied he re but Cibull obull I knows best

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ci 1 a ii s itch u is born ()i t obe i- j j2 | s s mi the f a rm owned bv Imr j min i Mcl l a skev 01 i l n n b u r g townsh ip

I gtnrm u ins 11 I T nut b and e-i r m a n h o o d I ce has held va r ious u a t ional pnsi t ioi is and wide e n r n u t e fron De t ro i t to spend the week end in m I 1 te h o m e lie met with a fa tal aec iden

tha t ins tan ly t r a n s p l a n t e d him to h s j I temal H o m e O c t o b e r 1 I liUH at fm ac of -17 y e a r s 11 m o n t h s and 2 1 j t lays

To m o u r n the loss of this kind ai-t t h o u g h t f u l son and b r o t h e r t he r e a re bis m o t h e r a n d b r o t h e r Joseph at home two s is ters Mrs M Munsel l of Fowlc rv i i l e a n d Mrs C l a r e n c e Dixon of D e t r o i t n u m e r o u s r e l a t ives and host of f r i ends won by I ee s b m t h e r l v love for his fellow m e n

The la rge ly a t t e n d e d funera l sershyvices were held f rom the St M a r -c h u r c h W e d n e s d a y mornin j r and ihe r e m a i n s were laid in t he fami ly lot in the P i n c k n e y c e m e t e r y

H u m b l y b o w e d in th i s g r e a t so r row T o our loving F a t h e r s d e c r e e

W e u n c o m p l a i n i n g l y res ign o u r s e l v e s

T o t h a t which was to he

SECOND LYCEUM NUMBER NOVEMBER 22ND

N O V 1 1 1 2 1 3 1 4

The Biggest Picture Ever Shown at the

TEMPLE laquo7 ti

HOWELL

NOW SHOWING NKJ

THE SEA HAWK Walter Heirs trade FAIR WEEK

More fun than a Circus Brass Band Pink Lemonade Pnt on your Glad Rags

A

if OUR GANG COMEDY

SUNDAY MONDAY NOV 16 17 Remember Thomas Meighan in The Miracle Man Well heres another one

THOMAS MEIGHAN THE CONFIDENCE MAN

A Gold Mine of Entertainment NEWS HODGE PLODGE Youll see t le bottom

of the sea

a

1

TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY NOVEMBER 18 19 20

Cecil B De MiiSes Successor to The Ten Commandments

FEET OF CLAY The Newest Paramount Picture by the

Greatest Director of Them AH V

VERA REYNOLDS ROD LAROCQUE JULIA FAYE RICARDO CORTEZ

THEODORE KOSLOFF

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T h e second n u m b e r of the h i^h school l y m m i c o u r s e will be given Sa t shyu r d a y e v e n i n g N o v e m b e r 22nd

J o s e p h O o u e l l who is a specia l i s t in m o n o l o g u e s c h a r a c t e r ind inijx r-s o n a t i o n s wilL be t he a t t r a c t i o n J u d g shying f rom t h e first n u m b e r given r e shyc e n t l y t h i s c o u r s e will p r o v e to b e a good one and the n e x t corn ing n u m shyb e r shou ld a t t r a c t a good attendance

SUNDAY SCHOOL NOTES

The Flower Girls were entertained i SHturday afternoon by Miss Lucile Kennedy

The Phihitheft Class nre being entershytained this Wednesday nfternoon nt the home of Mrs Gladys Lee of Lakeland

There will he no Sunday School next Sunday owing to the Dedication Services at the churvh

Cash Specials

t

1

At Kennedy s i

^

10 Bars R n M or P amp G Soap 45c 25 h Pure Cane Sugar $210 3 Cans Sunbonnet Pea 25c 3 Large Cans Milk 27c 3 Cans Campbcirs Tomato Soup 27c Jello per Package 10c 1 2 tgt HERSHEYS COCOA 17c SHREDDED WHEAT per pkg l i e

DIED IN AN AUTOMOBILE

Morricc Amburgey 16 while being taken from the home at Anderson to R Jackson hospital for treatment for dlabeten died in the automobile near Gregory

Tbe funeral was held Tuesday

NOTICE

A curiam dder mill 6 miles north and one mile west of Pinckney

Sweet cider for ule Ed H Maalaquo Howell Mich

Chef Red-E-Jell

8c

bull B

7 rolls Toilet Paper

25c

bullK)

I

Try our Bulk Tea None Better Per lb 43c

C H KENNEDY rltP

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i THE PINCKNEY DISPATCH

BEFORE TWINS WERE BORN

Was Vlaquor Miserable Felt Lots Better After Taking Lydia L Pinkhams Vegetable Compomd

Wyocena Wisconsin mdash 41 took Lydia E F tnkbams Vege tab le Compound be-

ifore my twins were [bora because my s u shyi t e r used i t and recshyommended i t to me I w a s so I could scarcely go about my daily work I was in gnch misery But afshyt e r I began tak ing t h e second bott le I w a s feeling lots be t shyt e r I took three botshyt l e s and a half before

u was confined and finished the bo t t l e while I was in bed I g o t u p feeling fine and have taken care of t he twins alone e v e r since I recomshymend the Vegetable Compound highly and will sing i t s pra ises in the future mdashMrs IDA GKBBITZ Wyoceaa Wis

I t is r emarkab le how many cases have been repor ted similar to th is one Many mo the r s a re left in a weakened and run-down condition af ter child-birth and for such mothe r s t h e care of the baby is well-nigh impossible Not only is ft ha rd for the mother b u t t h e child itself will indirectly suffer

Lydia E R n k h a m s Vegetable Comshypound is an excel lent tonic for the m o t h e r b o t h b e f o r e a n d a f t e r child-birth I t is prepared from medicinal roots and herbs and does no t contain any harmshyful drugs I t can be t a k e n in safety by nu r s ing mothers

QOOOOOOCOOCX)OOOOOCOCOOOCXXgt

CThe Kitchen Cabinet

cSSSoSSS33SSSSSS5o3SSSSooo kvy l s V W c a l c i u Nltjwraquoyraquoigtlaquo r U n i o n )

Wealth la a superfluity of thing you dont cure lor

Enough 1B wea l th mora 1laquo disshyease

The object of money la to enable one to forget It mdashHenry Jaroea

Must Pay Heed to Everyday Clothes

mynnimdash0m+

MORE GOOD THINGS

Against the Rules A street car was waiting ut a crossshy

ing for the go sign when alongside came a funny little automobile which appea red about the size of a ra t - t rap on wheels

T h e driver crowded the s t reet car giving the rear s tep a decided bump

He backed off hastily and was preshypar ing to apologize when the conducshytor poked his head out and shou ted Hey there youse can t bring that th ing In here

Best for Colds Bronchitis Asthma and all throat troubles Builds new Strength

NO DANGEROUS DRUGS GUARANTEED

Cuticnra Talcum Unadulterated

Exquisitely Scented

Whats the Use Joseph seven yea r s old came home

from school recently and solemnly anshynounced that he had decided to quit school His mother much astonished asked why he had reached th is decishysion

Well mother he replied one of t h e boys at school told me the teacher bulla id I was the smar tes t boy In her room so I dont think I need to go to school any longer

Motherhood G r i n d Rapids MichmdashAfter mothshy

erhood I could not walk I beshylieve I would have been a n invalid f o r life had it not been for Dr Pierce Favorite P r e shyscription I beshygan to improve almost at once after I started taking the P re shyscription and by the time I had used t h e third

bot t le I w a s entirely welL I cannot o r a t e this medicine too highlymdash Mrs Lomotil Rybski 525 Seward Avsoos N W

O o t a j a toJs famous Prescription a t FOlaquor aeoro i t s tore in tablets

- laquo _ _ bull ^ s j s p s D r Pierce Presi-

E ~ IMO aBatalesd advice

When there is a li t t le s tewed chickshyen left from a meul dice It add an

equal portion of celery cooked In chicken broth and then noodles cooked In the same broth Make a nest of the noodles add the celery then top with the chicken adding a spoonful of rich cream or white sauce over all A small amount of meat

In this dish may be s t re tched to serve several quite bountifully

Luncheon TonguemdashBoil tongue unshytil tender in a nicely flavored meat stock which has been seasoned with carrots onions sweet marjoram chershyvil or basil and a very little mint with the usuul salt pepper celery salt and cayeune Remove t h e skin from the tongue let it get quite cold place on a large platter and cut with a sharp knife into thin slices without losing its shape Spread a thick mayonnaise over triangles of toast decorate with chopped piraentoes pickles or olives a r range around the tongue garnish with parsley and serve

Creasy SoupmdashScrape and cut Into slices one-half pound of car ro t s and cook In one-fourth cupful of bu t t e r with the tender whi te pa r t of two green onions sliced Cook until the onions are a light brown Add to the saucepan two cupfuls of wa te r or stock and one-half cupful of fine crumbs Let s immer until the vegeshytables a re soft then put through a colander After sifting add one quar t of thin white sauce made by thickenshying a quart of milk with one-fourth of a cupful each of but te r and flour with seasonings to taste Garnish with cress

Pecan StuffingmdashThis is too good to be left from the Thanksgiv ing recipes Take a Iouf of bread (a pound bakshyer s loaf) crumb it and add one cupshyful of pecan meats one-half cupful of butter one tablesponnful of onion Juice one teaspoonful each of sweet marjoram and summer savors- Fait celery salt pepper and papr ika to taste

Drudgery ig as neces sary to call out the treasures of the mind as harrowing and plant ing those of the earth

Thf world Is mine oys ter which I wi th sword wi l l open

GOOD COMMON DISHES

The common foods served In an atshytract ive way and in unusual combinashy

tions make o r d i n a r y things qui te unusual

Beef Pot Roast With PrunesmdashCut Into slices one-half pound of pork and fry in a deep iron pot Add a piece of beef w e i g h i n g about five pounds cut from the shoulder or rump Turn it over in the hot fat on nil sides to get well

browned then add one or two onions sliced two or three car ro ts cut Into dice two sliced turnips diced and one-half of a head of cabbage shred ded Add barely wa te r enough boilshying hot to cover pour over a can of tomatoes and add one-half pound of prunes Cover the ket t le and cook for at least two hours turning the meat after the first hour Add seashysoning to taste and remove to a platshyter meat in the center with the vegeshytables surrounding it garnished with the prunes

Forcemeat mdashTake one and one-fourth pounds each of veal and pork using chops put through a meat chopshyper then through a puree strainer Cook one-half cupful of tar ragon vineshyga r five minutes with one small onion and four sprigs of parsley Strain through the cheesecloth and add to the meat Add two egg yolks slightly beaten one cupful smoked tongue cut Into cubes one-half cupful of pistachio nuts six truffles chopped one table-spoonful of truffle liquor and one cupshyful of larding pork cut Into cubes and parboiled two minutes drained and cooled Mix season and use as stuffing

Yorkshire PuddingmdashSift together one and one-half cupfuls of pastry flour and a teaspoonful of s a l t Add one cupful of milk gradual ly to form a smooth batter then add three eggs beaten thick and light T u r n Into a hot dripping pan the Inside of which has been well greased with roast beef dr ippings When well r isen bas te with the beef drippings and bake about twenty minutes Cut into squares to serve

Baked Fish With StuffingmdashClean a four-pound fish and stuff with the folshylowing Mix one-fourth of a loaf of bread crumbs one tahlespoonful of chopped parsley one teaspoonful of onion Juice one teaspoonful of ttweet basil one-fourth teaspoonful of salt the same of whi te pepper and one-fourth of R cupful of but ter melted Mix to blend well then fill the fish and sew up with twine

l ou t VWwtiC

The woman who best unders tands the psychology of dress gives especial a t ten t ion to everyday clothes for af ter all the everyday costume In which she is uftenest seen is the one in which the world at iurge receives its impression of her If she is wise hays a fashion correspondent in the New York Times she will see to It tha t she makes her most flattering apshypearance

it is a mat ter of comparat ive simshyplicity to create an a t t rac t ive frock for afternoon or evening to do something charming perhaps original with the lighter mater ials and the possible dishyversity of trimming part icularly in this day of individual expression in style But the very simplicity of the tailored frock challenges the skill of the designer and the modiste

A cloud of tulle a swathing length of beautiful fabric if the color and line be right may serve for the elecshytric light but the general utility dress must bear the test of Jaylight und run the gauntlet of keenest comparison It is an old saying that anybody can make a ball gown but It takes on ar t i s t to build a street dress

Changes seen in the Intest version of the taillcur are perhaps more radishycal than in any other type of gown The old-time fitted coat and skirt and shir t have been t rans la ted into a modshyern version along new lines and in many ways feminized There was a time within memory when any varishyation of that model was thought ru be fussy and lucking in smartness and every woman wore this Tailored outfit de rigueur regardless of its suitabili ty to her style

The street dress of the prespnt vogue Is most a t t ract ive artistic graceful chic and cleverly adapted to almost every figure It is no longer made only of cloth but Is of any one of many new materialsmdashwoolens velshyvets silks satins crepes voiles of any fabric with which the creator may establish a successful mode The abandon with which the couturieres are using mater ia ls that one would never have thought possible for the purpose Is a character is t ic of the seashyson and is a most eloquent t r ibute to their skill and imagination

The Idea of the ensemble prescribes tha t every dress built for the street or for all-day wear shall have Its ftwn par t icular wrap to go with It 7 n l s scheme makes possible the use of the loveliest and often the frailest fabshyrics In building a gown along tailored lines because the wrap which Is the third and most essential piece Is lined with the same stuff or something to harmonize with It

All-Day Gown Favored

Prominent houses In Paris that have been known for their skill in creating costumes of elaborat ionmdashthe opulent and elegant gowns for forma aftershynoon wear and the handsome toilettes for dinner and the d a n c e - - a r e now giving of their best to the practical all-day gown to the ensemble

From one designer Premet street sui ts of three distinct types are shown One of leaf-brown cloth Is a one-piece coat frock lacking tr imming other

piece frock Is built of black ottoman a mater ia l that is quite the rage at Purls The upper par t Is in tunic form paneled in front with a belt passing through slushes in the silk and a trimshyming of many bu t tons at euch side This frock has the smart long tight sleeves with cuffs matching the turnshyback collar of white crepe

Depar t ing fur ther from the ordinary this Par is ian creator presents a deshylightful three-piece sui tmdashthe frock of

Street Costume of Penny Brown Wide Bands of Monkey Flir

than a half dozen buttons of bronze enamel sewn on the low-front waistshycoat line and two of the same on each cuff The front of the frock is varied with an inset panel of geometric deshysign of the same goods finished with sti tching The deep exaggerated coat cnltar and revers end in a line carr ied diagonally across t^e front to a point low cm one hip where it is emphasized with n diamond-shaped inset of the cloth to match the front pcnel The underblouse successor of the shir t blouse is of ivory georgette Th i s enshygaging li t t le outfit Is a version of the garconne frock and with a fa r piece will serve far Into the au tumn

Another Premet success In t osgt

Red Kashara Cloth Trimmed With Sable Bands Narrow Braid

gray mousseline laid in fine plaits with a narrow ribbon panel down the front outlined with two rows of small but tons The close neckline is finshyished with a turn-over collar of white faille and the sleeves s t raight and full are ornamented at the bottom with needlework and gathered Into a narrow wrist cuff

Street Costumes In New Weaves

For the first winter cold some ol the most prominent designers in Paris show stunning street costumes in new weavesmdashvelours de Smyrne I ntre rat ine sepia kasha cloth and the Ro-dier materials Some of the^e quite heavily fur-trimmed are in one piece tunic or coat frocks with waistcoat or underblouse giving the becoming touch of softness

Others emphasize the type of dress that is all the rage from the very best quality created by ar t i s t s of prestige to the most faithful copy modestly done This Is not a single frock but the vogue of the hour the ensemble Worth Patou Doeuiilet Caret Ger-maine Lanvln Doucet Renee Lelong in fact all of the well-known coushytur iers are doing important things In

1 ensemble costumes In which fur Is inshytroduced as a conspicuous and distinshyguishing part

In this type of dress the new var ie ties of fur are much usedmdashthe foxes dyed in lovely shades of brown yelshylow gray taupe and blue-grny baby leopard and leopard cat squirrel tails chinchilla and many more that are separate ly descrfhed from time to time These fur t r immings are not always added In the conventional form of bands or borders but are often used a s Berthe has I l lustrated In sevshyeral smart coat-frock models as collar cuffs and pocket embellishing a plain cloth to which is added also a belt of bright scarlet and gilt i lluminated leather

Modish street dress is now Invariashybly in ensemble formmdashone-piece frock with a coat in material of sufficient weight to meet the needs of the seashyson lined with t h e same goods as the dress or with something which Is In troduced in some harmonizing manner

It was the Par i s ian woman^- the most successful economist of all In the ma t t e r of clothesmdashwho af ter the war

[ devised an a t t i r e In which she could appear properly gowned a t any hour

of the day and In any place One saw her in the Bols dur ing the morning at luncheon a t tea at some Informal place for dinner and a t the play wearshying the same outfit Butmdashat tent ionmdash always her coiffure her gloves her scarf were fresh

Use Fu r to Match C o a t Among the advance winter models

when heavier w r a p s in cloth and fur will be required t he same one-piece gown is shown some of the models having a touch of fur to match ths coat or its t r immings for such occashysions a s demand dress of some forshymality Delightful combinations ol color a r e accomplished in some ol these a s the best c rea tors I l lustrate

Doucet presents an ultra chic little sut In the fashionable apple-green emshybossed crepe with seven-eighths length s t raight- l ine coat of wool a shade deeper T h e coat is severely plain with t ight sleeves and is butshytoned down the front from collar to hem with large dull but tons Light brown fox forms the collar cuffs sad border around the bottom

POINTS ON KEEPING WELL

D r F r e d e r i c k R G r e e n

E d i t o r of H e a l t h I mdash mdash mdash I w i n mdash bull i ^ i mdash mdash m m m m I I J I I M I I I I I I I W M mdash M laquo ^ mdash mdash m i m u m i i m m

treg 184 Western JSewspeser Union)

SLEEPING PORCHES

SLEEPING outdoors Us a present-day fad Some fads a r e foolish and

temporary Others a re BO sensible that they become permanent

Sleeping in the open air is a fad which ought to become a permanent habit It is getting back to the habits of our ancestors and gett ing away from one of the dangers of overcivllizatlon For long centuries primitive man whatever rude shel ters he built for himself during the day slept in outshydoor air

But modern booses are practically air-tight Close-fitting windows and doors shut out all air Hot air steam and hot-water heat ing warm our houses and office buildings Instead of the open fireplaces of -our ancestors The house IB made air-tight with storm doors and windows p r is banked up with s traw or dry leaves at the first signs of winter Not only do the inmates live and work all day in a stove or furnace-heated atmosphere but they often sleep all night in a close bedroom The result Is that evshyery winter brings i ts Regular crop of coughs colds influenza bronchitis pneumonia and tuberculosis

There is no medicine you can buy that will prevent these diseases The remedy is free to all Pure outdoor air and plenty of it all night will reshyvive and stimulate the tired dried-out throat and lungs

Here s where the sleeping porch comes in

All right for millionaires you say but you cant afford any such luxuries Not at ull Any porch corner can be turned into any open-air sleeping room Select a corner screened from the wind and storm as sailors would say on the lee side of the house Curtains made of canvas old awnings or tarshypaulins will secure privacy and keep out the rain If you want something more elaborate it can be glazed In with window sashes made so that they can be opened and closed easily An iron bed or an army cot is all that Is needed If a door opens Into this sleeping porch so much the better If not a door can be cut or a window cut down You can undress In your warm room step into your sleeping porch and close the rjoor sleep all night with plenty of life-giving oxygen to breathe and go hack to your warm room in the morning

If a sleeping porch must be on the second floor a flat roof of a porch or a one-story addition can be used

All nonsense you say All right But try It this winter and see how much you save In lost time from sickshyness medicines and doctors bills and how much better and stronger you feel In the morning

To Housewives CDPF r ^ frac34 M bull B laquo 4 u B a w came sod I I bull bull w willmdashndyoLiFREE I | bull bull bull bull bull a n d r O S T r A J D I O M n t botUa of LIQUID VENEER Wonderful for your dully dustias Cleansdusts und polishes with one sweep oyour dust cloth Renews pl-saoejurnlturewoodworsautojaobiles Makes everything loek like new Makes dusting a pleasure

Said 0) Hardwaretbrpi toretiros point

laquoreci7od l u o i l U d R t i U0010 fHE9

ClflrtM UttaklT

Daat take laquo^laquoraquolaquomdash of your hones or mules bal l laid op with Distemper Influeasa Pfnk Bra Laiynxltis Heaves Cough or Colds ltHYraquo S P O H J T S to both the sick n d the well ones The standard remedy for 80 years Give SPOITNS tor Dog Disshytemper laquo0 cents and |1JM at drug stores 8POHN MEDICAL CO OOSHEN END

ASTHMA DnJDKELL0QQ8ASTHIAREME0Y for tha prompt rails of Asthma and Hay Favar Aak your druagt

poundat for It tS oonts and one dot r Writ for FREE S A M P L E

Northrop A Lyman CojBCBuffalo NY

Dr J D

DIRT EATING AMONG CHILDREN

MOST children have perpetual apshypetites They are always hungry

Thei r young bodies need plenty of food to build them up ano to make it possible for them to prow to full sized strong healthy men and women Plenty of milk pood bread and butter fruits and fresh vegetables and meat are needed

The healthy child Is satisfied with plenty of pood food It gets hungry again of course but It Is a natural hunger which is satisfied with ordishynary food

But a few children when they are from one to three years old develop a craving for unnatura l things Some of them eat mud coal cinders gravel or mortar wallpaper newspaper or paint

Kopllk of Philadelphia thinks that this s ta r t s from the natural instinct of the child to put anything it gets hold of into Its mrfuth We all know that the first thing a baby t r ies to do with anything It gets Its hands on is to p u t i t into its mouth Most children outgrow this habit But in a few generally those who are weakly or anemic the habit Is kept np and the child ea t s all kinds of queer subshys tances

In most cases these different kinds of dirt are comparatively ha rmless But the paint ea ters and those chilshydren who have a morbid craving for painted objects may easily develop lead poisoning

The child may gnaw or gnck paintshyed toys or may gnaw the paint off the window sills whi te furniture crib rail ings porch rail ings or even off door and window frames In one case reported by Dr John C Ruddock of Los Angeles a boy of th ree year h a d gnawed every bi t of paint off the porch railing window sins furni ture and doors

The lead in the paint poisons the child Just as it does the pain ter It becomes restless and fretful has a poor appeti te foul b rea th and pains in tha stomach and legs I t s gums bleed and It may have convulsions These convulsions may become mpre frequent and severe and may end fashytally In Queensland Aus t r a l i a where f rame houses are common these cases of lead poisoning In dirt-eating chilshydren became so numerous tha t efforts were made to prohibit the nse of whi te lead paint in honses where It w a s within the reach of children

Children from one to three should be carefully watched and any tendency to dirt-eating corrected Paint and painted objects sboald be kept oa t 64 tfcetr w t j

REMEDY

ACDLDTODAY-DOHTDEUOr ^ R I B v

bull^CASCARA(3)QUININF ^ 6Mltdeg

ColdS in Grippe W H H I I

OSTTROIT

n r f E n o A M L gt

PAXTINE 18 FOR WOMEN who have feminise ills that noed local treatshymentmdashDouches ot Paxtlne Aattaeptlc deshystroys disease germs heals Inflammation ulceration and stops the discharge The Lydia Bl Ptnkham Medicine Co recomshymended Paxtlne for years In their advershytising- A pure white powder to be dissolved In watsr as neededmdashone box makes fallona of strong antiseptic solollor that gives posishytive satisfactionmdash80c at drwyirlsts or postshypaid by malL TJTE COMFORT POWDER COMPANY BOSTON MASSACHUSETTS

PARKERS HAIR BALSAM

Bsaaore DanornS -8 topsHalr FalUaj Restores Color and

Beaoty to lt2ray ad Faded Hah toe and $100 at DructBti

ameoi Chun Wsa PatcbotufW T

HINDERCORNS R^CT- ctrade 0 looses eta stops all pain ensures eoesfori to tbe teel aoakes walklss bull Uo by rani or at Drag

Hisses CbenleaJ Woras Pasaaocse ti T

KEEP EYES WELL Igtr Thompsons Bye Water will strengthen them At dragjrlsts or 1167 EUveriTroy N T Booklet

Rheumatism ~KJ 35frac34 Neuritis not Hraquo FBKS Wkraquo nttm tencr-

Uiooaud btvibMii bvneStMmdashwhy net root Tall TOOT friraquondraquo tod writ todar tat tr a-l treatment You run no ris

ajm-PrHCUSJUTISM CO Dept 2 laquo Laaelaa M k

Motorists Adopt a Saint French motorists have adopted St

Chris topher le Jejolet as their patron saint According to legend St Chrisshytopher who was of plant s ta ture creased the River Jordan one dark night carrying the Divine Infant at a place where the river waters ran strongly Motorists now use a road nea r the spot and more - than 100000 motoris ts cyclists and airmen are said to have formed themselves into a brotherhood of sportsmen whose spir i tual home will be the little church In Normandy where a reliquary may be found containing the bones of the saint

Schoolgirl Athletics Twelve a th le t ic fields a re now availshy

able ror 75000 schoolgirls of New York city who par t ic ipa te In some form of athlet ics As many as 1050 girls a week report for athlet ic Instruction whereas a few years ago only a few could be rellied for t h e work

Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION

BCiirANS Hot water Sure Relief

ELL-ANS 2 5 AND 7 5 WCKAGES EVERYWHERE

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THE PINCKNEY DISPATCH

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CHILDREN WHO ARE SICKLY Mothers who rata the

health of their children should never be without NOTHEB QUAYS SWEET POWDEBSlsr CHILDREN for use when needed They tend to Break up Colas Relieve Feverish

CHAINS ARE REAL SKID STOPPERS

ness Worms Constip Greatest Danger Besetting tion Headache Teethuu disorders and Stoniacl TBAOB XAJUt

Don t acocsil Troubles Used by Moth laquo a y Sokistitate srt for over thirty yean

Sold by DnigMts everywhere Ask today Trial packageFREE Address MOTHER GRAY C O LC ROY N Y

Idea for Making Use of Wood Now Wasted

No less than 60 per cea t of a t ree U wasted In i ts conversion into lumshyber At present the twigs branches bark roots s awdus t and plank and log t r immings a r e entirely l o s t A new process for the ut i l izat ion of these was te products and the production of synthet ic lumber is being t r ied out In the United Sta tes T h e process is a conversion of the w a s t e Into a cellshyulose compound of a plast ic n a t u r e t h a t can be pressed or molded into all conceivable shapes and bulks from boards to ra f te rs

T h e development of the process h a s passed beyond t h e initial exper imental s tages and has been taken In hand by t h e National Lumber Manufac ture rs association If it is commercially pract icable It may be extremely valushyab le as a s tep to the conservat ion of the world t imber supplies

WOMEN NEED SWAMP-ROOT Thousands of women have kidney and

bladder trouble and never suspect it Womens complaints often prove to be

nothing else but kidney trouble or the result of kidney or bladder disease

If the kidneys are not in a healthy conshydition they may cause the other organs to become diseased

Pain in the back headache loss of ambition nervousness are oftentimes symptoms of kidney trouble

Dont delay starting treatment Dr Kilmers Swamp-Root a physicians preshyscription obtained at any drug store may be just the remedy needed to overcome such conditions

Get a medium or large size bottle immeshydiately from any drug store

However if you vmh first to test- this great preparation send ten cents to Dr Kilmer amp Co Binphamton N Y for a sample bottle When writing be SUM and mention this papermdashAdvertisement

Misunderstanding Elsie De Wolfe said at a re-at her residence in Sut ton

Miss ceptlon p l ace

Some women branch out into polshyit ics and reform before they a re qui te up to it A banker told me the other day that a woman asked him recently to address her club on internat ional finance

I am sorry madam said the banker but I have sworn off all public speaking

Butmdash said the woman No the banker cut her off firmly

bullNo I have burned my bridges 4 Oh but In that case said the

woman I can easily lend you a pair of my husbands mdashWall Street Journa l

DEMAND BAYER ASPIRIN

Aspirin Marked With Bayer Cross Has Been Proved Safe by Millions

W a r n i n g Unless you see the n a m e Baye r on package or on tab le ts you a r e not get t ing the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physic ians for 23 years

Say Bayer when you buy Aspirin Imi ta t ions may prove dangerousmdashAdv

Lost Record Found The last records of an explorer lost

In the desert In Africa 45 years ago have just been discovered In 1S70 Fr iedr ich Rolfe undertook to cross the Lybian desert one of the most barren and pitiless w a s t e s In the world He never was heard of again This year an expedition sent out by Prince Ke-mal ed Din found a cairn of s tones and when they took it apar t discovshyered witrrin it a sealed bot t le contain tng a manuscr ip t The la t te r proved to be the records of t h e lost explorer These were forwarded to Germany and were found to contain scientific da ta of considerable Interest and value

Shave Wi th Ctrticura Soap And double your razor efficiency as well a s promote skin pur i ty skin comshyfort and skin hea l th No mug no s l imy soap no germs no was te no Irrishyt a t ion even when shaved twice daily One soap for all usesmdashshaving bathshying and shampooing mdashAdver t i sement

One Thing at a Tim DorcasmdashDo you ever allow a m a n to

kiss yon when you re out motoring with h tm

Phi l ippamdashNever If a m a n can drive safely while k iss ing me he s not givshying the kiss t h e a t t en t ion it deserves mdash K a n s a s City S ta r

will d o w h a t w s d a i m for I tmdash

of Cata r rh o r Deafnssj

Halls Catarrh Medicine tld ycnt e s o s s d b r

raquo f C H E N E Y fr C O T o l e d o O M s

so - K ^amp REMEDY S t ST

COLDS-GRIP

Motorist Calls for Preshyventive Measures

(By I R W I N OREER President Greer Colshylec t of Automot ive Engineer ing Chicago)

Every motorist who has experienced the seusation of having his car franshytically try to slide from under him and go sli thering into a tree curb or passshying vehicle la well aware that skidding Is a dangerous fact that calls for drasshytic preventive measures

Skidding is the greatest danger t ha t besets the motorist It comes without warning turns p leasure Into peril and takes enormous toil in human lives and wrecked cars

To match man s s t rength against the crushing power of a skidding car Is usually futile often fatal a lways folly

Skidding is no respecter of person purse t ime p lace or conditions Pr ide s trength will and bank accounts fall before tts re lent less force

Accidents Due to Skidding

Stat is t ics prove tha t fully 90 per cent of motor car accidents and fatalshyities a re due directly or Indirectly to skidding When a car stnrta to go Its usually a goner There Is no t ime to wait or cogitate There Is no time to adjust differences between the car and the slippery street Life can be lost but oncemdashfrightful injuries may happen frequently

Nothing has ever been Invented In the way of anti-skd devices to equal t i re chains and it doesnt require the gift of second sight to see why this is true

Wheels equipped with chains autoshymatically lay their own traction surshyface Friction Is effected without afshyfecting the t ires They strike the ground squarelymdashhold and release Inshystantly They fight for firm contact a lways gain their ground prevent side-skid and drive-slip

Chains Make Best

Anti-skid chains make the best of bad going wherever you go You may be lulled Into a false sense of security by the good behavior of your car on dry paved s t reets But what about t h e country runs To motor on ley or muddy roads without tire chains Is like rocking a rowboat In mtdehannel

Take your chains and youll t ake no chances Go as far and as fast as you likemdashup hill down dale through mud slush and slime Tire chains will prove pathfinders to peace comshyfort and safety No mat ter how mudshydy the road they hold on like a bullshydog It Is as If you were to t ransfer your own Instinct for self-preservation to the wheels of your car They are as essential to your car as wheels brakes oil or gasoline

Old Man Friction Often Is an Unseen Passenger

No mat te r what kind of a car you drive how many passengers It holds or where or when you drive there s an extra passenger along with you says a garage man

It s Old Man Friction You can t see him but you can notice the effect of his sly damaging tactics He runs up your gasoline and repair bills and wears out your car a lot quicker as long as he has his own way

Frict ion must be eliminated by the use of a good lubricant and I have found the graphi te lubricants mcst efshyfective The selected flake graphi te in the grease forms an unusually long-wearing coating that keeps the metal contact surfaces from the rasping grind that wears away the par ts Graphite is especially good for cars used in t ravel ing a hilly country

I t t

t

Shortcut for Valve Grinding Outlined

In cases where a badly pit ted valve requires regrlnding here Is a shortcut Cut a piece of emery cloth in dimensions a l i t t le bit wider than the valve seat ing and twice as long and then double it over so that both surfaces are cut t ing surfaces Next cut a hole In the cloth so t h a t the valve s tem may be passed through and the emery cloth brought close up agains t the valve head The valve is then placed In position for grinding under comparat ively high pressure Both sides of the emery cloth will conform to the valve head and the seatshying cloth and if the valve turns and the emery cloth remains s ta t ionary the valve will be ground on the upper emery whereas if the cloth revolves the valve seat ing will be ground on the lower emerv

t

Clutch Lubrication Is Quite Often Neglected

In some cars lubrication of the clutch throwout collar means removal of the floor boards and the turning down of a grease cup It seems tha t it is a hardsh ip for many owners to tu rn down a grease cup even though it is exposed to view This class rarely if ever takes the t ime to atshytend to -the clutch throwout unless there is clutch and gear-shift ing troushyble Where there Is no provision for lubrication of this par t by turning down a cup extending through the floor boards or the side of the frame the owner had best have an oil line installed A good repai rman can easily a r r ange to have a large cup feed through a small opening into a piece of metal tubing running to the throw-out The small opening is necessary so the oil feed will not be rapid othershywise the reservoir will be exhausted quicTdy Or a self-feeding oil cup many types of which a re on the marshyket might he installed in place of the g rease cup under the floor boards

Automobile Tire Should Be Kept Well Inflated

Tt Is well known that after a long fast run the t i res of an automobile are found to he hot Many have supposed this the result of the friction of the t i re on the road Such is however not the case

The real cause of heat ing Is the inshyternal friction of the tire Itself Ai the tire Is being constantly deflected by contact with the road the various plis or layers which compose the t ire do not act uniformly Consequentshyly there is more or less motion beshytween them that resul ts In friction and heat

The greater the change in shape In t i re as It contacts with the road the grea ter will he the friction Of course the more the t i re Is Inflated the lesraquo will be the deflection but It Is evident that while a perfectly rigid t i re would generate but little heat It would fall In giving easy riding Hence one must put up with some heat ing and consequent tire wear

B a l l C h e c k R e p a i r In engines having pressure feed oilshy

ing there Is generally a regulator with a ball check valve In a housing If this ball gets stuck or lacks sphericity it Is difficult to remove tt for replaceshyment About the best way of get t ing it out Is to take an L-shaped tube or rod of a d iameter slightly smaller t han the ball On the end of this rod or tube stick a small lump of grease Putshyting the rod through the opening careshyfully the grease on the end will usualshyly pick up the ball and bring it o u t

IS THE CHAMPION AUTOMOBILE TIRE CHANGER

H

Famous Forts in U S History

By E L M O S C O T T W A T S O N

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W h e n D u t c h a n d S w e d e s

F o u g h t o n U S S o i l When Liustuvus Adolpbus the great

king of Sweden saw the success of o ther European nat ions in plant ing colonies in the New World he resolved to establish a colony -of Swedes In America Accordingly he formed a colonizing compuny for that purpose but his death prevented the plan from being carr ied out

Queen Chris t ina and Oxenstlern Adolphus famous minister however renewed the project and in ltxW they sent out a colony of plain s t rong industrious people who settled la what Is now the s ta te of De laware and called it New Sweden There they built a fort which stood near the present city of Wilmington and they named it Von Christ ina In honor of their queen

The new colons was soon In trouble This ground was claimed by the Dutch who had settled New Amstershydam a qua r t e r of a century before and after several years of bi t ter disshypute between the Dutch and the Swedes Peter Stuyvesant the choleric old governor of New Amsterdam reshysolved to put an end to the trouble by expelling the Swedes from the country

in 1GO4 Stuyvesant sailed from New Amsterdam with a fleet to cap ture Fort Christ ina Washington Irving in bis inimitable Knickerbocker s Hisshytory of New York tells how Govershynor Stuyvesant called upon Gov J a n Kisingh to surrender how the proshyposal was scornfully rejected and how the doughty Dutch warriors following their ancient rule of a lways fighting upon a full stomach a te a mighty dinshyner in prepar ing for the fray Then according to this historian brimful of wratl) and cabbage they moved forshyward to the a t tack Jus t before reachshying the fort they paused lighted the i r pipes gave a furious puff and charged gallantly under the cover of the smoke After un Homeric struggle In which Governor Stuyvesant vanshyquished Governor Hisingh in single combat the fort was carried without the loss of a single man

Although we cannot accept Irvings story unreservedly the assault on Fort Qhristina must have been something of an opera boufTe affair unique in the annals of warfare But the trishyumph of the Dutch was short-lived for In 1664 the English took possession of all the Dutch colonies in America j and the Brit ish flag supplanted the Dutch banner over Fort Christina To-d$y no t race of the fort remains but nfaiby s tands the little gray stone c iurch built in 1608 the successor o the chapel in the fort where the

yedish colonists worshiped as a re-lder of the fort where once Pu tch -

|n and Swede fought In America

Charles Paine of Philadelphia h a s made a study of changing t i res He has a definite system worked out for each m a k e of t i remdasha system with the least possible number of moves His assoc ia tes claim t h a t he took off a 80 s ampH clincher t i re and replaced it in less t h a n a minutemdashworking with bis ba re

M o n u m e n t o f F o l l y uch has been writ ten about the

ab kdoned fa rms of New England but he i l abandoned forts are not RO well known Of all of these obsolete s t ro igholds none Is more interes t ing than Fort Knox on the Narrows of the Penotiscot river at Prospect Maine

This fort which darived Its name from the fact that It was built on land once owned by Henry Knox the Boston bookseller who became Washshyingtons chief of arti l lery In the Revshyolution and the first secretary of war for the United States was begun In the early forties to protect the shipshybuilding and commerce of the Penobshyscot which was then at Its he igh t Work had progressed far enough a t the outbreak of the Civil war to enshyable the War depar tment to use For t Knox as a t ra in ing school for many of the ar t i l lery officers who served in the Union army This was the nearshyest that Fort Knox ever came to a war record however for It never heard the shot of a hostile gun and In 1S69 af ter construct ion had been In progress for 26 years work on it was abandoned

Costing about a million dollars it s tands a monument of human folly wri tes one historian The recent adshyvance In the science of war is such that Fort Knox would be scarcely more effective In time of danger t han an ancient feudal cas t le of the Middle Ages Monument of folly though Fort Knox may be it is also a monushyment to the days when masonry was a fine ar t Huge white slabs of granshyite quarr ied from Mount Waldo a few miles nor th and floated down the river In scows are set In Its wal ls edge on edge with beautiful precision and a great c i rcular s ta i rcase of solid pieces of g ran i te Is the crowning piece of workmansh ip N e a r the shore ba t te r ies can still be seen the brick ovens where the 42-pound canshynon balls were heated but nearly all of the ar t i l lery placed in the fort durshying the Civil w a r has been removed to adorn p a r k s a rmor ies and o ther public places in New England

Designed to be the finest fortress on the Atlant ic coast For t Knox is now abandoned and it is one of the several forts whose sa l e has been authorized hy congress wi th in recent years Alshythough it l acks the historic backshyground of many other forts there a re few which a r e a s pic turesque as this grim old monument of folly which s tands guard over an unfulfilled nope s a the b a n k s of the Rhine of Amershyica the Penobscot r ivet

ATV

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Important News jix Cocoa Drinkers

C u t cocoa b i l k 4 0 to 5 0 b y askshyi n g f o r M o n a r c h w h e n y o u b u y D u t c h P roces s C o c o a mdash b y ask ing for F a r m H o u s e w h e n y o u w a n t A m e r shyi c a n P r o c e s s Note the low prices

R E 1 D M U R D O C H amp C O

Manufacturer and Importer Ewblihed 1833

Chicago Boston N e w York Pi t t sburgh

Q R O C E R S Retd Murdoch amp Cos food products are sold only by the Regular Retail Grocer who owes and operates his own store We never tell lo Chain Store

Drop as a postal for shipping

tags pncM and

instruction

You Can Ship Your Poultry to Market Yourself

Save buyers profit or Co-op expense Highest cash prices paid for quality poultry

NEWHALL MARKET CO Wholesale Poultry

2 6 0 2 O r l e a n s S t D e t r o i t M i c h

In Business Over 50 Years Reference mdash Banks mdash Commercial Agencies

Of all the pes ts that go unhung Its the bird with a scheme and a well-oiled tonguemdashGood Hurdware

Talking and eloquence a re not thf same To speak and to speak well are too things

When smiling-

you give - J o u b e r t

give with Joy and Be fair In all your dealings and for the highest

^^33

SAY BAYER ASPIRIN and INSIST Unless you see the Bayer Cross on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years for

Colds Pain

Headache Toothache

Neuralgia Lumbago Neuritis Rheumatism

Sfi Accept only Bayer package which contains proven directions Hahdv Bayer boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100mdashDruggists

Ssptta Is ths trad mart of Ssjar Manmictarraquo of MonoacUclaquocdlaquoraquoter of SalicjUcacU

Ship Carries Tailor Shop In the most exact ing sense the Atshy

lant ic liner Homeric carr ies a s h i p s tai lor I l ls shop is so well (itted up t h a t a man or woman may select the goods be measured fitted and refitted so as to have a new outfit between t ime of embark ing nnri leaving the ship at the o ther end of the vnynglaquo

Girls Turn Expressmen Girls in London ho drove motof

cycles during the war are now conducts lng parcel delivery service using SldS cars to hold the packages

Poverty Is not romant ic to the poor nnd wealth often becomes t i resome t l the rich

Castoria is a pleasant harmshyless Substitute for Castor Oil Paregoric Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups espeshycially prepared for Infant in arms and Children aU

To avoid imhatiooi always look for (as tfanatva of frozen drreerions on each package Fkjiirlsii siSfjrwhafs racuiisimiJ it

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bull 2 i v lt raquo bull

THE PaNCKWEY DISPATCH

m^ praquo bull

CtMETtUSFOR

HOME GOODS Sf every itscriftiw

At liwest prices

Tkanbgivmg Cards One Cent Each

lines Bazaar HflwcH Opposite Courthouse

GREGORY MARION

Hon Shoeing General Repairing mdash - a l s o Ford Repairing

F C BRENNINGSTALL PetteysviUe - Michigan

Funeral Director P H SWARTHOUT

Phone No 39 Pinckney Mich

PERCY ELLIS Expert Auctioneer

SclU Anything for Anyonemdash AnytimemdashAnywhere

I am conversant with Cattle and Hog Pedigrees

For dates and terms call phone or write Anderson Corners

Pinckney or Dispatch Office

Phone No 19FU Pinckney

WANTED POULTRY amp EGGS

Will payjcash for poultry and eggs delivered at my poultry plant and will pay all the market affords at all times

E FARNAM

E W DANIELS General Auctioneer

Chelsea Michigan P O Address

Gregory Mich R F D 2 Phone 116-2L-2S

HIRAM R SMITH Lawyer

Office Opposite Court House D D Monroe Bldg

Howell Mich

laquoraquoraquoraquoraquoraquoraquoraquowraquoraquovraquoraquoraquoraquo raquoraquoraquoraquoraquoraquobullraquolaquo

Drs HFampCLSIGLER PINCKNEY

Office Hour

1230 to 230 P M

Sunday 1 to 2 P M

STATE OF MICHIGAN BANKING DEPARTMENT OFFICE OF T H E

COMMISSIONER

Olive Hetninger and Fave Hill spent bullSaturday night and Sunday at the l l rminger home at Webnervil lr

Mrs iibnie Saddler ltgtf California who haigt been among relatives and friends in this vicinity for some time spent a few days last week with Mrs Kmily Har r i s

The eldest son of Clifton Osborn who recently broke one of his lower limbs had to have it reuroken last week and set again

Mrs Sara Cicario of Detroit was the winner of the s t r ing of pearls pu t in H K Marshall s raquotore by a soap comshypany

At the home of the brides parentis Mr and Mrs Charles Ellsworth Ust Wednesday evening occurred the mar riage of their eldest daughter Miss Lela to Russell Grosshaus They leave Monday Nov 10 accompanied by his brother John Grosshaus and wife for an overland trip to Florida

It will be remembered that the lashydies of this 1 A S will have for sale Nov -gty afternoon and evening quiltshyed and tied quilts rugs and -ill kinds of fancy work also will serve a chickshyen pie supper

In the j u ry trial of Mrs Cora Brewshyer of Jackson and H K Munsell last Thursday Mr Munsell was the winshyner

Mrs Iillie Burden and Mrs Klla Benjamin of Fowlerville visited among friends and relatives here last week

F A Hill and Sterns Smith unshyloaded a car load of lumber last week at Stockbridge belonging to Charles B Clark of River Rouge Mr Clark havshying bought several acres of the Rockshywell Island farm and will erect a cotshytage at once

Mr and Mrs Win George and daughter Blanch and Clare Ti tus of Rochester were recent guests with C M Titus and family

Stanley Quinn and family of Chesan-ing anil Miss Iuiiii v^uinn of Harr ison were callers at Mrs Hills and C M Titus last Sunday

- - - -o- --

APRON SOCIAL

The Kings Daughters felt much gratified and justifiably so in the reshysults of the Apron Social held at the Iarsoriage last Friday afternoon Deshyspite threa tening weather condition approximately 150 were in a t tendance and the contr ibut ions from these as well as from absent friends were genshyerous indeed more than S10D having bullilnady been received to iid in carryshying out the good work of the organisashytion

A line progrniit was given consisting nf vocjl solos b Mrs Farl Baughn iiul Mrs H F Maycroft readings b x Mrs Meihns of Detroit piano duets o M I-Mlaquo v adi1 I InrHs n n 1 111fi lw Martin and piano solos by Misses Bessie Swurtliout and Dorothy Cnrr

A luncheon WHS served mdasho

Mrs Ar thu r White visited her sis-ter in Saginaw over the week end

Mrs Burr Clark visited relatives in Rose city last week

Leslie Muycoek is on a hunt ing tr ip in the north - Walter Karzidofer and wife were given a farewell par ty Friday evening They are leaving the Ccphelus farm to move to New Balt imore Fdwin F Roberts who has been sershyiously ill with heart trouble and scarlet fever the past week is slowly improvshying

Fugene Smith and wife of Cavan-augh Fake are spending the winter months with their daughter Mrs Mac Martin

John M Har r i s and family of Pinckshyney were Sunday visitors at J D Whites

Mrs Adam Gehringer has sold Tier farm at Tr iangle Lake and is moving to Howell this week

Jessie White and family of Howell visited at Ray Kllsworths Wednesday evening

Win Ru t tmau and family spent Sunshyday at Mel Dunns in Iosco

Herbert Lane has moved to his new home which was the Coral Drew farm near the Sani tor ium

Mr and Mrs Ray T Bentley of Grand Kupids fisited at J I) Whiles Friday evening

Mr Sarle and family are leaving the Archie Gorton farm to spend the winter in southern Florida

Charles P Reed and family were in Corunna Sunday

Albin Pfau Alfred Lange and famshyilies were reclaquoat visitors at Frank Langes in Aon Arbor

The Ladies AW served chicken pie at Edwin Webbs Wednesday evening A good crowd was present Proceed 37oo

SCHOOL NOTES

| Kd Brown former right halfback i on the Pinckney High School football j t eam is now pllaquoying in the back field j of the freshmen squad at the Inivur- sily of Michigan

The universifv coaches have picked Kd as one of Hie best hacks to cntci Michigan in some time

mdash - o Merlynne Aiuburgey has left schoo Miss Catheritte Canade of Ferndale

visited school the past week Phyllis Sprout has returnee

school Miss ShuriK visited school

Thursday Tho our members now ugtre few We are t rying our best to do And if ou only do the same Youll find school one great game

Kvrryonr is now busy at his sew ing

JACKSON COUPLE SPEAK MARRIAGE

VOWS THURSDAY

M I M Helen V Craves and Albert Boucher Are Wed at Brides Home

An au tumn wedding of charm and at t ract ion was the marr iage Wednesshyday noon of Miss Helen Virginia Graves of this city to Albert L Bouchshyer son of Mr and Mrs J F Bouchshyer 8iy West Morrell street

The marr iage was solemnized ut high noon at the home of the bride s parshyents Mr ajid Mrs Marcus T Graves in Pinckney

Only immediate members of the two families were present to witness the ceremony which was performed by Rev A T Camburn of the Methodist Kpiseopal church of Stockbridge

The bride was unat tended and was charming in a costume suit of russet brown cloth with brown fur t r immings with which she wore a small modish hat of gold cloth Her flowers were pink roses

Following the exchanges of the bridshyal vows a wedding breakfast was servshyed to the company of 15 guests

Clirv santheums of golden hue were used to adorn the home and fall foliage added to the a t t ract ive effect of the decorative note

Mr and Mrs Boucher l e f t l a t e r in the day for a wedding tr ip by motor to Cleveland Detroit and Chicago and after Nov 20 will he at home at 321 West Morrell street- Citizen Patr iot

Miss Graves is well known in this vicinity being a graduate of Pinckshyney High school of the class of 1920 and for the past I years has been em-employed as bookkeeper with the Conshysumers Power Co of Jackson Mr Boucher is a g radua te of the Jackson schools and a prosperous youngbusiness man

ELECTION AFTERMATH

S T

JOINT BANK ACCOUNT

bull A great many people deposit money bull bull in joint accounts Some have joint check- bull bull accounts and some have joint savings ac- bull bull counts By this we mean that the account j bull is payable to either of the parties mention g bull ed in the account during their lifetime or in J bull case of death of one the account is immed- J bull iately payable to the survivor without legal 2 5 proceedings9

s This method is not only used by husband and wife but may also be used by any parties who wish to havetheir money matters arranged in this way

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CHUBBS CORNERS

J

WHKRKAS by satisfactory evishydence presented to the undersigned it lias been nmdc to appear thnt The Pinckney State Bank in the Village of Pinckney in the County of Livingston State of Michigan has complied with nil the provisions of the General Bankshying lftws of the State of Michigan reshyquired to he complied with before a corporation shall be aiithomed to commence the business of Banking

NOW THKRKKORK I HUGH A McPHERSON Commissioner of the State Banking Department do hereby certify that The Pinckney State Bank in the Village of Pinckney in the County of Mivingstnn and State of Michigan is authorised to commence the business of Banking as provided in section seven of the General Banking laws of the State of Michigan

IN TESTIMONY WHEKK-OF Witness my hand and

(Seal) Seal of Office at Lansing thil First day of October 1M4

_ HUGH A McPHERSON ^ Commissioner of the Banking

Department

Mr and Mrs Fri Hrigham were in Ann Arbor last Wednesday

Mrs Dell Gnffney visited her daughshyter Mrs Louis Gehringer of Howell bull vt Wednesday

Mrs Kingsley visited her parents Rev N W Pierce and wife of Marion one day last week

Mrs Nettie Hennett has sold her farm to a Mr Roberts of Detroi t

Mr Mr Goodspeed of Detroit visited at the Ezra Hrighum home over Sunshyday

Mrraquo and Mrs Jay Rrigham spent last Thursday at tho home of Thomas Moshier and wife of Ann Arbor

Mr and Mrs F W Allison spent Sunday in Hyron the guest of Mrs Allisons daugh te r and family

Albert Dinklc has purchased a new busker and is busy husking corn

Mrs Roiit Granger spent ltraquo irvr days last week in I inrkney with her father Thos Richardson

Mr and Mrs Butlin anil daugh te r Marion of Detroit were calling on ail their old neighbors here Sunday

Mr and Mrs Ed Hoisel and daughshyter of Howell called on M ) Hoisel and family Sunday

MCP Mark Allison and family spent Tuesday night at San ford Reasons listening to the election re turns over I he radio

- - - - - o mdash

PRIZES FOR BEST ARTICLE

HAMBONES MEDITATIONS r ZoSS LOW P t H A R P

TIMES MIT HIM M O H A R P E R H IT H I T Mpound - - AH DON KNOW BOUT PAT BUT T SHO K N 0 C K E P gtAO O U T E N

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bull bull -bull BmUHm Staff VmmU bull bull titt raquobullbull are be-m W nm b

Open to All Students Attending School in Putnam Township

The Dispatch will give five prires total value 1150 to any student atshytending school in Putnam township for an laquortiele on the following subject How I WoiHd Make Pinckney A More Desirable Village to Live In

The first prire will be valued at 500 second $300 third $200 fourth 810laquo fifth 50 cents

The only conditions of the contest are that the article shall not exceed 500 words In length and that all must be submitted ^o the Dispatch office beshyfore December 1st 1924

Competent disinterested iodjres will decide the winners

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MmglUh Soger BmdashU Two tbftBMQrt people la England

ratted rasir bmsnn 18X00 ncrm fatt

No Wealth in Oil Shml-The Unlterl States bnreati of mine

has conducted tests whleh disprove the hysterical reports that gold diver platinum and potash have been obshytained in paying qnantities from oil shales That it la not commercially possible to recover any of these mateshyrials has been demonstrated by the assays

MajMty o th Law Eight magistrates the clerk anpound bis

assistants n police superintendent an tnspector a sergeant a detective sii constables and two pressmen attended Epplng pollee eonrt when two men were snmmoned for riding bicycles on the footpath neither of whom put In an appearancemdashLondon TJf-Blts

TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN Youwill please take notice that the

undersigned Wendelin Altman a resishydent of the County of Livin^stonyj Michigan for a year last past hereby gives notice that he will make applishycation to the Honorable Jodge of Proshybate in and for the County of Livingshyston and State of Michigan on the 18 day of December 1994 at 1000 A M in the office of said Judge of Probate in the Court Houae of the City of Howell Michigan for a change of his said name to Wendelin Sorg

Wendelin Altman

The outs tanding features of the elecshytion in Pu tnam township were as folshylows

The school amendment was defeated 3-Ki No M Yes

Lynn Gardner for state legislature on Republican ticket ran ahead of his ticket hut behind his opponent H votes

Hiram R Smith for prosecuting atshytorney also made an excellent showing cut t ing Don Van Winkles majori ty down to 11

Davis democrat ic nominee for presishydent received 31 majority

Groesbeck and Couzens were ed here by 25 majority

Miss Nellie Gardner for t reasurer on Democrat ticket the township by 91 majority

Cloirles Hoff on Democratic ticket for Sheriff defeated Ired Teeple Reshypublican by H 2 majority Tins big showing is admit ted by Teeples friends to be on account of the popular i ty of the Hoff shrievalty service in this vicshyinity Before election two c a r s ago Hoff promised the voters in this par t of the county that if elected he would do all in his power towards the en-foreement of law and it would seem from bis splendid showing at the polls I this year that the Voters were satisfied i with his efforts He appointed Irvin I Kennedy local deputy sheriff and gave him all the backing requested T h e result is tha t Kennedy has made good i as i peace officer and although his chief was defeated by a very small ] majori ty in Livingston county the t i t - i ens of this township regrdless of par ty affiliations would like to see Kennedy retained here as deputy shershyiff so that the good work for law enshyforcement may he continued And we unders tand that influential Republishycans have volunteered to petition the Sheriff-elect to reappoint Kennedy to the office

bull - o

Dishonett Borrower$ Vhv does the nvernjre man or womshy

an who borrows honks lose all sense of property rights and fall to return them ovrr-pr imlaquohraquor compulsion Othlaquor things fivtpmrlv come back to the lender hi f it is n book he is lucky bull ullt ffiins possesvinn of it

Tgt-ltgti T laquo i j i s r r i t

PINCKNEY STATE BANK] Officers Director bull

C L SIGLER C L SIGLER President W E FARNAM THOS READ ___Vice-president Q W TttPLE S A H MURPHY Cashier THOS READ bull

nitration ampmnrra

(Enmmmtitij Qlnngrrgattimal QHjitrrij ftnrknri fHirtjtgatt

3fatmnbrr lfi IB 10 2fl 1024

SUNDAY

Dedication Service 1030 Dr J W Sutherland Speaker

Super intendent Michigan Congregational Conference

Evening Service 730 Rev C H Harder Speaker Missionary Michigan Congregational Conference

bull TUESDAY j

Home-Coming s 4 Supper Served in New Dining Room

Evening Service ^^ __730 Former Pastors of Pinckney Speakers

WEDNESDAY

Evening Service Mr Geo W Soerheide Speaker

City Mission Cleveland O

730

THURSDAY

Evening Service 730 Rev Paul Voelker Speaker

President Olivet College

Special Music at Each Service

The Public u Cordially invited

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NOTICE Keep your credit good by paying you account before October 1st No more credit after tbat date if acct not settled

We Offer the FoUowkg Articles for Cash A $2400mdash3-Burner Ofl Cooker for $17 00 A $3000 4 B laquo u u OQ Cooker for $20 00 A 75c Pocket Knife for ^ A $125 tad $150 Pocket Knife for I trade 9 0 c A $150 Ahrm Clock for j i laquoa A $150 Watck for I j bdquo A $300 RacSofite Watch for L t g A $3000 Bom Poller far ^ bdquo _ I I I $ i a 0 0

Teeple i lctraware gt

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mm THE P1NCKNEY DISPATCH mmmmmmmy W

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OUR PRICES ON BEEF Are as follows

Round Steak 25c lb Loin and Porterhouse 28c Shoulder Roast 15c Rib Stew 8 to 10c

8 I

With every other food getting higher EAT MORE MEAT

Reason amp Reason mm

bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull

Full Line of Accessories and Genuine Ford Parts

Expert Repairmen Satisfaction Guaranteed

Full line of Oils and Greases Stop Lights Spot Lights Bulbs and Heaters

Special price on 30x3 1-2 Fabrics $10 for Tire and Tube while they last

R DAY BIRD Pinckney Ford Sales and Service

M i H i i m m m n M i H u i

Ciiicf Justice White am

Mr Justice Harlan chewed tobacco in the Supreme Court room and lived to a ripe old age and in full vigor at 76 and 78 yean respectively Chew Beech-Nut and remain strong and vigorous

Over2S0MiHkn Packages SoMf in laquo

Single Year

Childrens Ailments TIS0RDERS of the stomach and constipation are U the most common diseases of children To

correct them you will find nothing better than srlains Tablets One tablet at bed time will

do th$ work and will make your child bright and fcheeriiil the following morning Do not punish

jour Children by giving them castor oil Chamber-are better and more pleasant to take-

r him berl a irVs Tablets M- iVs H7-

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P i n c k n e y D i s p a t c h

Entered at the Postofficeat Finck-oey Mich araquo Second Claos Matter

LINCOLN E SI ITH PUBLISHER

Subscription $126 a Year la Advauc

Mr B r o w n ot N u r t h v i l l c m a n a g e r of t h i s d i s t r i c t l o r t he D e t r o i t Kdison C o t u p a u y a n d his a s s i s t a n t Mr Wi lk in son w e r e p l e a s a n t c a l l e r s a t t h e Disshyp a t c h office M o n d a y

T h e m a r r i a g e of Dr J D S i n g e r a n d Miss M a r g a r e t I r m i t both of B r i g h t o n w a s sulcinni cd at tin- home of Mr a n d Mrs G e o r g e W S m i t h of E a s t Cirand l i ive r s t r e e t tliii (W edshyn e s d a y ) a f t e r n o o n it J 00 o c lock Rev K K J ) u r k e e of tin- W M cl iurcl i officiatetl a n d uuly t he i j iunedi-LI11 r e l a t i v e s were prese j i t T h e y left on t he a f t e r n o o n t r a in for a w e d d i n g l o u r to I cnnsyU anni the Dr s old iionie - A r g u s

T h e F a r m i n g t o n t o w n s h i p boa rd h a v e a d o p t e d a r e s o l u t i o n t o s u b m i t the q u e s t i o n of l i gh t i ng G r a n d Rivet road f rom t h e W a y n e c o u n t y in te r see -thfh on the east to the N o s i t o w n s h i p

Mrs F r e d G r i e v e of A n n A r b o r a n d I l i u deg t i u w l s t T l u ^ e n f will he M r s Hiram S m i t h of H o w e l l we re Mipplied by the D e t r o i t Kdison Co if

LOCAL AND GENERAL

M r s Al ice P r i c e of D e t r o i t is visitshying M r s E H Bye r

Mrs K H B y e r v is i ted a t W a l k e r shysilk O n t a few d a s s l as t week

v i s i t o r s a t t h e h o m e of G VV T h u r s d a y

R e iso n f a v o r a b l e ac t ion is t a k e n by the vo te rs

I lvmoiUh Mail

F l o y d R e a s o n was in Howe l l Tues - j d a I TUBERCULOSIS CLINIC

D o n a l d Mgk-r of D e t r o i t spen t the j A ] u r m a n t n t t- t u b e r c u l o s i s cl inic week end with his p a r e n t s Dr and w i bdquo ]) ^ ^ | ( t t ) u ^ ^ o f t h M r s L i - S i g l e r e o u n t y n u r s e H o w e l l on S a t u r d a y

Mrs Rex S m i t h a n d Mrs C J i N ovember bullgt 19JI a n d t i i r rp a f t e r the C l i n t o n w e r e Arm A r b o r v is i tors tiiirff S a t u rday of each m o n t h Hourgt T h u r s d a y imi to -l-oo a m a n d 2 00 to Vltgtgt

i i bull ^ raquo I- l n- 1 be c o n d u c t e d bv L i v i n g s t o n 1 s o s e t t e r s b r ed in D e n m a r k and

i m p o r t e d on a c c o u n t of t h e i r line pedshyig rees a n d i n d i v i d u a l i t y w e r e t a k e n to t h e d o g r a n c h n e a r 1 u t te rson l ake this w e e k

M r and Mrs C l a u d e fteason and fami ly were Ann A r b o r v is i tors Sun-d a )

Mr a n d Mrs Wiil T i p l a d y a n d fam- ily of W e b s t e r were S u n d a y vis i tors a t t he h o m e of C l a r e n c e S t a c k a b l e j

P a t L a v e s a n d L e e Lavey were1

J a c k s o n vrs i tors S u n d a y

Mr a n d Mrs W 11 M a n n i n g and Mr a n d M r s R a l p h S c h r o d e r of Lai is-ing w e r e v is i to rs a t the h o m e of C S 1 l a r g e r T h u r s d a y

Miss P a u l i n e Reason s p e n t the week j end wi th A n n A r b o r r e l a t i ve s

lti sp l e of Hie d i s a g r e e a b l e sveather las t l r i d a a stiff cold ga le of ssindf b l o v i n g tlie a t t e n d a n c e at t he f o o t b a l l g a m e was good A l a r g e n u m b e r oi Fnwic rv i l l c s u p p o r t e r s w e r e p r e s e n t

gt 11 C a r r has been a s s i s t i ng R o b e r t J a c k e rec t a c o t t a g e at L a k e l a n d

j l o i i r d v Pub l i c H e a l t h S e r v i c e u n d e r the d i r e c t i o n of Dr L ] P i e rce of

j the Si a t e S a n a t o r i u m - - - i

P e a r l T h i m b l e s Ludi i s of high da-vs in Chin use

t h e d a i n t i e s t t h i m b l e s i iuag innb ie some of tliiin be ing c a r v e d out of

pioM-rtious p e a r l s and o r n a m e n t e d wi th j Viands of fine gold on w h i c h all nnin-I nee of q u a i n t imd f a n t a s t i c d e s i g n s Hre engrived

Ind i rec t S i g h t His VfltmdashIt s a s h a m e t h a t big

fat w o m a n hnd to t a k e t h e sea t dishyrec t ly rn front of you Y o u r e missshying the w h o l e s h o w Mr L i t t l e t o n mdash v o nor all of it S h e s r e a d i n g all the t i t l e s a loud mdashBuf fa lo E x p r e s s

C alder onn Busy Pen lt a h b V o t t rgt- r e | o t n - i ed S p a n i s h

hu ai 1 i - f a n d p o r t ltbull - bulllt i ude f u t i g -

l i l e W o l k e l I l e i-oe i- bull i i l l i n ^ h is

i i l e 111 p l a y s a n d 7 S I O I - i t i pluVS

for t h e i l i u r e l a H e e i t j o v r d t X t m o -

dinars pepulnr i tv

CHURCH NOTES A i i i imir is c i r c u l a t i n g a r o u n d town t h a t doe G e n t i l e cNpects to aga in con duc t a fruit s to re and ice c r e a m p a r shylor h e r e

G P L a m h e i d s o n will sell his pershysonal p m p e r t s at the f a rm l l i u r s d a v Nov J i b begiiii i Dg at 1lt) o c lock L u n c h at noon

Miss Rose L a v e y spen t las l Thur s shyd a y wi th Mr a n d Mrs C l a r e n c e S t a c k ab le

Dr H V Sigki svas i Ann A r b o r 1 u e s d a y

Mr a n d M r s R W Bird and chil d r e n spen t S u n d a y with W h i t m o r e L ke f r i ends

B o r n to Mr and Mrs F r e d R e a d of D e t r o i t Nov l o t h a d a u g h t e r

Mr a n d M r gt M Ni le a n d son ot J a c k s o n w e r e v is i tors at the P a t L a v e y h o m e last F r i d a v and S a tu rdav

L woo] buck I- v r a r s old Mr a n d Mrs 1 red B o w m a n visd-d ~ -ltbull j bull

I or t H u r o n r e l a t ives severa l d a v s last

C o m m u n i t y C o n g r e g a t i o n a l Church

II L M A V C L O I T P a s t o r

M o r n i n g W o r s h i p liPJo a in Su nda v School I 1 0 a in

N o r t h H a m b u r g

Suudav School J 0() p in

W o r s h i p 3d)0 p Mi

The Most Exquisite Taste can be Satisfied at Our

Ice Cream Parlors The Connor Ice Cream Co make special efforts to produce someshything newmdashsomething different in Ice Cream Flavors Just now they are specializing on

Cherry Ice Cream a most deled able frozen dainty with ^he ripened cherry crushed and mingled into a beautiful and satisfying congealed refreshment

Also Maple-Nut Ice Cream in which the purest Maple Juices flavor various Nut Meats blended and frozen for your approval

If you have not yet tried eitherof these new creations a pleasant surshyprise awaits you

BARRYS JO N Y A L DRUGS STORE

Cooking by Current

WANTS FOR SALE ETC

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PINCKNEY BAKERY ^ OUR BREAD SPECIALTIES

The ever growing demand for Blue Ribbon Bread Proves Its Popularity

Nice Sweet Raisin Bread YOUD Be Pleased With a Trial of Our Different Pastries

I Try Our Graham Bread and Sandwich Bread

G B b A N K E N Prop

week

S U C a r r A e l C a r p e n t e r and H a r r y Lee a r e enjoying 1 a h u n t i n g t r i p in v rn Mich igan

i V Yince a n d son r e t u r n e d to eir h o m e a t I i y r o n S u n d a y

Mri A l f r ed M o n k s is v is i t ing S t o c k -b r idge r e l a t i ves

MLsses Nel l ie G a r d n e r Drus i l l a a n d F l o r e n c e M u r p h y and L o r e n z o M u r p h y a t t e n d e d the foo tba l l g a m e a t A n n Ar shybor S a t u r d a y

M r a n d M r s L o u i s M o n k s a n d da ugh t e r M a r i e of J a c k s o n s p e n t S u n d a y wi th Miss L u c y H a r r i s

M r s K a t e S a l i s b u r y who has been v i s i t ing seve ra l w e e k s wi th h e r vSigler c o u s i n s w e n t to A n n A r b o r T h u r s d a y las t to visi t in t h e h o m e of J u d g e N e w -kirk fc AJLiil

Mr and Mrs S J Ashenbrenner and daughter of Detroit were visitors at the Fred Bowman home the first of the week

Miss Minnie Reason was a fioweU caller Tuesday

Mrs S H Carr Miss Ijiura Hofl and Mrs Robt Jack and Mrs Milo Kettier were inn Arbor visitors Thursday

Mr jnd Mrs Frank Jioycc of Stock-bridge were Sunday guests of Mr and Mrs Floyd Reason

Mr and Mrs Geo Barnes of St Johns spent several days last week with her sister Mrs Floyd Reason

Mr and Mrs J M Harris and famshyily spent Sunday with Mr and Mrs John White near Howell

Mr and Mrs Frank Kennedy and family of Detroit are visiting Mr and Mr Patrick Kennedy

W Uurn Dancer of Stockbridge transacted business in Pinckney Tuesshyday

The Pinckney fire department WHS called to the Frank Barton farm two miles west of Anderson Monday aftershynoon A Are in a nearby marsh wa spreading so rapidly in the hifh wind er Two gangs of men threshing and putting up sifo corn in the neighborshyhood turned ia and by hard work

off the blase before it reached Jkrton buiidtifs

C i R A I l l O N O L A sVioo i n s t r u m e n t with lti r e c o r d s Will sell for $1000 I n q u i r e D i spa tch office

F O R HI NT The R u d o l p h I azalo f a r m one mile nor th of A n d e r s o n

( i O O D K A T l N C i Or Inn

T U M I S for s a l e L C R o g e r s

1

CIDER APPLES for sale William Doyle

RabCs Sulkey FOR SALEMrs Roy Hannctt

Thoroughbred Hereford bull and 0 I C boar for sale Robert Kelley

House for sale or rent Inquire J C Pinkie DOLL l l TIIK OLD H U S - A n d

make it look as if it had some pep David Jones automobile finishing

CASH PAIDmdashFor false teeth gold i crowns and bridges old magnet points and old gold Mail tn Hoke Smelting and Refining Co Otsego Mich Let us hear from you

FOR SALEmdashTo reduce stock will sell a few Silver Canipine hens cheap

Ben E White FOR SERVICEmdashPoland China boar

(W K Livingston strain) Paul Fohcy

WILL CALLmdashWednesday of every week for junk of all kinds Rags rubbers papers magasines metal etc Notify Dispatch office Also pay highest prices for second hand furnishyture

H Storey Phone 97M Dexter MONEY TO LOANmdashOn improved

farms at 6 per cent For particushylars write Brown Cress amp Company First National Bank Building Ann Arbor Michigan

FOR SALEmdashA quantity of hay and cum John R Marthv

FLUFF RUGSmdashIf you have any carshypet to make into rugsmdashdrop us a card We famish border free You will like our work and our prices Pinekney Fluff Rug Co Pmckaey Mich

FOR SERVICEmdashShorthorn Durham Bull elifJblt for registry

Ed Spoan JUffTICft OF T M PEACB

Cooking without fire smoke or aslns without fui c or gases cooking with a steady unchanging heat cooking at no greater bother than the snapping of a switchmdashthat is electric cooking

The electric range now so widely used has brought great comfort into the kitchen it has done away with the troubles the watchfulness the anxieties of the old time cookshying and has substituted a sure cleanly and comparatively effortless method of preparing food for the table

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w5 7-THE PINCKNEY DISPATCH

m

HMITI STATE NEWS IN BRIEF

S

Coolidge Puts Up Presidents Cup

WASHINGTON mdash President Coolidge has taken a long Step toward arousing greatshye r interest in athlet ics in the

army and the navy and in the counshytry general ly by present ing to athshyletic representa t ives of the army and of t h e scout ing fUet a challenge cup for football between service teams of the two b rand ie s

Indicat ion a re that as a result of this one of the great annual athlet ic events of the future will center about the Coolidge cup or as it will be offishycially called the Pres ident s ( up

T h e Pres ident summoned athlet ic representa t ives of the army and the navy to the Whi te House He then formally turned over to them a cup to be contested for every year by two football teams chosen from officers and enlisted men of the two forces

T h e first contest for the cup was set for November Uigt at Griffith s tadium Each team will be composed of one officer and ten enlisted men

Pres ident Coolidge himself will bulltart the game and there is every inshydication that it will be a social and athletic event rivaling the contest between West Point and Annapolis

Maj Paul Baade infantry represhysen t ing the array from Fort Benning and Lieut Com Hamil ton V Bryan scouting fleet athlet ic officer together with Coxswain Claude A Ezell and

Staff Sergt Har ry O Troupe represhysent ing the enlisted men of the army nnd the fleet received the cup It ia of generous proport ions embossed Ua blue and gold and su rmounted by the American eagle

In connection with the presenta t ion the Pres ident made this s t a tement

As President of the United Sta tes of America in the interest of good clean Ileal thy recreat ion for the peoshyple of the ent i re country and to enshycourage and s t imula te athlet ics among the enlisted men of the servshyices I offer this cup to be known as the Presid nt s cup for contest beshytween footkil l teams of the army and navy from units or subdivisions of forces urn -r such te rms as the secshyre tary of war and the secretary of navy may de t e rmine provided howshyever tha t the teams shall be coin posed of enlisted men and officers in about the same proportion as a re offishycers and enlisted men in the services

I desire to mention the grea t beneshyfits to mind and body that result from part icipat ion in good clean whole some sport The people of the United S ta tes have a lways been devoted to manly contests and I know of no betshyter way to give to them a t rue examshyple of sport in its best form than to offer such a cup as this for a trophy to be contested for by the army and the navy

Six New Reclamation Projects Approved

SIX new Western reclamation projshyects embracing more than 400-000 acres have been approved as feasible from an engineering

economic agricul tural and land develshyopment s tandpoint by investigating commit tees whose reports are made public by the Interior depar tment

Studies of the projects were conshyducted by professors of agr icul tural colleges In s ta tes In which they a re located s t a te agricultural officials and bankers In their development it Is recommended tha t policies and methshyods proposed by the committee of speshycial advisors of reclamation be folshylowed T h e projects

VaJe project Oregon 28305 acres msifily sage brush with an est imated gross annual crop re turn after irrigashytion of $35 an acre Ninety per cent of the land will require subdivision and se t t lement and will provide farms for 2fi0 to 300 set t lers

Baker project Oregon Irr igable land es t imated at 26031 acres which Should yield a gross annual re turn of between $30no t6 $3750 per acre The value of the raw land Is fixed at between $250 to $5 an acre

Kittitas project Washington W38U

acres of Irrigable land Including 48-402 acres of agricultural n a t u r e 21-925 of pas ture and 20071 of waste land It is recommended that farm units should not he less than laquoS0 acres on the best grade soil nnd about 1150 acres on the poorer grades in order to y M d an income for a family The bet ter land shoulrf re turn a gross anshynual income of from $10 to $55 an acre after the development

Uwyhee project lt ireyon 5SS59 acres of first-class land well adapted to produce satisfactory yield of crops while there is raquo15140 acres of second class lund that cannot produce more than about 75 per cent of the yield of the first-class land A good farm with a variety of [gtrod4rts ought to produce as much as $00 an acre annual ly

Salt Lake basin project U t a h 110000 acres will be directly beneshyfited and there a re excellent marke t ing and t ranspor t ing facilities Mixed crops should yield from $50 to $80 per acre u year The lands to be Irrigatshyed a re already colonized and settled on small farms

Spanish Springs project N e v a d a Including 39H50 acres of high-grade land adap tab le to a wide variety of crops

Airplane vs the Battleship in Congress

REGAKDLRSS of the outcome of

the investigation now being made by the general board of the navy under Instructions by

the secre tary and at the instigation of the Pres ident a showdown light in the old airplane-bat t leship controvershysy looms when congress reopens in December

Whatever the findings of the hoard and it is admit ted on all sides that they must be predicated on the basis tha t the bat t leship is still the main reliance in sen power a i r en thus ias t s a re laying plans for a drive on conshygress to get full recognition of the increaslnc importance of aviation In the national defense with a sepa ra t e air force as their final objective

Hear tened by President Coolidges recent u t te rances In which he voiced his belief in the possibility of the airshyp lane superseding the surface fighting ship they propose to demand that an impart ia l tr ibunal hear their case and tha t the aerial fighting forces be placed In a position to be developed free from the obstruct ionis ts in the mil i tary services

On the other hand naval officers are gravely concerned over the recent developments realizing the popular appeal of the aviation propaganda with Its promise of cheap and effecshytive nat ional preparedness They fear that as Intimated by the Presi dent no provision will be made fo modernizinc the older bat t leships for proper maintenance of the fleet and for construction unless the controvershysy over the relative meri ts of aircraft nnd bat t leships Is finally and definiteshyly settled

T h e round-the-world flight by the army flyers spectacular and epochal ns it was did not in the opinion of the majority of exper ts war ran t the conclusions drawn in some quar te rs

The one outs tanding lesson of the achievement they say was that it demonst ra ted conclusively the dependshyence of aircraft on surface ships in long-distance work It is pointed out tha t while the flyers were covering their twenty-odd thousand miles apshyproximately 87000 miles of s teaming was done hy United S ta t e s naval vesshysels in helping to put the flight across

Flag With Only 40 Stars Causes Stir

GEN FRANK T HTNES direcshy

tor of the veterans bureau Ims begun an Investigation of the origin nnd history of the

flag with only 40 stars which was disshyplayed by Mrs Lillian R Sire before de legates of the New York Sta te Fedshyera t ion of Womens Clubs in New York

So far a s he has been aide to learn only one of the freak flags ever has appeared in the ve terans bureau service I t was shipped from Perry-rille Md along with five other flags FelaVnary 7 1922 and w a s received at Hospital No 49 Philadelphia Februshya r y 16 1raquo22 At tha t t ime Perryvll ie w a s a United S t a t e s public hea l th bull bull t r i c e depot

Cteseral H lnes deplored published Assertions the bureau had contracted l o r 800000 cheap shoddy flags for the coffins of dead ve te rans

8 O B M tUne ago according to the dishyrector compUUnt was made tha t t h e eofta of s soldier who died in Hosshypital NO 48 W t t covered with a flag SafUtt on ly 4 0 bull H e immediately

officer in chart whether the

regarding flags a M SOS osssptttef with and whether

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the flag in question had been Inshyspected

The answer to both quest ions was in the affirmative The oflieer also stated according to the director tha t all o ther Macs in stock had been found to be regulat ion

A brother of Har ry H Pench the veteran whose coffin was covered with the improperly made flag hart reported the m a t t e r to the bureau It was the flag which covered Benchs coffin that Mrs Sire showed the deleshygates

T h e New York City Federa t ion of Women s Clubs has appointed a comshymittee consisting of Mrs Belle de Rivera honorary p re s iden t Mrs Lilshylian R Sire who brought the m a t t e r to public a t tent ion nnd who is presishydent of the Womens National Demoshycra t ic club nnd Mrs William Albert Lewis

Char les A Bench bro ther of Har ry H Bench a soldier who served his country 20 years and died in the Vetshyerans hospital at Phi ladelphia gave Mrs Sire a cheap 40-star flag which had been draped about the coffla when it reached the family home in Readshying Pa Mr Bench replaced it with a flag he taodght more suitable

SaginawmdashJ W Ferdney former m e m b e r of congress from the eighth distr ict baa taken in his annua l deer hunt ing t r ip in Luce county this year He is 71 yea r s old

Owosso mdash Mason Ri lenberry 72 yea r s old a farmer living near Banshycroft was found dead in his barn A physician said that he evidently had suffered a hear t a t tack while loading a wagon

SturgismdashCity Attorney Paul Wal t broke his arm in an a t t emp t to c rank his automobile A few mnu tes la te r his mother- in law Mrs El izabeth Cole t r ied to open a heavy ga te at her husshyband s farm and the ga te fell on tier f rac tur ing her hip

FlintmdashAfter going to a local newsshypaper office to announce that he would main ta in his record of voting for evshyery Pres iden t since Lincoln Theodore V Canright 94 years old fell from his porch while r e tu rn ing to his home and was seriously injured

OwossomdashJohn McAvoy 52 years old a p rominen t New Haven Townshyship lar jner waa found dead in the wa te r t ank on his farm It is beshylieved that he sat down on the edge of the tank to lest and suffered a s t roke falling irto the tank and drowning

Detroi t Majorities of nearly 10 to 1 were rolled up by the Republ ican s t a t e and county t ickets in Wayne county according to complete reshytu rns In pract ical ly every case the con tes t s were decided upon s t ra igh t par ty l ines with but sl ight fluctuashyt ions in the voe

Por t HuronmdashMiss Lau ra Copeland of Boston is in Port Huron to car ry on the work of the Rotary clubs cripshypled chi ldren s clinic She will carry out the recommendat ions of the recent clinic and be of service to local medishycal men also teaching pa ren t s proper mas sage methods in the care of cripshypled children

RomeomdashTwo I ta l ians demanding repr i sa l s for wounds one suffered tn a domest ic feud were killed here as they s tormed the home of Joseph Pill-eri to Identification of one of the men as Patsy Prris a former enemy of Pi l ler l to was t s t ab i l shed soon after the shooting Pillerito said he had never seen the third man before

Det ro i tmdashResumpt ion of activity at the Monnier road studio of the Deshytroit Motion P ic ture company within a few weeks has been announced folshylowing the annual meet ing of stockshyholders It was voted to assume a mor tgage of $150000 on the proper ty l iquidate ou ts tand ing obl igat ions and r e sume the production of pic tures

Grand RapidsmdashErect ion of a memorshyial to the Grand Rapids service men of the Civil Spanish-American and world wars now rests upon the city commission a s the result of the comshypletion of a general design by a civilshyian commit tee appointed by former Mayor Jul ius Tisch a year ago The project it is es t imated will cost $300000

Detroi tmdashForeign capital is pouring into Germany due to the excessively high rates of in teres t at which money-Is loaned and Jackie Coogan created as much a t ten t ion in Berlin as the Zeppelin ZR-3 These observat ions along with m a n o thers were brought back to Detroit fcy C Leidich who reshyturned a few days ago from his 73rd t r ip abroad in the past 30 years

Grand RapidsmdashThe Commercial Savings bank and the People s Savshyings bank has b ten merged with the Kent S ta te bank in the largest t ransshyact ion in Grand Rapids banking hisshytory The deal involved $6000000 asse t s Stockholders of the Comshymercial and People s banks gave thei r consent at special meet ings after the deal had won the sanct ion of the s ta te banking i epa r tmen t

Marsha l lmdashEvery precinct in Batt le Creek voted in favor or eas te rn standshyard t ime Marshall had been holding off apparen t ly to see what action Bat t le Creek would take A great many Marshall people work in Battle Creek and the result ing inconvenience of the two towns were using different t ime probably would be sufficient to influence Marshal l s decision it was believed This city it is believed will r emain on eas te rn s t anda rd t ime the year around

LAnsemdashMrs Cora Reynolds Andershyson of LAnse has been elected Repshyre sen ta t ive of t i e Iron dis t r ic t in the S ta t e House )f Represen ta t ives She ran on the Republican t icket wi thout Democrat ic opposition and will reshyplace Rep Pat r ick OBrien ve te ran Upper Pen insuK legislator wbo reshyt i red following the special session of 1923 Mrs Anderson is the first woman to become a member of the House and the second to become a m e m b e r of the legislature

KalamazoomdashRais ing of $150000 for the expansion of the Bronson Methoshydist Hospi ta l in the next three yea rs has been announced here The fund was obtained through subscr ip t ions of $100000 fulfilling the condi t ions imshyposed in t en ta t ive gifts of 125000 each by Mrs Dorothy Peck Clark of Kalamazoo and Mr and Mrs W M Earnart of Ann Arbor The larger proportion of the fund was obtained ia Methodist congregations throughout the state The proposed expansion would give the hospital almost double its capaci ty and equipment

HillsdalemdashO C Dickinson of this ci ty an employe of the New York Censhyt ra l ra i l road since 1882 local t icket agen t for the last 28 years has reshytired after i2 years In the company s employ

S turg ismdashAust in McDonald awaitshying t ranspor ta t ion to J a c k s o n prison for a t e r m of oae to 15 y e a r s for carshyry ing concealed weapons dug a hole th rough the brick walls of the county jail a t Centervil le and escaped

Berk leymdashFrank Wilcox 40 yea r s old w a s c rushed to dea th benea th his house here when a gus t of wind blew it from jacks on which it was s tanding Wilcox who was laying a foundation had jus t crawled under the bouse when it fell

MonroemdashEdward Kitchin Jr 9 y e a r s old shot and killed himself while playing with his fa ther s reshyvolver The bullet en te red the boys left eye and caused ins tan t death The Ki tchins live on a farm six miles west of Monroe

Detroi tmdashMichigan Democracy lost her sole represen ta t ive in Congress in the Republican landsl ide tha t swept the s ta te Rober t H Clancy of Deshytroit r epresen t ing the F i r s t District was badly defeat t d by his Republican opponent John B Sosnowski

Lans ingmdashFores t fires which are preva len t in the nor the rn pa r t of the s t a t e a re general ly under control and confined to s lashings and cut-over land according to repor ts received by John Baird s ta te conserva t ion comshymiss ioner from deputy fire wardens

E s c a n a b a - Irving Micheau 15 years old of Brampton had his r ight hand mut i l a ted and shot in his neck and r ight ear the result of the accidenta l d ischarge of his shotgun Micheau picking the gun up n o r r the ground placed his hand over the end of the ba r r e l

Detroi tmdashAlbert Majewski Ham-t ramck was ar res ted by the police of tha t city on a charge of mans laugh te r following the death of a 10-year-old boy who is s a i l to have fallen from the running board of Majewski s autoshymobile when the la t ter s t a r t ed the mashychine in an effort to shake the boy off

AlbionmdashThe principal fea ture of the Albion election was the naming of a woman for a municipal office for the first t ime in the his tory of the city Mrs Kate Bromeling who has carr ied on a real es ta te and insurance business since the dea th of her husshyband four yea r j ago was named just ice of the peace

LansingmdashMajor i t ies which a re beshylieved to have finally crushed in Michigan any a t tempt to impose an income tax upen the public and furshyther a t t e m p t s o abolish parochial schools were rolled up in the s ta te election The chool a m e n d m e n t was bea ten 2 to 1 while the income tax proposal was beaten near ly 5 to 1

DetroitmdashConvicted solely on his finshyger-prints Onnie Howard 27 was sen tenced to se rve one to five yea r s in Jackson prison for burglary Lieutenshyant Charles Carmody head of the poshylice identification bureau produced at the t r ial pr ints found at the scene of the cr ime and pointed out s t r ik ing l ikenesses in them to the finger-prints of Howard

Grand Rapius mdashDorothy Plucker 2-year-old daughter of Mr and Mrs Clifshyford Plucker was seriously Injured when struck near her home by an aushytomobile in charge of Ted Rice of Howard City The shock of the accishydent revived a nervous trouble in Rice and he was taken to a hospi tal where physicians say he has little chance for recovery

LansingmdashMichigan has elected a 1925 Legis la ture that is solidly Re publican In 1923 the Democra t s had fivemembers i n t h e House and none in the Sena te Four of Lhose five ran for re-election and according to offishycial r e tu rns they have all been de feated The fifth Democrat Dr De-nias Dawe of Monroe did not run for renomna t ion and his place has also been taken by a Republican

Grand RapidsmdashJohn Ormand 52 years old was killed when he was s t ruck by a Fere A^aiquette passenger t rain at F rank l in s crossing Orraond was walking mine from work and is said to have^ t epped around the crossshying ga tes and walked direct ly into the path of the train A 3ister Rose Ormond was at the cross ing when the accident occurred but did not reshyalize the victim was he r b ro the r unshytil he was identified an hour la ter

De t ro i tmdashPurchase of 85 ac res and condemnat ion -jf 11 and one-half more to c o m p l e x the recrea t ion deshypa r tmen t s summer camp on Eular lake near Howell has been ordered by the Detroit common council Alshythough 40 acres of the first t r ac t is half a mile from the l ake it was s ta ted tha t the remain ing 45 ac res could not be bought for less than $20-000 the price to be paid for the whole 85 When the two proper t i es a re acshyquired the a m o will su r round the lake

Lans ingmdashPres iden t Calvin Coolidge carr ied Michigan by a major i ty of 600-000 votes over the combined tota ls of his two r ivals a sweep that has not even been approached in the s t a t e s political h is tory according to complete r e tu rns He polled near ly 80 per cent of the total vote compared with 72 per cent of the total vote given Hardshying In 1920 Davis received only about 13 per cent of the to ta l The LaFol-lette third party failed to attract more than 9 per cent of the Michigaa vote Oroesbeck and Couxens were more than W0000 ahead of their rivals

HOW THE STATES CAST VOTE FOR PRESIDENT

U gt

S t a t e f I O Q

o u a -J

12mdashAlabama 3mdashArizona 9 A r k a n s a s

13mdashCalifornia 6mdashColorado 7mdashConnect icut 3mdashDelaware 6- -F lor ida

14mdashGeorgia 4mdashIdaho

29mdashIllinois 15mdashIndiana 13mdashIowa 10mdashKansas 13mdashKentucky 10mdashLouisiana

6mdashMaine 8mdashMaryland

18mdashMassachuse t t s 15mdashMichigan 12mdashMinnesota 10mdashMississippi 18mdashMissouri 4mdashMontana 8mdashNebraska 3mdashNevada 4mdashNew H a m p s h i r e

14mdashNew J e r s e y 3mdashNew Mexico

45mdashNew York 12mdashNorth Carol ina

5mdashNorth Dakota 24mdashOhio 10mdashOklahoma

5mdashOregon 38mdashPennsylvania

5mdashRhode Island 9mdashSouth Carolina 6mdashSouth Dakota

12mdashTennessee 20mdashTexas

4mdashUtah 4mdashVermont

12mdashVirginia 7mdashWashington

8mdashWest Virginia 13mdashWisconsin

3mdashWyoming

12

9 13 6 7 3

4 29 15 13 10 13

6 S

18 15 12

18 4 8 o ltJ

4 14 3

45

5 24

5 38

6 14

10

10

12

10

4

4

7 8

12 20

12

Wouldnt Have Autoist Think He Was Curious

A motorcar apparent ly afflicted with dropsy or some such malady s topped in front of t h e res idence of Gap Johnson of Rumpus Ridge After examining the machine s upper shell the drfver seized cer ta in tools and reshyclining on his back scuffed himself under the car and began thumping on Its s tomach Mr Johnson who had

| been rest ing for some t ime by hanging

J onto his own fence with his elbows

I hooked over the top rail kept silent

j for a short season and then inqu i red

I dont reckon you re aiming to go

to Fiddle Creek a t t e r you get that

I t h e r e contrapt ion fixed

No replied the gent under the car

j Aw to Slippery Slap m e b b y T i No I H m To Sandy Mush t h e n

No Well dont get the idy t h a t I keer

j2 whur the hmdash1 youre going t o mdash Kansas City Star

631 Tota ls 382 136 13 Necessa ry to elect 266

HIGHLIGHTS FROM ELECTION RETURNS

Wash ing tonmdashWil l i am E Borah of j Idaho will be the Republ ican leader Of the s ena t e in the next congress i

St Paul MinnmdashMagnus Johnson Minnesota s widely known dir t farmshye r sena tor was defeated for re-elecshytion by Thomas D Schall Republican

New YorkmdashBy running near ly a million votes ahead of his t icket Alshyfred E Smi th Democra t defeated Colonel Roosevel t for the office of governor of t h e Empi re s ta te

Sena tor F r a n c i s E War ren Repubshyl ican 80 and father-in-law of General John J Pe r sh ing has been re-elected to the sena te He has a l ready served the re a quar te r of a century

Wil l iam Allen Whi te Independent for governor of Kansas who camshypaigned on but one ou t s t and ing issue opposit ion to the Ku Klux Klan was snowed under by a klan-indorsed canshydida te

Atlas TRACM MARK

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Two women were elected governors of s ta tes for the first t ime in his tory The new governors are Mrs Wil l iam

A Ferguson in Texas and Mrs Nellie G Ross in Wyoming Both a re Demshyocra t s

Des Moines IamdashComplete check of unofficial r e t u r n s in the senator ia l j contes t in Iowa showed tha t Sena tor

Smi th W Brookhar t had a major i ty of less than 1200 over his Democrat ic opponent Daniel F Steck j

| ChicagomdashThe first Negro ever j elected to a municipal judgeship roll-

ed into office on the Republican land- si Me Albert B George 51 a lawyer j

defeated his Democra t ic opponent by i a majori ty of be tween 65000 and 70-

000 votes

New YorkmdashTabula t ion of the popu- lar vote for p res iden t of the United I S t a t e s ind ica tes tha t P res iden t Cool- I idge has a c lear lead of more than 7500000 over John Davis The tabu- | la t ion shows tha t the LaFol le t te- ] W h e e l e r t icke t polled near ly 4500000 gt votes J

Lexington KymdashVirgil M Chap- man Lexington and Pa r i s Democrat e lected wi thou t opposition represent - j a t ive from th i s the seventh H e n r y Clays old dis t r ic t to congress will ]

be t he younges t member of e i the r i house of the new congress H e was born March 15 1895 J

Wash ing tonmdashUnless official tabula-lat ion of votes upsets the resu l t s he re is the complexion of the new Congress S e n a t e Republ icans 54 Democra t s 40 Farmer-Labor 1 v cancy 1 (Connec t icu t ) House Reshypublicans 246 Democrats 184 Fanner-Labor 3 Socialists 2 At adshyjournment of CongreM In June there ware In the Senate 51 Republicans 48 Democrats and 2 Fanner-Labor itea and in the House 226 Republishycan 207 Democrat 1 Socialist 1 Fannor-Labortta aad 1 Independent

Pertnantnt roods are a good

inlaquolaquotmlaquont ^ X ^ l f k V f mdashnot an txfxnu

America Must Have More Paved Highways

Almost every section of the United States is conshyfronted by a traffic probshylem

Month by month this problem is becoming more and more serious

Hundreds of cars pass a given point every hour on many of our state and county roads Down-town city streets are jammed with traffic

Think toohow narrow many of our read are and how comshyparatively lew paved highways there are in proporticp to the bullreadily increasing number oicara

If the motor vehicle is to can-tinne giving the bullconomictarvkt of which it is capable we most have more Conotta highways and widen tboat near large canshyters of population

Every drJsen should discus highway needs of hiaconununitf with his local aotboridtm

Your highway officials will do their part if given your support

Wny postpone meeting this pressing need

An early start nteassaarlt relief

PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION

111 West Wi

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THE PINCKNEY DISPATCH

V

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MCKIE THE PRINTERS DEVIL By Chtrtea Sughroe

a

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WHATS THE USE By L F Van Zelm He Went Prepared AJHAT TELIX- IWAGNES T h e ftEST OP | TKE C U 5 T O M E laquo 9 A 2 e T H I N K I N G

^BOUT H I M

HE M U S T

BE A C H E A P

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S O M E T H I N G T H E M A T T E L ^ I T M

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- f H E N E X T T I M E T E L I

W E M T TOC A HAt2 C u T

BUT

JUltST SJAHT A

H M c t f T WW ^ u

D Events in the Lives of Little Men D Along the Concrete DO

HOME WANTED FOR A BABY MCLL ENOUGHS fco W C H j

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The

Clancy Kids This Way Out

By frac34 PERCYt CROSBY

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ncem Uvingrtoo Comity Public Health Service will

rflnfeft lht a i l a t l Cferina Seed Sale as usual this yew Watch spac each week The penny Christshymas Health Swrf aids in promoting the health of the children of Livingston County

- i j

44

THE PMCMNEY DISPATCH bull39c

1 mm) mumming MAKING 6O0D IN A SMALL TOWN

Reml- Stories About Reml Girls mdash

amppound

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By MRS HARLAND H ALLEN

DYEING FOR YOUR FRIENDS

SETTIN6 THUMfP ONTUKRHHWIS

F R r E C H E S T CLIN1C8 KCEP TUBERCULOSIS INFECTION

UNDER CONTROL

Baby Betty is just one of the many hundred children who each year arc brought to the Free Chest Clinics ei

^A I ff

flwrsday November 20th Sale Begins at 10 oclock Sharp

FREE LUNCH AT NOON

HORSES Black mare 15 yrs old wt 1000 Black mare 14 wt 1000 lbs CATTLE

Halfblood Brown Swiss cow 9 giving milk bred Oct 5

Durham Cow 7 giving milk Three quarter Brown Swiss cow

amp giving milk Durham Heifer 2 due Jan 30 Durham-Heifer 2 fat 2 Durham calves 2 Durham Calves 9 months old 1 Durham Calf 4 months old HOGS

i oland China Sow one year old 5 Spring Shoats HAY AND GRAIN ETC Quantity of Hay Stack of Rye Straw Corn Stalks 600 bu Sorted Yellow Dent Corn CO Fence Potts 70 f t Black Wahrat Lumber FARM TOOLS Land Roller YcouW 2 Horse Cultivator 1 Horse Cultivator |L F Michel Fanning Mill

600 lb Scales Feed Cooker Truck Wagon Osborne Mower 60 Tooth Drag Favorite Grain Drill Bean Poller Hay Rake Tank Header Grindstone Corn Sheller Corn Planter Crosscut Saw Grain Cradle Log Chain Platform Spring Buggy Road Cart Spring Buggy Grain Bags 21 Potato Crates Hay Knife Hay Rope Harpoon Fork Set Work Harness 2 Single Harnesses 2 Ladders Drmp Boards Barrel Chum Water Separator 10 Gal Milk Can Coal Stove And Many Other Articles Too

Numerous to Mention

Terms of Sale All sums of $10 and under cash over that amount one years time will be given on good bankable notes at 6 per cent

Lambert PERCY ELLIS Auctioned

Pmckney 14 Fowlerville 7

Continwed from ftrat page

Then Captain Hourbonrwiis called Ms men around him and scathingly deshylivered his opinion of the team whose mediocre playing was giving their opshyponents an easy vctory He exhorted fhetn to yet in the jrame and show Iowlerville the real simon-pure Pinck-ney brand of football After this ) enrt-to-heart tongue lashing came a t omplete reversal of form for the conshytesting elevens Pinckney secured the lgtal and the lMnrkney fighting spirit domineered the battle until the whistle thrieked the finish with two touchshydowns nnd goals to the credit of the rnti-muendnirnt warriors nnd i final wore of 11 to 7

The score does not tell the real story laquogtf the game ns all the breaks of luck verc in favor of the visitors At one Itntc iVickncy h-nl t-ikM iilt Iill and Mriroming the stubborn resistance 1 as steadily ga ltbull until only a few i bullbull( separated (he pigskin from goal bull he opposition growing weaker and vcsker when the whistle signalled the 1 nd of that quarter stopped proceed-bulllraquogt gave Fowlerville a very much de-ftred chance to rent and recuperate and plated the bull in safer territory for then The Fowlerville boys wrrr accomshypanied by a large number of enthosi lStic supporters who thronged the sde-

bull bullbullIfet and cheered their favorites ltereU|rhout the entire jrame Kven j bullvhen their team frJsjr weary and dis- j

^ ffceartened under Hnckneys repeated t-l -JlSlaUgftts the Fowlerville supporters vS^raquosielaquond skirted were untiring in their

w -ltrifofts for encouragement This loy-^ tIty was worthy of better results but vftet that first disastrous touchdown bull f

Vv traquolaquo nnckney team was transformed ^bullbullbulltfioinbend of mHd football players

bull lnttf a flatting writhing unleashed rjrcjfciie of veritable fury bucking the vi skirting the ends ineaking

tkc seeratagjy invulnerable bullf basic wStfV laquoraquod siaew for rain j

iffifm|tMi amp victory Anally reward- Leoisjeir -aespersee saons ^JHKfc4ampampmMttradere nd with

ience be-

j to the last was outclassed after the ( firlt| touchdown At one time with the ball in their own possession--the bitjirr team was forced back back ajrain and a^ain for larjre losses until

conipelled to ineffectually resort to the i forward pass There is the lesson of loyalty at lest to be learned from football jrames played here this voir ler visiting teiii has been accompanied by enthusshyiastic contingents of its home town supporters who came to help with their

ipiesence while their players were I buttling in the arena Why not folshylow this example in loyalty and when liickrtey visits other towns for an afshyternoon contest lets show- our appreshyciation of a really fine football team

by ffoinjr alonjr and showing the ltiut-sifi world how proud wc are of the 1 DJ V Pitickney team

Friday Nov 1 linckney ]i|ays a reinrn jrame at Fowlerville Inless there is a complete reversal of form raquoin either team Pincknev should win this jrame Hut they will hae to work for it as Fowlerville players are ( -Ic-mincd to win

Wedding The wedding anniversaries are

First cotton seroml paper third lenther fourth rruit and flowers fifth wooden sixth sugar seventh woolen eighth India rubber ninth willow tenth tin eleventh steel twelfth silk and linen thirteenth Ince fourteenth Ivory fifteenth crysshytal twentieth chisa twenty-fifth silver thirtieth pearl fortieth ruby fiftieth golden seventy-fifth diashymond

n ^ R B Itinerant dyer-by-the-day brings Mohimmed to the mountainmdashthe

Mohammed of the paint pots to the mountain of almost Immovable davenshyports and armchairs

The woman toucher-up may renshyovate with her magic dyes houseshyhold fnrnlshinss that cannot be dipped She has and needs no ofshyfice she simply Soelaquo from house to house office to office or to dubs theshyaters hallsmdashwherever in fact there is touching up to be donemdashcarrying with her a simple but efficient dyeing Service

Theres a iure to the business of freshening and brightening by the strokes of a brush says a woman who Is known as interior redecorator of her small town The work reshyquires nothing but an eye for color ami a certain skill with the brush And it supplies earthly necessities as wii as esthetic satisfaction

The plan is simply this The special dye intended for the purpose is applied to sofa carpet wall coveringsmdashanyshything about the house hall or office that needs recoiwringmdashwith an ordishynary paint brush scrub brush or on larpe surfaces a special kind of tank spray which mary be had from the manufacturers of the dye This colorshying process is much simpler than dyo-inir by dipping It is almost as easy as palntinj Thefdyer can do the rugs rUht on the floorwall coverings right 01 the wall

The dyer may also get the job of dyeing things othter than the unremov-aMe ones then_she will not use her special dyes suitable only for heavy textiles rugs hanfttigs couch ami chair coverings For dyeing by lipshyping she will -use the ordinary dyes with which the average person Is best acquainted tine ones for coloring blouses handkerchiefs and other delishycate articles The interior redecorate does well to carry both kinltN of dye and to understand the methods of usshying both

The successful dyer-by-the-day Is sure to make good financial returns She will probably have practically no competition for the line is ns yet little known She should advertise In the local papers for her customers and spread the news of her project to her friends by personal communication

The dyer will of course never ex poriment on the possessions of tier customers Cntil she becomes export sip must read even-thing she can find on the technical details of dyeing proc esses and she must follow directions Implidtly

(SJ l lt4 WMlirr Nlaquowspaplaquor Union)

ALL FOR HEALTH HEALTH FOR ALL

THATS THI8 CRUSADERS WAR CRY AS SHE FIGHTS FOR

BETTER HEALTH

Betty Awaits The Doctors Verdict

the Michigan Tuberculosis Associashytion Her parents are wiBe They know that 65 per cent of all children in the United States between Ave and fifteen are infected with the germ of tuberculosis

It is but a step from tuberculosis infection to the disease itself Herein lies the wisdom and necessity of frequent chest examinations by comshypetent physicians

Tuberculosis Christmas Seals supshyport Free Chest Clinics all over Miebi

gan Such clinics j are a ctitch in I time against the most insidious of c o u r s e s t h e plague which in the last ten years killed 31196 men women and chilshy

dren of Michigan Christmas Seals fight tuberculosis

Buy them Give Health Ready-Made Critic

Man must serve his time to every trade Save censure critics all are reidy mademdashByron

Doubter Not Wanted I will listen to any ones convicshy

tions but pray keep your doubts to yourselfmdashGoethe

iHiiiiniimiHMnmniiHiiiHuimmniliiii

Santa Makes Merry llilliliillll(iiitiliiliiilililllillllllllllllillll

Mamp

Heres Mary Elisabeth all ready to wage war against dirty hands falte and teeth enemies of Better Health Shes a Modern Health Crusader of the Michigan Tuberculosis Association

ftwiiiMm M_II

Santa Claus sometimes jokes with f( Iks big and little nnd he nearly always has some comic toys for the children This yerr ho will leave them fvnny spoon dolls made of paper picnic spoons and dressed in crepe paper clothes A clown doil with dangling less a Chinaman and a Puritan have had their pictures taken so that any one can make them

mdasho-

LUDENS MFNTHOL CfiJCH SKCPS

fV il f f

mdash which fights disease of all kinds She sleeps at least ten hours erery nifht with her windows open she likes milk and she eats only those oods that healthy happy children should have

Healthy children cant succumb to tubercntoej Making frail children strong is one 0 the duties of the Christmas Tuberculosis Seals Buy Christmas Seals and help Mary Elisshyabeth and other Crusaders fight tushyberculosis which strikes where toast expected

State of Michiirtn the Probate Court for the County of Livingston

t i session of sfiid Court held at the Probate Office in the City of Hov-ell in said County on the 24th dny ot October A D 1924

Present Hon Willis L Lyons Judge of Probate

In the matter of the estate of Perry Blunt Deceased

A M Roche having filed in said court his petition praying for license to sell the interest of said estate in certnin real estate therein described

It is ordrred thnt the 24th day of November A D 1924 at l e n oclock In the forenoon at said probate office be and is hereby appointed for hearshying said petition nnd that all persons interested in said estate appear before said court at said time and place to show cause why a license to sell the interest of said estate in said real esshytate should qot be granted

It is further ordered that public noshytice thereof be given by publication of a copy of this order for three sue-cMwdve weeks previous to said day of hearing in the Pinckney Dispatch a newspaper printed nnd circulated in said county

WILLIS L LYONS Judge of Probate

A true copy Celestla ParshaU

Register of Prtbats

f l

s

are in styles that are very late

Most of them fur-trimmed

Beautiful shades of reds and browns aswell as grays and blacks Suedine cloths velours and Bolivia

The prices are most reasonable

$1676 $2475 $3975 $5275 We should like to show you any time

JJ

MEN who come to us from Pinckshyney always have demanded style and quality

OUR answer has always Y pound Smdash-and even morlt a moderate price

been

amp bull

Just Now t 1 laquo

we are showing a fine line of all wool suits at

$25 $30 $35 $40 We will be pleased to show you

Mmikg m-

Page 2: PINCKNEY DISPATCHpinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1924-11-12.pdf · mi in.iii«i(i.jAHf .^fi| :C WW VV1 PINCKNEY DISPATCH ^¾ f IL,," ••'« ^ a. i Vol. 41 Pinckney. Liyingston

i THE PINCKNEY DISPATCH

BEFORE TWINS WERE BORN

Was Vlaquor Miserable Felt Lots Better After Taking Lydia L Pinkhams Vegetable Compomd

Wyocena Wisconsin mdash 41 took Lydia E F tnkbams Vege tab le Compound be-

ifore my twins were [bora because my s u shyi t e r used i t and recshyommended i t to me I w a s so I could scarcely go about my daily work I was in gnch misery But afshyt e r I began tak ing t h e second bott le I w a s feeling lots be t shyt e r I took three botshyt l e s and a half before

u was confined and finished the bo t t l e while I was in bed I g o t u p feeling fine and have taken care of t he twins alone e v e r since I recomshymend the Vegetable Compound highly and will sing i t s pra ises in the future mdashMrs IDA GKBBITZ Wyoceaa Wis

I t is r emarkab le how many cases have been repor ted similar to th is one Many mo the r s a re left in a weakened and run-down condition af ter child-birth and for such mothe r s t h e care of the baby is well-nigh impossible Not only is ft ha rd for the mother b u t t h e child itself will indirectly suffer

Lydia E R n k h a m s Vegetable Comshypound is an excel lent tonic for the m o t h e r b o t h b e f o r e a n d a f t e r child-birth I t is prepared from medicinal roots and herbs and does no t contain any harmshyful drugs I t can be t a k e n in safety by nu r s ing mothers

QOOOOOOCOOCX)OOOOOCOCOOOCXXgt

CThe Kitchen Cabinet

cSSSoSSS33SSSSSS5o3SSSSooo kvy l s V W c a l c i u Nltjwraquoyraquoigtlaquo r U n i o n )

Wealth la a superfluity of thing you dont cure lor

Enough 1B wea l th mora 1laquo disshyease

The object of money la to enable one to forget It mdashHenry Jaroea

Must Pay Heed to Everyday Clothes

mynnimdash0m+

MORE GOOD THINGS

Against the Rules A street car was waiting ut a crossshy

ing for the go sign when alongside came a funny little automobile which appea red about the size of a ra t - t rap on wheels

T h e driver crowded the s t reet car giving the rear s tep a decided bump

He backed off hastily and was preshypar ing to apologize when the conducshytor poked his head out and shou ted Hey there youse can t bring that th ing In here

Best for Colds Bronchitis Asthma and all throat troubles Builds new Strength

NO DANGEROUS DRUGS GUARANTEED

Cuticnra Talcum Unadulterated

Exquisitely Scented

Whats the Use Joseph seven yea r s old came home

from school recently and solemnly anshynounced that he had decided to quit school His mother much astonished asked why he had reached th is decishysion

Well mother he replied one of t h e boys at school told me the teacher bulla id I was the smar tes t boy In her room so I dont think I need to go to school any longer

Motherhood G r i n d Rapids MichmdashAfter mothshy

erhood I could not walk I beshylieve I would have been a n invalid f o r life had it not been for Dr Pierce Favorite P r e shyscription I beshygan to improve almost at once after I started taking the P re shyscription and by the time I had used t h e third

bot t le I w a s entirely welL I cannot o r a t e this medicine too highlymdash Mrs Lomotil Rybski 525 Seward Avsoos N W

O o t a j a toJs famous Prescription a t FOlaquor aeoro i t s tore in tablets

- laquo _ _ bull ^ s j s p s D r Pierce Presi-

E ~ IMO aBatalesd advice

When there is a li t t le s tewed chickshyen left from a meul dice It add an

equal portion of celery cooked In chicken broth and then noodles cooked In the same broth Make a nest of the noodles add the celery then top with the chicken adding a spoonful of rich cream or white sauce over all A small amount of meat

In this dish may be s t re tched to serve several quite bountifully

Luncheon TonguemdashBoil tongue unshytil tender in a nicely flavored meat stock which has been seasoned with carrots onions sweet marjoram chershyvil or basil and a very little mint with the usuul salt pepper celery salt and cayeune Remove t h e skin from the tongue let it get quite cold place on a large platter and cut with a sharp knife into thin slices without losing its shape Spread a thick mayonnaise over triangles of toast decorate with chopped piraentoes pickles or olives a r range around the tongue garnish with parsley and serve

Creasy SoupmdashScrape and cut Into slices one-half pound of car ro t s and cook In one-fourth cupful of bu t t e r with the tender whi te pa r t of two green onions sliced Cook until the onions are a light brown Add to the saucepan two cupfuls of wa te r or stock and one-half cupful of fine crumbs Let s immer until the vegeshytables a re soft then put through a colander After sifting add one quar t of thin white sauce made by thickenshying a quart of milk with one-fourth of a cupful each of but te r and flour with seasonings to taste Garnish with cress

Pecan StuffingmdashThis is too good to be left from the Thanksgiv ing recipes Take a Iouf of bread (a pound bakshyer s loaf) crumb it and add one cupshyful of pecan meats one-half cupful of butter one tablesponnful of onion Juice one teaspoonful each of sweet marjoram and summer savors- Fait celery salt pepper and papr ika to taste

Drudgery ig as neces sary to call out the treasures of the mind as harrowing and plant ing those of the earth

Thf world Is mine oys ter which I wi th sword wi l l open

GOOD COMMON DISHES

The common foods served In an atshytract ive way and in unusual combinashy

tions make o r d i n a r y things qui te unusual

Beef Pot Roast With PrunesmdashCut Into slices one-half pound of pork and fry in a deep iron pot Add a piece of beef w e i g h i n g about five pounds cut from the shoulder or rump Turn it over in the hot fat on nil sides to get well

browned then add one or two onions sliced two or three car ro ts cut Into dice two sliced turnips diced and one-half of a head of cabbage shred ded Add barely wa te r enough boilshying hot to cover pour over a can of tomatoes and add one-half pound of prunes Cover the ket t le and cook for at least two hours turning the meat after the first hour Add seashysoning to taste and remove to a platshyter meat in the center with the vegeshytables surrounding it garnished with the prunes

Forcemeat mdashTake one and one-fourth pounds each of veal and pork using chops put through a meat chopshyper then through a puree strainer Cook one-half cupful of tar ragon vineshyga r five minutes with one small onion and four sprigs of parsley Strain through the cheesecloth and add to the meat Add two egg yolks slightly beaten one cupful smoked tongue cut Into cubes one-half cupful of pistachio nuts six truffles chopped one table-spoonful of truffle liquor and one cupshyful of larding pork cut Into cubes and parboiled two minutes drained and cooled Mix season and use as stuffing

Yorkshire PuddingmdashSift together one and one-half cupfuls of pastry flour and a teaspoonful of s a l t Add one cupful of milk gradual ly to form a smooth batter then add three eggs beaten thick and light T u r n Into a hot dripping pan the Inside of which has been well greased with roast beef dr ippings When well r isen bas te with the beef drippings and bake about twenty minutes Cut into squares to serve

Baked Fish With StuffingmdashClean a four-pound fish and stuff with the folshylowing Mix one-fourth of a loaf of bread crumbs one tahlespoonful of chopped parsley one teaspoonful of onion Juice one teaspoonful of ttweet basil one-fourth teaspoonful of salt the same of whi te pepper and one-fourth of R cupful of but ter melted Mix to blend well then fill the fish and sew up with twine

l ou t VWwtiC

The woman who best unders tands the psychology of dress gives especial a t ten t ion to everyday clothes for af ter all the everyday costume In which she is uftenest seen is the one in which the world at iurge receives its impression of her If she is wise hays a fashion correspondent in the New York Times she will see to It tha t she makes her most flattering apshypearance

it is a mat ter of comparat ive simshyplicity to create an a t t rac t ive frock for afternoon or evening to do something charming perhaps original with the lighter mater ials and the possible dishyversity of trimming part icularly in this day of individual expression in style But the very simplicity of the tailored frock challenges the skill of the designer and the modiste

A cloud of tulle a swathing length of beautiful fabric if the color and line be right may serve for the elecshytric light but the general utility dress must bear the test of Jaylight und run the gauntlet of keenest comparison It is an old saying that anybody can make a ball gown but It takes on ar t i s t to build a street dress

Changes seen in the Intest version of the taillcur are perhaps more radishycal than in any other type of gown The old-time fitted coat and skirt and shir t have been t rans la ted into a modshyern version along new lines and in many ways feminized There was a time within memory when any varishyation of that model was thought ru be fussy and lucking in smartness and every woman wore this Tailored outfit de rigueur regardless of its suitabili ty to her style

The street dress of the prespnt vogue Is most a t t ract ive artistic graceful chic and cleverly adapted to almost every figure It is no longer made only of cloth but Is of any one of many new materialsmdashwoolens velshyvets silks satins crepes voiles of any fabric with which the creator may establish a successful mode The abandon with which the couturieres are using mater ia ls that one would never have thought possible for the purpose Is a character is t ic of the seashyson and is a most eloquent t r ibute to their skill and imagination

The Idea of the ensemble prescribes tha t every dress built for the street or for all-day wear shall have Its ftwn par t icular wrap to go with It 7 n l s scheme makes possible the use of the loveliest and often the frailest fabshyrics In building a gown along tailored lines because the wrap which Is the third and most essential piece Is lined with the same stuff or something to harmonize with It

All-Day Gown Favored

Prominent houses In Paris that have been known for their skill in creating costumes of elaborat ionmdashthe opulent and elegant gowns for forma aftershynoon wear and the handsome toilettes for dinner and the d a n c e - - a r e now giving of their best to the practical all-day gown to the ensemble

From one designer Premet street sui ts of three distinct types are shown One of leaf-brown cloth Is a one-piece coat frock lacking tr imming other

piece frock Is built of black ottoman a mater ia l that is quite the rage at Purls The upper par t Is in tunic form paneled in front with a belt passing through slushes in the silk and a trimshyming of many bu t tons at euch side This frock has the smart long tight sleeves with cuffs matching the turnshyback collar of white crepe

Depar t ing fur ther from the ordinary this Par is ian creator presents a deshylightful three-piece sui tmdashthe frock of

Street Costume of Penny Brown Wide Bands of Monkey Flir

than a half dozen buttons of bronze enamel sewn on the low-front waistshycoat line and two of the same on each cuff The front of the frock is varied with an inset panel of geometric deshysign of the same goods finished with sti tching The deep exaggerated coat cnltar and revers end in a line carr ied diagonally across t^e front to a point low cm one hip where it is emphasized with n diamond-shaped inset of the cloth to match the front pcnel The underblouse successor of the shir t blouse is of ivory georgette Th i s enshygaging li t t le outfit Is a version of the garconne frock and with a fa r piece will serve far Into the au tumn

Another Premet success In t osgt

Red Kashara Cloth Trimmed With Sable Bands Narrow Braid

gray mousseline laid in fine plaits with a narrow ribbon panel down the front outlined with two rows of small but tons The close neckline is finshyished with a turn-over collar of white faille and the sleeves s t raight and full are ornamented at the bottom with needlework and gathered Into a narrow wrist cuff

Street Costumes In New Weaves

For the first winter cold some ol the most prominent designers in Paris show stunning street costumes in new weavesmdashvelours de Smyrne I ntre rat ine sepia kasha cloth and the Ro-dier materials Some of the^e quite heavily fur-trimmed are in one piece tunic or coat frocks with waistcoat or underblouse giving the becoming touch of softness

Others emphasize the type of dress that is all the rage from the very best quality created by ar t i s t s of prestige to the most faithful copy modestly done This Is not a single frock but the vogue of the hour the ensemble Worth Patou Doeuiilet Caret Ger-maine Lanvln Doucet Renee Lelong in fact all of the well-known coushytur iers are doing important things In

1 ensemble costumes In which fur Is inshytroduced as a conspicuous and distinshyguishing part

In this type of dress the new var ie ties of fur are much usedmdashthe foxes dyed in lovely shades of brown yelshylow gray taupe and blue-grny baby leopard and leopard cat squirrel tails chinchilla and many more that are separate ly descrfhed from time to time These fur t r immings are not always added In the conventional form of bands or borders but are often used a s Berthe has I l lustrated In sevshyeral smart coat-frock models as collar cuffs and pocket embellishing a plain cloth to which is added also a belt of bright scarlet and gilt i lluminated leather

Modish street dress is now Invariashybly in ensemble formmdashone-piece frock with a coat in material of sufficient weight to meet the needs of the seashyson lined with t h e same goods as the dress or with something which Is In troduced in some harmonizing manner

It was the Par i s ian woman^- the most successful economist of all In the ma t t e r of clothesmdashwho af ter the war

[ devised an a t t i r e In which she could appear properly gowned a t any hour

of the day and In any place One saw her in the Bols dur ing the morning at luncheon a t tea at some Informal place for dinner and a t the play wearshying the same outfit Butmdashat tent ionmdash always her coiffure her gloves her scarf were fresh

Use Fu r to Match C o a t Among the advance winter models

when heavier w r a p s in cloth and fur will be required t he same one-piece gown is shown some of the models having a touch of fur to match ths coat or its t r immings for such occashysions a s demand dress of some forshymality Delightful combinations ol color a r e accomplished in some ol these a s the best c rea tors I l lustrate

Doucet presents an ultra chic little sut In the fashionable apple-green emshybossed crepe with seven-eighths length s t raight- l ine coat of wool a shade deeper T h e coat is severely plain with t ight sleeves and is butshytoned down the front from collar to hem with large dull but tons Light brown fox forms the collar cuffs sad border around the bottom

POINTS ON KEEPING WELL

D r F r e d e r i c k R G r e e n

E d i t o r of H e a l t h I mdash mdash mdash I w i n mdash bull i ^ i mdash mdash m m m m I I J I I M I I I I I I I W M mdash M laquo ^ mdash mdash m i m u m i i m m

treg 184 Western JSewspeser Union)

SLEEPING PORCHES

SLEEPING outdoors Us a present-day fad Some fads a r e foolish and

temporary Others a re BO sensible that they become permanent

Sleeping in the open air is a fad which ought to become a permanent habit It is getting back to the habits of our ancestors and gett ing away from one of the dangers of overcivllizatlon For long centuries primitive man whatever rude shel ters he built for himself during the day slept in outshydoor air

But modern booses are practically air-tight Close-fitting windows and doors shut out all air Hot air steam and hot-water heat ing warm our houses and office buildings Instead of the open fireplaces of -our ancestors The house IB made air-tight with storm doors and windows p r is banked up with s traw or dry leaves at the first signs of winter Not only do the inmates live and work all day in a stove or furnace-heated atmosphere but they often sleep all night in a close bedroom The result Is that evshyery winter brings i ts Regular crop of coughs colds influenza bronchitis pneumonia and tuberculosis

There is no medicine you can buy that will prevent these diseases The remedy is free to all Pure outdoor air and plenty of it all night will reshyvive and stimulate the tired dried-out throat and lungs

Here s where the sleeping porch comes in

All right for millionaires you say but you cant afford any such luxuries Not at ull Any porch corner can be turned into any open-air sleeping room Select a corner screened from the wind and storm as sailors would say on the lee side of the house Curtains made of canvas old awnings or tarshypaulins will secure privacy and keep out the rain If you want something more elaborate it can be glazed In with window sashes made so that they can be opened and closed easily An iron bed or an army cot is all that Is needed If a door opens Into this sleeping porch so much the better If not a door can be cut or a window cut down You can undress In your warm room step into your sleeping porch and close the rjoor sleep all night with plenty of life-giving oxygen to breathe and go hack to your warm room in the morning

If a sleeping porch must be on the second floor a flat roof of a porch or a one-story addition can be used

All nonsense you say All right But try It this winter and see how much you save In lost time from sickshyness medicines and doctors bills and how much better and stronger you feel In the morning

To Housewives CDPF r ^ frac34 M bull B laquo 4 u B a w came sod I I bull bull w willmdashndyoLiFREE I | bull bull bull bull bull a n d r O S T r A J D I O M n t botUa of LIQUID VENEER Wonderful for your dully dustias Cleansdusts und polishes with one sweep oyour dust cloth Renews pl-saoejurnlturewoodworsautojaobiles Makes everything loek like new Makes dusting a pleasure

Said 0) Hardwaretbrpi toretiros point

laquoreci7od l u o i l U d R t i U0010 fHE9

ClflrtM UttaklT

Daat take laquo^laquoraquolaquomdash of your hones or mules bal l laid op with Distemper Influeasa Pfnk Bra Laiynxltis Heaves Cough or Colds ltHYraquo S P O H J T S to both the sick n d the well ones The standard remedy for 80 years Give SPOITNS tor Dog Disshytemper laquo0 cents and |1JM at drug stores 8POHN MEDICAL CO OOSHEN END

ASTHMA DnJDKELL0QQ8ASTHIAREME0Y for tha prompt rails of Asthma and Hay Favar Aak your druagt

poundat for It tS oonts and one dot r Writ for FREE S A M P L E

Northrop A Lyman CojBCBuffalo NY

Dr J D

DIRT EATING AMONG CHILDREN

MOST children have perpetual apshypetites They are always hungry

Thei r young bodies need plenty of food to build them up ano to make it possible for them to prow to full sized strong healthy men and women Plenty of milk pood bread and butter fruits and fresh vegetables and meat are needed

The healthy child Is satisfied with plenty of pood food It gets hungry again of course but It Is a natural hunger which is satisfied with ordishynary food

But a few children when they are from one to three years old develop a craving for unnatura l things Some of them eat mud coal cinders gravel or mortar wallpaper newspaper or paint

Kopllk of Philadelphia thinks that this s ta r t s from the natural instinct of the child to put anything it gets hold of into Its mrfuth We all know that the first thing a baby t r ies to do with anything It gets Its hands on is to p u t i t into its mouth Most children outgrow this habit But in a few generally those who are weakly or anemic the habit Is kept np and the child ea t s all kinds of queer subshys tances

In most cases these different kinds of dirt are comparatively ha rmless But the paint ea ters and those chilshydren who have a morbid craving for painted objects may easily develop lead poisoning

The child may gnaw or gnck paintshyed toys or may gnaw the paint off the window sills whi te furniture crib rail ings porch rail ings or even off door and window frames In one case reported by Dr John C Ruddock of Los Angeles a boy of th ree year h a d gnawed every bi t of paint off the porch railing window sins furni ture and doors

The lead in the paint poisons the child Just as it does the pain ter It becomes restless and fretful has a poor appeti te foul b rea th and pains in tha stomach and legs I t s gums bleed and It may have convulsions These convulsions may become mpre frequent and severe and may end fashytally In Queensland Aus t r a l i a where f rame houses are common these cases of lead poisoning In dirt-eating chilshydren became so numerous tha t efforts were made to prohibit the nse of whi te lead paint in honses where It w a s within the reach of children

Children from one to three should be carefully watched and any tendency to dirt-eating corrected Paint and painted objects sboald be kept oa t 64 tfcetr w t j

REMEDY

ACDLDTODAY-DOHTDEUOr ^ R I B v

bull^CASCARA(3)QUININF ^ 6Mltdeg

ColdS in Grippe W H H I I

OSTTROIT

n r f E n o A M L gt

PAXTINE 18 FOR WOMEN who have feminise ills that noed local treatshymentmdashDouches ot Paxtlne Aattaeptlc deshystroys disease germs heals Inflammation ulceration and stops the discharge The Lydia Bl Ptnkham Medicine Co recomshymended Paxtlne for years In their advershytising- A pure white powder to be dissolved In watsr as neededmdashone box makes fallona of strong antiseptic solollor that gives posishytive satisfactionmdash80c at drwyirlsts or postshypaid by malL TJTE COMFORT POWDER COMPANY BOSTON MASSACHUSETTS

PARKERS HAIR BALSAM

Bsaaore DanornS -8 topsHalr FalUaj Restores Color and

Beaoty to lt2ray ad Faded Hah toe and $100 at DructBti

ameoi Chun Wsa PatcbotufW T

HINDERCORNS R^CT- ctrade 0 looses eta stops all pain ensures eoesfori to tbe teel aoakes walklss bull Uo by rani or at Drag

Hisses CbenleaJ Woras Pasaaocse ti T

KEEP EYES WELL Igtr Thompsons Bye Water will strengthen them At dragjrlsts or 1167 EUveriTroy N T Booklet

Rheumatism ~KJ 35frac34 Neuritis not Hraquo FBKS Wkraquo nttm tencr-

Uiooaud btvibMii bvneStMmdashwhy net root Tall TOOT friraquondraquo tod writ todar tat tr a-l treatment You run no ris

ajm-PrHCUSJUTISM CO Dept 2 laquo Laaelaa M k

Motorists Adopt a Saint French motorists have adopted St

Chris topher le Jejolet as their patron saint According to legend St Chrisshytopher who was of plant s ta ture creased the River Jordan one dark night carrying the Divine Infant at a place where the river waters ran strongly Motorists now use a road nea r the spot and more - than 100000 motoris ts cyclists and airmen are said to have formed themselves into a brotherhood of sportsmen whose spir i tual home will be the little church In Normandy where a reliquary may be found containing the bones of the saint

Schoolgirl Athletics Twelve a th le t ic fields a re now availshy

able ror 75000 schoolgirls of New York city who par t ic ipa te In some form of athlet ics As many as 1050 girls a week report for athlet ic Instruction whereas a few years ago only a few could be rellied for t h e work

Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION

BCiirANS Hot water Sure Relief

ELL-ANS 2 5 AND 7 5 WCKAGES EVERYWHERE

bullMmdashanmdashl laquobullbullbullbull New York

Vaseline bullaa a s asTes

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T Mi fta$iamp1 poundbull -bull- ^ ^ ii bullbull^^^0^^^^^^^ sslsSss

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THE PINCKNEY DISPATCH

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CHILDREN WHO ARE SICKLY Mothers who rata the

health of their children should never be without NOTHEB QUAYS SWEET POWDEBSlsr CHILDREN for use when needed They tend to Break up Colas Relieve Feverish

CHAINS ARE REAL SKID STOPPERS

ness Worms Constip Greatest Danger Besetting tion Headache Teethuu disorders and Stoniacl TBAOB XAJUt

Don t acocsil Troubles Used by Moth laquo a y Sokistitate srt for over thirty yean

Sold by DnigMts everywhere Ask today Trial packageFREE Address MOTHER GRAY C O LC ROY N Y

Idea for Making Use of Wood Now Wasted

No less than 60 per cea t of a t ree U wasted In i ts conversion into lumshyber At present the twigs branches bark roots s awdus t and plank and log t r immings a r e entirely l o s t A new process for the ut i l izat ion of these was te products and the production of synthet ic lumber is being t r ied out In the United Sta tes T h e process is a conversion of the w a s t e Into a cellshyulose compound of a plast ic n a t u r e t h a t can be pressed or molded into all conceivable shapes and bulks from boards to ra f te rs

T h e development of the process h a s passed beyond t h e initial exper imental s tages and has been taken In hand by t h e National Lumber Manufac ture rs association If it is commercially pract icable It may be extremely valushyab le as a s tep to the conservat ion of the world t imber supplies

WOMEN NEED SWAMP-ROOT Thousands of women have kidney and

bladder trouble and never suspect it Womens complaints often prove to be

nothing else but kidney trouble or the result of kidney or bladder disease

If the kidneys are not in a healthy conshydition they may cause the other organs to become diseased

Pain in the back headache loss of ambition nervousness are oftentimes symptoms of kidney trouble

Dont delay starting treatment Dr Kilmers Swamp-Root a physicians preshyscription obtained at any drug store may be just the remedy needed to overcome such conditions

Get a medium or large size bottle immeshydiately from any drug store

However if you vmh first to test- this great preparation send ten cents to Dr Kilmer amp Co Binphamton N Y for a sample bottle When writing be SUM and mention this papermdashAdvertisement

Misunderstanding Elsie De Wolfe said at a re-at her residence in Sut ton

Miss ceptlon p l ace

Some women branch out into polshyit ics and reform before they a re qui te up to it A banker told me the other day that a woman asked him recently to address her club on internat ional finance

I am sorry madam said the banker but I have sworn off all public speaking

Butmdash said the woman No the banker cut her off firmly

bullNo I have burned my bridges 4 Oh but In that case said the

woman I can easily lend you a pair of my husbands mdashWall Street Journa l

DEMAND BAYER ASPIRIN

Aspirin Marked With Bayer Cross Has Been Proved Safe by Millions

W a r n i n g Unless you see the n a m e Baye r on package or on tab le ts you a r e not get t ing the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physic ians for 23 years

Say Bayer when you buy Aspirin Imi ta t ions may prove dangerousmdashAdv

Lost Record Found The last records of an explorer lost

In the desert In Africa 45 years ago have just been discovered In 1S70 Fr iedr ich Rolfe undertook to cross the Lybian desert one of the most barren and pitiless w a s t e s In the world He never was heard of again This year an expedition sent out by Prince Ke-mal ed Din found a cairn of s tones and when they took it apar t discovshyered witrrin it a sealed bot t le contain tng a manuscr ip t The la t te r proved to be the records of t h e lost explorer These were forwarded to Germany and were found to contain scientific da ta of considerable Interest and value

Shave Wi th Ctrticura Soap And double your razor efficiency as well a s promote skin pur i ty skin comshyfort and skin hea l th No mug no s l imy soap no germs no was te no Irrishyt a t ion even when shaved twice daily One soap for all usesmdashshaving bathshying and shampooing mdashAdver t i sement

One Thing at a Tim DorcasmdashDo you ever allow a m a n to

kiss yon when you re out motoring with h tm

Phi l ippamdashNever If a m a n can drive safely while k iss ing me he s not givshying the kiss t h e a t t en t ion it deserves mdash K a n s a s City S ta r

will d o w h a t w s d a i m for I tmdash

of Cata r rh o r Deafnssj

Halls Catarrh Medicine tld ycnt e s o s s d b r

raquo f C H E N E Y fr C O T o l e d o O M s

so - K ^amp REMEDY S t ST

COLDS-GRIP

Motorist Calls for Preshyventive Measures

(By I R W I N OREER President Greer Colshylec t of Automot ive Engineer ing Chicago)

Every motorist who has experienced the seusation of having his car franshytically try to slide from under him and go sli thering into a tree curb or passshying vehicle la well aware that skidding Is a dangerous fact that calls for drasshytic preventive measures

Skidding is the greatest danger t ha t besets the motorist It comes without warning turns p leasure Into peril and takes enormous toil in human lives and wrecked cars

To match man s s t rength against the crushing power of a skidding car Is usually futile often fatal a lways folly

Skidding is no respecter of person purse t ime p lace or conditions Pr ide s trength will and bank accounts fall before tts re lent less force

Accidents Due to Skidding

Stat is t ics prove tha t fully 90 per cent of motor car accidents and fatalshyities a re due directly or Indirectly to skidding When a car stnrta to go Its usually a goner There Is no t ime to wait or cogitate There Is no time to adjust differences between the car and the slippery street Life can be lost but oncemdashfrightful injuries may happen frequently

Nothing has ever been Invented In the way of anti-skd devices to equal t i re chains and it doesnt require the gift of second sight to see why this is true

Wheels equipped with chains autoshymatically lay their own traction surshyface Friction Is effected without afshyfecting the t ires They strike the ground squarelymdashhold and release Inshystantly They fight for firm contact a lways gain their ground prevent side-skid and drive-slip

Chains Make Best

Anti-skid chains make the best of bad going wherever you go You may be lulled Into a false sense of security by the good behavior of your car on dry paved s t reets But what about t h e country runs To motor on ley or muddy roads without tire chains Is like rocking a rowboat In mtdehannel

Take your chains and youll t ake no chances Go as far and as fast as you likemdashup hill down dale through mud slush and slime Tire chains will prove pathfinders to peace comshyfort and safety No mat ter how mudshydy the road they hold on like a bullshydog It Is as If you were to t ransfer your own Instinct for self-preservation to the wheels of your car They are as essential to your car as wheels brakes oil or gasoline

Old Man Friction Often Is an Unseen Passenger

No mat te r what kind of a car you drive how many passengers It holds or where or when you drive there s an extra passenger along with you says a garage man

It s Old Man Friction You can t see him but you can notice the effect of his sly damaging tactics He runs up your gasoline and repair bills and wears out your car a lot quicker as long as he has his own way

Frict ion must be eliminated by the use of a good lubricant and I have found the graphi te lubricants mcst efshyfective The selected flake graphi te in the grease forms an unusually long-wearing coating that keeps the metal contact surfaces from the rasping grind that wears away the par ts Graphite is especially good for cars used in t ravel ing a hilly country

I t t

t

Shortcut for Valve Grinding Outlined

In cases where a badly pit ted valve requires regrlnding here Is a shortcut Cut a piece of emery cloth in dimensions a l i t t le bit wider than the valve seat ing and twice as long and then double it over so that both surfaces are cut t ing surfaces Next cut a hole In the cloth so t h a t the valve s tem may be passed through and the emery cloth brought close up agains t the valve head The valve is then placed In position for grinding under comparat ively high pressure Both sides of the emery cloth will conform to the valve head and the seatshying cloth and if the valve turns and the emery cloth remains s ta t ionary the valve will be ground on the upper emery whereas if the cloth revolves the valve seat ing will be ground on the lower emerv

t

Clutch Lubrication Is Quite Often Neglected

In some cars lubrication of the clutch throwout collar means removal of the floor boards and the turning down of a grease cup It seems tha t it is a hardsh ip for many owners to tu rn down a grease cup even though it is exposed to view This class rarely if ever takes the t ime to atshytend to -the clutch throwout unless there is clutch and gear-shift ing troushyble Where there Is no provision for lubrication of this par t by turning down a cup extending through the floor boards or the side of the frame the owner had best have an oil line installed A good repai rman can easily a r r ange to have a large cup feed through a small opening into a piece of metal tubing running to the throw-out The small opening is necessary so the oil feed will not be rapid othershywise the reservoir will be exhausted quicTdy Or a self-feeding oil cup many types of which a re on the marshyket might he installed in place of the g rease cup under the floor boards

Automobile Tire Should Be Kept Well Inflated

Tt Is well known that after a long fast run the t i res of an automobile are found to he hot Many have supposed this the result of the friction of the t i re on the road Such is however not the case

The real cause of heat ing Is the inshyternal friction of the tire Itself Ai the tire Is being constantly deflected by contact with the road the various plis or layers which compose the t ire do not act uniformly Consequentshyly there is more or less motion beshytween them that resul ts In friction and heat

The greater the change in shape In t i re as It contacts with the road the grea ter will he the friction Of course the more the t i re Is Inflated the lesraquo will be the deflection but It Is evident that while a perfectly rigid t i re would generate but little heat It would fall In giving easy riding Hence one must put up with some heat ing and consequent tire wear

B a l l C h e c k R e p a i r In engines having pressure feed oilshy

ing there Is generally a regulator with a ball check valve In a housing If this ball gets stuck or lacks sphericity it Is difficult to remove tt for replaceshyment About the best way of get t ing it out Is to take an L-shaped tube or rod of a d iameter slightly smaller t han the ball On the end of this rod or tube stick a small lump of grease Putshyting the rod through the opening careshyfully the grease on the end will usualshyly pick up the ball and bring it o u t

IS THE CHAMPION AUTOMOBILE TIRE CHANGER

H

Famous Forts in U S History

By E L M O S C O T T W A T S O N

t

t

l(c 1S1pound4 Wcaiern Newspaper Lnlun gt

W h e n D u t c h a n d S w e d e s

F o u g h t o n U S S o i l When Liustuvus Adolpbus the great

king of Sweden saw the success of o ther European nat ions in plant ing colonies in the New World he resolved to establish a colony -of Swedes In America Accordingly he formed a colonizing compuny for that purpose but his death prevented the plan from being carr ied out

Queen Chris t ina and Oxenstlern Adolphus famous minister however renewed the project and in ltxW they sent out a colony of plain s t rong industrious people who settled la what Is now the s ta te of De laware and called it New Sweden There they built a fort which stood near the present city of Wilmington and they named it Von Christ ina In honor of their queen

The new colons was soon In trouble This ground was claimed by the Dutch who had settled New Amstershydam a qua r t e r of a century before and after several years of bi t ter disshypute between the Dutch and the Swedes Peter Stuyvesant the choleric old governor of New Amsterdam reshysolved to put an end to the trouble by expelling the Swedes from the country

in 1GO4 Stuyvesant sailed from New Amsterdam with a fleet to cap ture Fort Christ ina Washington Irving in bis inimitable Knickerbocker s Hisshytory of New York tells how Govershynor Stuyvesant called upon Gov J a n Kisingh to surrender how the proshyposal was scornfully rejected and how the doughty Dutch warriors following their ancient rule of a lways fighting upon a full stomach a te a mighty dinshyner in prepar ing for the fray Then according to this historian brimful of wratl) and cabbage they moved forshyward to the a t tack Jus t before reachshying the fort they paused lighted the i r pipes gave a furious puff and charged gallantly under the cover of the smoke After un Homeric struggle In which Governor Stuyvesant vanshyquished Governor Hisingh in single combat the fort was carried without the loss of a single man

Although we cannot accept Irvings story unreservedly the assault on Fort Qhristina must have been something of an opera boufTe affair unique in the annals of warfare But the trishyumph of the Dutch was short-lived for In 1664 the English took possession of all the Dutch colonies in America j and the Brit ish flag supplanted the Dutch banner over Fort Christina To-d$y no t race of the fort remains but nfaiby s tands the little gray stone c iurch built in 1608 the successor o the chapel in the fort where the

yedish colonists worshiped as a re-lder of the fort where once Pu tch -

|n and Swede fought In America

Charles Paine of Philadelphia h a s made a study of changing t i res He has a definite system worked out for each m a k e of t i remdasha system with the least possible number of moves His assoc ia tes claim t h a t he took off a 80 s ampH clincher t i re and replaced it in less t h a n a minutemdashworking with bis ba re

M o n u m e n t o f F o l l y uch has been writ ten about the

ab kdoned fa rms of New England but he i l abandoned forts are not RO well known Of all of these obsolete s t ro igholds none Is more interes t ing than Fort Knox on the Narrows of the Penotiscot river at Prospect Maine

This fort which darived Its name from the fact that It was built on land once owned by Henry Knox the Boston bookseller who became Washshyingtons chief of arti l lery In the Revshyolution and the first secretary of war for the United States was begun In the early forties to protect the shipshybuilding and commerce of the Penobshyscot which was then at Its he igh t Work had progressed far enough a t the outbreak of the Civil war to enshyable the War depar tment to use For t Knox as a t ra in ing school for many of the ar t i l lery officers who served in the Union army This was the nearshyest that Fort Knox ever came to a war record however for It never heard the shot of a hostile gun and In 1S69 af ter construct ion had been In progress for 26 years work on it was abandoned

Costing about a million dollars it s tands a monument of human folly wri tes one historian The recent adshyvance In the science of war is such that Fort Knox would be scarcely more effective In time of danger t han an ancient feudal cas t le of the Middle Ages Monument of folly though Fort Knox may be it is also a monushyment to the days when masonry was a fine ar t Huge white slabs of granshyite quarr ied from Mount Waldo a few miles nor th and floated down the river In scows are set In Its wal ls edge on edge with beautiful precision and a great c i rcular s ta i rcase of solid pieces of g ran i te Is the crowning piece of workmansh ip N e a r the shore ba t te r ies can still be seen the brick ovens where the 42-pound canshynon balls were heated but nearly all of the ar t i l lery placed in the fort durshying the Civil w a r has been removed to adorn p a r k s a rmor ies and o ther public places in New England

Designed to be the finest fortress on the Atlant ic coast For t Knox is now abandoned and it is one of the several forts whose sa l e has been authorized hy congress wi th in recent years Alshythough it l acks the historic backshyground of many other forts there a re few which a r e a s pic turesque as this grim old monument of folly which s tands guard over an unfulfilled nope s a the b a n k s of the Rhine of Amershyica the Penobscot r ivet

ATV

GOOTgt

Important News jix Cocoa Drinkers

C u t cocoa b i l k 4 0 to 5 0 b y askshyi n g f o r M o n a r c h w h e n y o u b u y D u t c h P roces s C o c o a mdash b y ask ing for F a r m H o u s e w h e n y o u w a n t A m e r shyi c a n P r o c e s s Note the low prices

R E 1 D M U R D O C H amp C O

Manufacturer and Importer Ewblihed 1833

Chicago Boston N e w York Pi t t sburgh

Q R O C E R S Retd Murdoch amp Cos food products are sold only by the Regular Retail Grocer who owes and operates his own store We never tell lo Chain Store

Drop as a postal for shipping

tags pncM and

instruction

You Can Ship Your Poultry to Market Yourself

Save buyers profit or Co-op expense Highest cash prices paid for quality poultry

NEWHALL MARKET CO Wholesale Poultry

2 6 0 2 O r l e a n s S t D e t r o i t M i c h

In Business Over 50 Years Reference mdash Banks mdash Commercial Agencies

Of all the pes ts that go unhung Its the bird with a scheme and a well-oiled tonguemdashGood Hurdware

Talking and eloquence a re not thf same To speak and to speak well are too things

When smiling-

you give - J o u b e r t

give with Joy and Be fair In all your dealings and for the highest

^^33

SAY BAYER ASPIRIN and INSIST Unless you see the Bayer Cross on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years for

Colds Pain

Headache Toothache

Neuralgia Lumbago Neuritis Rheumatism

Sfi Accept only Bayer package which contains proven directions Hahdv Bayer boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100mdashDruggists

Ssptta Is ths trad mart of Ssjar Manmictarraquo of MonoacUclaquocdlaquoraquoter of SalicjUcacU

Ship Carries Tailor Shop In the most exact ing sense the Atshy

lant ic liner Homeric carr ies a s h i p s tai lor I l ls shop is so well (itted up t h a t a man or woman may select the goods be measured fitted and refitted so as to have a new outfit between t ime of embark ing nnri leaving the ship at the o ther end of the vnynglaquo

Girls Turn Expressmen Girls in London ho drove motof

cycles during the war are now conducts lng parcel delivery service using SldS cars to hold the packages

Poverty Is not romant ic to the poor nnd wealth often becomes t i resome t l the rich

Castoria is a pleasant harmshyless Substitute for Castor Oil Paregoric Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups espeshycially prepared for Infant in arms and Children aU

To avoid imhatiooi always look for (as tfanatva of frozen drreerions on each package Fkjiirlsii siSfjrwhafs racuiisimiJ it

vv

bull 2 i v lt raquo bull

THE PaNCKWEY DISPATCH

m^ praquo bull

CtMETtUSFOR

HOME GOODS Sf every itscriftiw

At liwest prices

Tkanbgivmg Cards One Cent Each

lines Bazaar HflwcH Opposite Courthouse

GREGORY MARION

Hon Shoeing General Repairing mdash - a l s o Ford Repairing

F C BRENNINGSTALL PetteysviUe - Michigan

Funeral Director P H SWARTHOUT

Phone No 39 Pinckney Mich

PERCY ELLIS Expert Auctioneer

SclU Anything for Anyonemdash AnytimemdashAnywhere

I am conversant with Cattle and Hog Pedigrees

For dates and terms call phone or write Anderson Corners

Pinckney or Dispatch Office

Phone No 19FU Pinckney

WANTED POULTRY amp EGGS

Will payjcash for poultry and eggs delivered at my poultry plant and will pay all the market affords at all times

E FARNAM

E W DANIELS General Auctioneer

Chelsea Michigan P O Address

Gregory Mich R F D 2 Phone 116-2L-2S

HIRAM R SMITH Lawyer

Office Opposite Court House D D Monroe Bldg

Howell Mich

laquoraquoraquoraquoraquoraquoraquoraquowraquoraquovraquoraquoraquoraquo raquoraquoraquoraquoraquoraquobullraquolaquo

Drs HFampCLSIGLER PINCKNEY

Office Hour

1230 to 230 P M

Sunday 1 to 2 P M

STATE OF MICHIGAN BANKING DEPARTMENT OFFICE OF T H E

COMMISSIONER

Olive Hetninger and Fave Hill spent bullSaturday night and Sunday at the l l rminger home at Webnervil lr

Mrs iibnie Saddler ltgtf California who haigt been among relatives and friends in this vicinity for some time spent a few days last week with Mrs Kmily Har r i s

The eldest son of Clifton Osborn who recently broke one of his lower limbs had to have it reuroken last week and set again

Mrs Sara Cicario of Detroit was the winner of the s t r ing of pearls pu t in H K Marshall s raquotore by a soap comshypany

At the home of the brides parentis Mr and Mrs Charles Ellsworth Ust Wednesday evening occurred the mar riage of their eldest daughter Miss Lela to Russell Grosshaus They leave Monday Nov 10 accompanied by his brother John Grosshaus and wife for an overland trip to Florida

It will be remembered that the lashydies of this 1 A S will have for sale Nov -gty afternoon and evening quiltshyed and tied quilts rugs and -ill kinds of fancy work also will serve a chickshyen pie supper

In the j u ry trial of Mrs Cora Brewshyer of Jackson and H K Munsell last Thursday Mr Munsell was the winshyner

Mrs Iillie Burden and Mrs Klla Benjamin of Fowlerville visited among friends and relatives here last week

F A Hill and Sterns Smith unshyloaded a car load of lumber last week at Stockbridge belonging to Charles B Clark of River Rouge Mr Clark havshying bought several acres of the Rockshywell Island farm and will erect a cotshytage at once

Mr and Mrs Win George and daughter Blanch and Clare Ti tus of Rochester were recent guests with C M Titus and family

Stanley Quinn and family of Chesan-ing anil Miss Iuiiii v^uinn of Harr ison were callers at Mrs Hills and C M Titus last Sunday

- - - -o- --

APRON SOCIAL

The Kings Daughters felt much gratified and justifiably so in the reshysults of the Apron Social held at the Iarsoriage last Friday afternoon Deshyspite threa tening weather condition approximately 150 were in a t tendance and the contr ibut ions from these as well as from absent friends were genshyerous indeed more than S10D having bullilnady been received to iid in carryshying out the good work of the organisashytion

A line progrniit was given consisting nf vocjl solos b Mrs Farl Baughn iiul Mrs H F Maycroft readings b x Mrs Meihns of Detroit piano duets o M I-Mlaquo v adi1 I InrHs n n 1 111fi lw Martin and piano solos by Misses Bessie Swurtliout and Dorothy Cnrr

A luncheon WHS served mdasho

Mrs Ar thu r White visited her sis-ter in Saginaw over the week end

Mrs Burr Clark visited relatives in Rose city last week

Leslie Muycoek is on a hunt ing tr ip in the north - Walter Karzidofer and wife were given a farewell par ty Friday evening They are leaving the Ccphelus farm to move to New Balt imore Fdwin F Roberts who has been sershyiously ill with heart trouble and scarlet fever the past week is slowly improvshying

Fugene Smith and wife of Cavan-augh Fake are spending the winter months with their daughter Mrs Mac Martin

John M Har r i s and family of Pinckshyney were Sunday visitors at J D Whites

Mrs Adam Gehringer has sold Tier farm at Tr iangle Lake and is moving to Howell this week

Jessie White and family of Howell visited at Ray Kllsworths Wednesday evening

Win Ru t tmau and family spent Sunshyday at Mel Dunns in Iosco

Herbert Lane has moved to his new home which was the Coral Drew farm near the Sani tor ium

Mr and Mrs Ray T Bentley of Grand Kupids fisited at J I) Whiles Friday evening

Mr Sarle and family are leaving the Archie Gorton farm to spend the winter in southern Florida

Charles P Reed and family were in Corunna Sunday

Albin Pfau Alfred Lange and famshyilies were reclaquoat visitors at Frank Langes in Aon Arbor

The Ladies AW served chicken pie at Edwin Webbs Wednesday evening A good crowd was present Proceed 37oo

SCHOOL NOTES

| Kd Brown former right halfback i on the Pinckney High School football j t eam is now pllaquoying in the back field j of the freshmen squad at the Inivur- sily of Michigan

The universifv coaches have picked Kd as one of Hie best hacks to cntci Michigan in some time

mdash - o Merlynne Aiuburgey has left schoo Miss Catheritte Canade of Ferndale

visited school the past week Phyllis Sprout has returnee

school Miss ShuriK visited school

Thursday Tho our members now ugtre few We are t rying our best to do And if ou only do the same Youll find school one great game

Kvrryonr is now busy at his sew ing

JACKSON COUPLE SPEAK MARRIAGE

VOWS THURSDAY

M I M Helen V Craves and Albert Boucher Are Wed at Brides Home

An au tumn wedding of charm and at t ract ion was the marr iage Wednesshyday noon of Miss Helen Virginia Graves of this city to Albert L Bouchshyer son of Mr and Mrs J F Bouchshyer 8iy West Morrell street

The marr iage was solemnized ut high noon at the home of the bride s parshyents Mr ajid Mrs Marcus T Graves in Pinckney

Only immediate members of the two families were present to witness the ceremony which was performed by Rev A T Camburn of the Methodist Kpiseopal church of Stockbridge

The bride was unat tended and was charming in a costume suit of russet brown cloth with brown fur t r immings with which she wore a small modish hat of gold cloth Her flowers were pink roses

Following the exchanges of the bridshyal vows a wedding breakfast was servshyed to the company of 15 guests

Clirv santheums of golden hue were used to adorn the home and fall foliage added to the a t t ract ive effect of the decorative note

Mr and Mrs Boucher l e f t l a t e r in the day for a wedding tr ip by motor to Cleveland Detroit and Chicago and after Nov 20 will he at home at 321 West Morrell street- Citizen Patr iot

Miss Graves is well known in this vicinity being a graduate of Pinckshyney High school of the class of 1920 and for the past I years has been em-employed as bookkeeper with the Conshysumers Power Co of Jackson Mr Boucher is a g radua te of the Jackson schools and a prosperous youngbusiness man

ELECTION AFTERMATH

S T

JOINT BANK ACCOUNT

bull A great many people deposit money bull bull in joint accounts Some have joint check- bull bull accounts and some have joint savings ac- bull bull counts By this we mean that the account j bull is payable to either of the parties mention g bull ed in the account during their lifetime or in J bull case of death of one the account is immed- J bull iately payable to the survivor without legal 2 5 proceedings9

s This method is not only used by husband and wife but may also be used by any parties who wish to havetheir money matters arranged in this way

s 5

tlt

l St

CHUBBS CORNERS

J

WHKRKAS by satisfactory evishydence presented to the undersigned it lias been nmdc to appear thnt The Pinckney State Bank in the Village of Pinckney in the County of Livingston State of Michigan has complied with nil the provisions of the General Bankshying lftws of the State of Michigan reshyquired to he complied with before a corporation shall be aiithomed to commence the business of Banking

NOW THKRKKORK I HUGH A McPHERSON Commissioner of the State Banking Department do hereby certify that The Pinckney State Bank in the Village of Pinckney in the County of Mivingstnn and State of Michigan is authorised to commence the business of Banking as provided in section seven of the General Banking laws of the State of Michigan

IN TESTIMONY WHEKK-OF Witness my hand and

(Seal) Seal of Office at Lansing thil First day of October 1M4

_ HUGH A McPHERSON ^ Commissioner of the Banking

Department

Mr and Mrs Fri Hrigham were in Ann Arbor last Wednesday

Mrs Dell Gnffney visited her daughshyter Mrs Louis Gehringer of Howell bull vt Wednesday

Mrs Kingsley visited her parents Rev N W Pierce and wife of Marion one day last week

Mrs Nettie Hennett has sold her farm to a Mr Roberts of Detroi t

Mr Mr Goodspeed of Detroit visited at the Ezra Hrighum home over Sunshyday

Mrraquo and Mrs Jay Rrigham spent last Thursday at tho home of Thomas Moshier and wife of Ann Arbor

Mr and Mrs F W Allison spent Sunday in Hyron the guest of Mrs Allisons daugh te r and family

Albert Dinklc has purchased a new busker and is busy husking corn

Mrs Roiit Granger spent ltraquo irvr days last week in I inrkney with her father Thos Richardson

Mr and Mrs Butlin anil daugh te r Marion of Detroit were calling on ail their old neighbors here Sunday

Mr and Mrs Ed Hoisel and daughshyter of Howell called on M ) Hoisel and family Sunday

MCP Mark Allison and family spent Tuesday night at San ford Reasons listening to the election re turns over I he radio

- - - - - o mdash

PRIZES FOR BEST ARTICLE

HAMBONES MEDITATIONS r ZoSS LOW P t H A R P

TIMES MIT HIM M O H A R P E R H IT H I T Mpound - - AH DON KNOW BOUT PAT BUT T SHO K N 0 C K E P gtAO O U T E N

defeatshy

ed unty

carr ied

Cm 111 ty McOu

jJ[ltfi

bull bull -bull BmUHm Staff VmmU bull bull titt raquobullbull are be-m W nm b

Open to All Students Attending School in Putnam Township

The Dispatch will give five prires total value 1150 to any student atshytending school in Putnam township for an laquortiele on the following subject How I WoiHd Make Pinckney A More Desirable Village to Live In

The first prire will be valued at 500 second $300 third $200 fourth 810laquo fifth 50 cents

The only conditions of the contest are that the article shall not exceed 500 words In length and that all must be submitted ^o the Dispatch office beshyfore December 1st 1924

Competent disinterested iodjres will decide the winners

mdash o

MmglUh Soger BmdashU Two tbftBMQrt people la England

ratted rasir bmsnn 18X00 ncrm fatt

No Wealth in Oil Shml-The Unlterl States bnreati of mine

has conducted tests whleh disprove the hysterical reports that gold diver platinum and potash have been obshytained in paying qnantities from oil shales That it la not commercially possible to recover any of these mateshyrials has been demonstrated by the assays

MajMty o th Law Eight magistrates the clerk anpound bis

assistants n police superintendent an tnspector a sergeant a detective sii constables and two pressmen attended Epplng pollee eonrt when two men were snmmoned for riding bicycles on the footpath neither of whom put In an appearancemdashLondon TJf-Blts

TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN Youwill please take notice that the

undersigned Wendelin Altman a resishydent of the County of Livin^stonyj Michigan for a year last past hereby gives notice that he will make applishycation to the Honorable Jodge of Proshybate in and for the County of Livingshyston and State of Michigan on the 18 day of December 1994 at 1000 A M in the office of said Judge of Probate in the Court Houae of the City of Howell Michigan for a change of his said name to Wendelin Sorg

Wendelin Altman

The outs tanding features of the elecshytion in Pu tnam township were as folshylows

The school amendment was defeated 3-Ki No M Yes

Lynn Gardner for state legislature on Republican ticket ran ahead of his ticket hut behind his opponent H votes

Hiram R Smith for prosecuting atshytorney also made an excellent showing cut t ing Don Van Winkles majori ty down to 11

Davis democrat ic nominee for presishydent received 31 majority

Groesbeck and Couzens were ed here by 25 majority

Miss Nellie Gardner for t reasurer on Democrat ticket the township by 91 majority

Cloirles Hoff on Democratic ticket for Sheriff defeated Ired Teeple Reshypublican by H 2 majority Tins big showing is admit ted by Teeples friends to be on account of the popular i ty of the Hoff shrievalty service in this vicshyinity Before election two c a r s ago Hoff promised the voters in this par t of the county that if elected he would do all in his power towards the en-foreement of law and it would seem from bis splendid showing at the polls I this year that the Voters were satisfied i with his efforts He appointed Irvin I Kennedy local deputy sheriff and gave him all the backing requested T h e result is tha t Kennedy has made good i as i peace officer and although his chief was defeated by a very small ] majori ty in Livingston county the t i t - i ens of this township regrdless of par ty affiliations would like to see Kennedy retained here as deputy shershyiff so that the good work for law enshyforcement may he continued And we unders tand that influential Republishycans have volunteered to petition the Sheriff-elect to reappoint Kennedy to the office

bull - o

Dishonett Borrower$ Vhv does the nvernjre man or womshy

an who borrows honks lose all sense of property rights and fall to return them ovrr-pr imlaquohraquor compulsion Othlaquor things fivtpmrlv come back to the lender hi f it is n book he is lucky bull ullt ffiins possesvinn of it

Tgt-ltgti T laquo i j i s r r i t

PINCKNEY STATE BANK] Officers Director bull

C L SIGLER C L SIGLER President W E FARNAM THOS READ ___Vice-president Q W TttPLE S A H MURPHY Cashier THOS READ bull

nitration ampmnrra

(Enmmmtitij Qlnngrrgattimal QHjitrrij ftnrknri fHirtjtgatt

3fatmnbrr lfi IB 10 2fl 1024

SUNDAY

Dedication Service 1030 Dr J W Sutherland Speaker

Super intendent Michigan Congregational Conference

Evening Service 730 Rev C H Harder Speaker Missionary Michigan Congregational Conference

bull TUESDAY j

Home-Coming s 4 Supper Served in New Dining Room

Evening Service ^^ __730 Former Pastors of Pinckney Speakers

WEDNESDAY

Evening Service Mr Geo W Soerheide Speaker

City Mission Cleveland O

730

THURSDAY

Evening Service 730 Rev Paul Voelker Speaker

President Olivet College

Special Music at Each Service

The Public u Cordially invited

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bull~plusmnAJ m laquoraquolt ^ W raquo M -wrymuw

NOTICE Keep your credit good by paying you account before October 1st No more credit after tbat date if acct not settled

We Offer the FoUowkg Articles for Cash A $2400mdash3-Burner Ofl Cooker for $17 00 A $3000 4 B laquo u u OQ Cooker for $20 00 A 75c Pocket Knife for ^ A $125 tad $150 Pocket Knife for I trade 9 0 c A $150 Ahrm Clock for j i laquoa A $150 Watck for I j bdquo A $300 RacSofite Watch for L t g A $3000 Bom Poller far ^ bdquo _ I I I $ i a 0 0

Teeple i lctraware gt

lea l f^ ^bullbullxampamsiampai- mrfimL

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bullbullWfl

W

mm THE P1NCKNEY DISPATCH mmmmmmmy W

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I- v

OUR PRICES ON BEEF Are as follows

Round Steak 25c lb Loin and Porterhouse 28c Shoulder Roast 15c Rib Stew 8 to 10c

8 I

With every other food getting higher EAT MORE MEAT

Reason amp Reason mm

bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull

Full Line of Accessories and Genuine Ford Parts

Expert Repairmen Satisfaction Guaranteed

Full line of Oils and Greases Stop Lights Spot Lights Bulbs and Heaters

Special price on 30x3 1-2 Fabrics $10 for Tire and Tube while they last

R DAY BIRD Pinckney Ford Sales and Service

M i H i i m m m n M i H u i

Ciiicf Justice White am

Mr Justice Harlan chewed tobacco in the Supreme Court room and lived to a ripe old age and in full vigor at 76 and 78 yean respectively Chew Beech-Nut and remain strong and vigorous

Over2S0MiHkn Packages SoMf in laquo

Single Year

Childrens Ailments TIS0RDERS of the stomach and constipation are U the most common diseases of children To

correct them you will find nothing better than srlains Tablets One tablet at bed time will

do th$ work and will make your child bright and fcheeriiil the following morning Do not punish

jour Children by giving them castor oil Chamber-are better and more pleasant to take-

r him berl a irVs Tablets M- iVs H7-

felM

i

P i n c k n e y D i s p a t c h

Entered at the Postofficeat Finck-oey Mich araquo Second Claos Matter

LINCOLN E SI ITH PUBLISHER

Subscription $126 a Year la Advauc

Mr B r o w n ot N u r t h v i l l c m a n a g e r of t h i s d i s t r i c t l o r t he D e t r o i t Kdison C o t u p a u y a n d his a s s i s t a n t Mr Wi lk in son w e r e p l e a s a n t c a l l e r s a t t h e Disshyp a t c h office M o n d a y

T h e m a r r i a g e of Dr J D S i n g e r a n d Miss M a r g a r e t I r m i t both of B r i g h t o n w a s sulcinni cd at tin- home of Mr a n d Mrs G e o r g e W S m i t h of E a s t Cirand l i ive r s t r e e t tliii (W edshyn e s d a y ) a f t e r n o o n it J 00 o c lock Rev K K J ) u r k e e of tin- W M cl iurcl i officiatetl a n d uuly t he i j iunedi-LI11 r e l a t i v e s were prese j i t T h e y left on t he a f t e r n o o n t r a in for a w e d d i n g l o u r to I cnnsyU anni the Dr s old iionie - A r g u s

T h e F a r m i n g t o n t o w n s h i p boa rd h a v e a d o p t e d a r e s o l u t i o n t o s u b m i t the q u e s t i o n of l i gh t i ng G r a n d Rivet road f rom t h e W a y n e c o u n t y in te r see -thfh on the east to the N o s i t o w n s h i p

Mrs F r e d G r i e v e of A n n A r b o r a n d I l i u deg t i u w l s t T l u ^ e n f will he M r s Hiram S m i t h of H o w e l l we re Mipplied by the D e t r o i t Kdison Co if

LOCAL AND GENERAL

M r s Al ice P r i c e of D e t r o i t is visitshying M r s E H Bye r

Mrs K H B y e r v is i ted a t W a l k e r shysilk O n t a few d a s s l as t week

v i s i t o r s a t t h e h o m e of G VV T h u r s d a y

R e iso n f a v o r a b l e ac t ion is t a k e n by the vo te rs

I lvmoiUh Mail

F l o y d R e a s o n was in Howe l l Tues - j d a I TUBERCULOSIS CLINIC

D o n a l d Mgk-r of D e t r o i t spen t the j A ] u r m a n t n t t- t u b e r c u l o s i s cl inic week end with his p a r e n t s Dr and w i bdquo ]) ^ ^ | ( t t ) u ^ ^ o f t h M r s L i - S i g l e r e o u n t y n u r s e H o w e l l on S a t u r d a y

Mrs Rex S m i t h a n d Mrs C J i N ovember bullgt 19JI a n d t i i r rp a f t e r the C l i n t o n w e r e Arm A r b o r v is i tors tiiirff S a t u rday of each m o n t h Hourgt T h u r s d a y imi to -l-oo a m a n d 2 00 to Vltgtgt

i i bull ^ raquo I- l n- 1 be c o n d u c t e d bv L i v i n g s t o n 1 s o s e t t e r s b r ed in D e n m a r k and

i m p o r t e d on a c c o u n t of t h e i r line pedshyig rees a n d i n d i v i d u a l i t y w e r e t a k e n to t h e d o g r a n c h n e a r 1 u t te rson l ake this w e e k

M r and Mrs C l a u d e fteason and fami ly were Ann A r b o r v is i tors Sun-d a )

Mr a n d Mrs Wiil T i p l a d y a n d fam- ily of W e b s t e r were S u n d a y vis i tors a t t he h o m e of C l a r e n c e S t a c k a b l e j

P a t L a v e s a n d L e e Lavey were1

J a c k s o n vrs i tors S u n d a y

Mr a n d Mrs W 11 M a n n i n g and Mr a n d M r s R a l p h S c h r o d e r of Lai is-ing w e r e v is i to rs a t the h o m e of C S 1 l a r g e r T h u r s d a y

Miss P a u l i n e Reason s p e n t the week j end wi th A n n A r b o r r e l a t i ve s

lti sp l e of Hie d i s a g r e e a b l e sveather las t l r i d a a stiff cold ga le of ssindf b l o v i n g tlie a t t e n d a n c e at t he f o o t b a l l g a m e was good A l a r g e n u m b e r oi Fnwic rv i l l c s u p p o r t e r s w e r e p r e s e n t

gt 11 C a r r has been a s s i s t i ng R o b e r t J a c k e rec t a c o t t a g e at L a k e l a n d

j l o i i r d v Pub l i c H e a l t h S e r v i c e u n d e r the d i r e c t i o n of Dr L ] P i e rce of

j the Si a t e S a n a t o r i u m - - - i

P e a r l T h i m b l e s Ludi i s of high da-vs in Chin use

t h e d a i n t i e s t t h i m b l e s i iuag innb ie some of tliiin be ing c a r v e d out of

pioM-rtious p e a r l s and o r n a m e n t e d wi th j Viands of fine gold on w h i c h all nnin-I nee of q u a i n t imd f a n t a s t i c d e s i g n s Hre engrived

Ind i rec t S i g h t His VfltmdashIt s a s h a m e t h a t big

fat w o m a n hnd to t a k e t h e sea t dishyrec t ly rn front of you Y o u r e missshying the w h o l e s h o w Mr L i t t l e t o n mdash v o nor all of it S h e s r e a d i n g all the t i t l e s a loud mdashBuf fa lo E x p r e s s

C alder onn Busy Pen lt a h b V o t t rgt- r e | o t n - i ed S p a n i s h

hu ai 1 i - f a n d p o r t ltbull - bulllt i ude f u t i g -

l i l e W o l k e l I l e i-oe i- bull i i l l i n ^ h is

i i l e 111 p l a y s a n d 7 S I O I - i t i pluVS

for t h e i l i u r e l a H e e i t j o v r d t X t m o -

dinars pepulnr i tv

CHURCH NOTES A i i i imir is c i r c u l a t i n g a r o u n d town t h a t doe G e n t i l e cNpects to aga in con duc t a fruit s to re and ice c r e a m p a r shylor h e r e

G P L a m h e i d s o n will sell his pershysonal p m p e r t s at the f a rm l l i u r s d a v Nov J i b begiiii i Dg at 1lt) o c lock L u n c h at noon

Miss Rose L a v e y spen t las l Thur s shyd a y wi th Mr a n d Mrs C l a r e n c e S t a c k ab le

Dr H V Sigki svas i Ann A r b o r 1 u e s d a y

Mr a n d M r s R W Bird and chil d r e n spen t S u n d a y with W h i t m o r e L ke f r i ends

B o r n to Mr and Mrs F r e d R e a d of D e t r o i t Nov l o t h a d a u g h t e r

Mr a n d M r gt M Ni le a n d son ot J a c k s o n w e r e v is i tors at the P a t L a v e y h o m e last F r i d a v and S a tu rdav

L woo] buck I- v r a r s old Mr a n d Mrs 1 red B o w m a n visd-d ~ -ltbull j bull

I or t H u r o n r e l a t ives severa l d a v s last

C o m m u n i t y C o n g r e g a t i o n a l Church

II L M A V C L O I T P a s t o r

M o r n i n g W o r s h i p liPJo a in Su nda v School I 1 0 a in

N o r t h H a m b u r g

Suudav School J 0() p in

W o r s h i p 3d)0 p Mi

The Most Exquisite Taste can be Satisfied at Our

Ice Cream Parlors The Connor Ice Cream Co make special efforts to produce someshything newmdashsomething different in Ice Cream Flavors Just now they are specializing on

Cherry Ice Cream a most deled able frozen dainty with ^he ripened cherry crushed and mingled into a beautiful and satisfying congealed refreshment

Also Maple-Nut Ice Cream in which the purest Maple Juices flavor various Nut Meats blended and frozen for your approval

If you have not yet tried eitherof these new creations a pleasant surshyprise awaits you

BARRYS JO N Y A L DRUGS STORE

Cooking by Current

WANTS FOR SALE ETC

L KOH S A L K Brown m i re l o wt

a b o u t 1 1 Vi C r a d c Belg ian g e l d i n g fi wt about KioO R e g i s t e r e d finc-

i m p n c

PINCKNEY BAKERY ^ OUR BREAD SPECIALTIES

The ever growing demand for Blue Ribbon Bread Proves Its Popularity

Nice Sweet Raisin Bread YOUD Be Pleased With a Trial of Our Different Pastries

I Try Our Graham Bread and Sandwich Bread

G B b A N K E N Prop

week

S U C a r r A e l C a r p e n t e r and H a r r y Lee a r e enjoying 1 a h u n t i n g t r i p in v rn Mich igan

i V Yince a n d son r e t u r n e d to eir h o m e a t I i y r o n S u n d a y

Mri A l f r ed M o n k s is v is i t ing S t o c k -b r idge r e l a t i ves

MLsses Nel l ie G a r d n e r Drus i l l a a n d F l o r e n c e M u r p h y and L o r e n z o M u r p h y a t t e n d e d the foo tba l l g a m e a t A n n Ar shybor S a t u r d a y

M r a n d M r s L o u i s M o n k s a n d da ugh t e r M a r i e of J a c k s o n s p e n t S u n d a y wi th Miss L u c y H a r r i s

M r s K a t e S a l i s b u r y who has been v i s i t ing seve ra l w e e k s wi th h e r vSigler c o u s i n s w e n t to A n n A r b o r T h u r s d a y las t to visi t in t h e h o m e of J u d g e N e w -kirk fc AJLiil

Mr and Mrs S J Ashenbrenner and daughter of Detroit were visitors at the Fred Bowman home the first of the week

Miss Minnie Reason was a fioweU caller Tuesday

Mrs S H Carr Miss Ijiura Hofl and Mrs Robt Jack and Mrs Milo Kettier were inn Arbor visitors Thursday

Mr jnd Mrs Frank Jioycc of Stock-bridge were Sunday guests of Mr and Mrs Floyd Reason

Mr and Mrs Geo Barnes of St Johns spent several days last week with her sister Mrs Floyd Reason

Mr and Mrs J M Harris and famshyily spent Sunday with Mr and Mrs John White near Howell

Mr and Mrs Frank Kennedy and family of Detroit are visiting Mr and Mr Patrick Kennedy

W Uurn Dancer of Stockbridge transacted business in Pinckney Tuesshyday

The Pinckney fire department WHS called to the Frank Barton farm two miles west of Anderson Monday aftershynoon A Are in a nearby marsh wa spreading so rapidly in the hifh wind er Two gangs of men threshing and putting up sifo corn in the neighborshyhood turned ia and by hard work

off the blase before it reached Jkrton buiidtifs

C i R A I l l O N O L A sVioo i n s t r u m e n t with lti r e c o r d s Will sell for $1000 I n q u i r e D i spa tch office

F O R HI NT The R u d o l p h I azalo f a r m one mile nor th of A n d e r s o n

( i O O D K A T l N C i Or Inn

T U M I S for s a l e L C R o g e r s

1

CIDER APPLES for sale William Doyle

RabCs Sulkey FOR SALEMrs Roy Hannctt

Thoroughbred Hereford bull and 0 I C boar for sale Robert Kelley

House for sale or rent Inquire J C Pinkie DOLL l l TIIK OLD H U S - A n d

make it look as if it had some pep David Jones automobile finishing

CASH PAIDmdashFor false teeth gold i crowns and bridges old magnet points and old gold Mail tn Hoke Smelting and Refining Co Otsego Mich Let us hear from you

FOR SALEmdashTo reduce stock will sell a few Silver Canipine hens cheap

Ben E White FOR SERVICEmdashPoland China boar

(W K Livingston strain) Paul Fohcy

WILL CALLmdashWednesday of every week for junk of all kinds Rags rubbers papers magasines metal etc Notify Dispatch office Also pay highest prices for second hand furnishyture

H Storey Phone 97M Dexter MONEY TO LOANmdashOn improved

farms at 6 per cent For particushylars write Brown Cress amp Company First National Bank Building Ann Arbor Michigan

FOR SALEmdashA quantity of hay and cum John R Marthv

FLUFF RUGSmdashIf you have any carshypet to make into rugsmdashdrop us a card We famish border free You will like our work and our prices Pinekney Fluff Rug Co Pmckaey Mich

FOR SERVICEmdashShorthorn Durham Bull elifJblt for registry

Ed Spoan JUffTICft OF T M PEACB

Cooking without fire smoke or aslns without fui c or gases cooking with a steady unchanging heat cooking at no greater bother than the snapping of a switchmdashthat is electric cooking

The electric range now so widely used has brought great comfort into the kitchen it has done away with the troubles the watchfulness the anxieties of the old time cookshying and has substituted a sure cleanly and comparatively effortless method of preparing food for the table

XHE DETROIT EDISON COMPANY

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Quality the best and priced Right

C V V A N WINKLE

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w5 7-THE PINCKNEY DISPATCH

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HMITI STATE NEWS IN BRIEF

S

Coolidge Puts Up Presidents Cup

WASHINGTON mdash President Coolidge has taken a long Step toward arousing greatshye r interest in athlet ics in the

army and the navy and in the counshytry general ly by present ing to athshyletic representa t ives of the army and of t h e scout ing fUet a challenge cup for football between service teams of the two b rand ie s

Indicat ion a re that as a result of this one of the great annual athlet ic events of the future will center about the Coolidge cup or as it will be offishycially called the Pres ident s ( up

T h e Pres ident summoned athlet ic representa t ives of the army and the navy to the Whi te House He then formally turned over to them a cup to be contested for every year by two football teams chosen from officers and enlisted men of the two forces

T h e first contest for the cup was set for November Uigt at Griffith s tadium Each team will be composed of one officer and ten enlisted men

Pres ident Coolidge himself will bulltart the game and there is every inshydication that it will be a social and athletic event rivaling the contest between West Point and Annapolis

Maj Paul Baade infantry represhysen t ing the array from Fort Benning and Lieut Com Hamil ton V Bryan scouting fleet athlet ic officer together with Coxswain Claude A Ezell and

Staff Sergt Har ry O Troupe represhysent ing the enlisted men of the army nnd the fleet received the cup It ia of generous proport ions embossed Ua blue and gold and su rmounted by the American eagle

In connection with the presenta t ion the Pres ident made this s t a tement

As President of the United Sta tes of America in the interest of good clean Ileal thy recreat ion for the peoshyple of the ent i re country and to enshycourage and s t imula te athlet ics among the enlisted men of the servshyices I offer this cup to be known as the Presid nt s cup for contest beshytween footkil l teams of the army and navy from units or subdivisions of forces urn -r such te rms as the secshyre tary of war and the secretary of navy may de t e rmine provided howshyever tha t the teams shall be coin posed of enlisted men and officers in about the same proportion as a re offishycers and enlisted men in the services

I desire to mention the grea t beneshyfits to mind and body that result from part icipat ion in good clean whole some sport The people of the United S ta tes have a lways been devoted to manly contests and I know of no betshyter way to give to them a t rue examshyple of sport in its best form than to offer such a cup as this for a trophy to be contested for by the army and the navy

Six New Reclamation Projects Approved

SIX new Western reclamation projshyects embracing more than 400-000 acres have been approved as feasible from an engineering

economic agricul tural and land develshyopment s tandpoint by investigating commit tees whose reports are made public by the Interior depar tment

Studies of the projects were conshyducted by professors of agr icul tural colleges In s ta tes In which they a re located s t a te agricultural officials and bankers In their development it Is recommended tha t policies and methshyods proposed by the committee of speshycial advisors of reclamation be folshylowed T h e projects

VaJe project Oregon 28305 acres msifily sage brush with an est imated gross annual crop re turn after irrigashytion of $35 an acre Ninety per cent of the land will require subdivision and se t t lement and will provide farms for 2fi0 to 300 set t lers

Baker project Oregon Irr igable land es t imated at 26031 acres which Should yield a gross annual re turn of between $30no t6 $3750 per acre The value of the raw land Is fixed at between $250 to $5 an acre

Kittitas project Washington W38U

acres of Irrigable land Including 48-402 acres of agricultural n a t u r e 21-925 of pas ture and 20071 of waste land It is recommended that farm units should not he less than laquoS0 acres on the best grade soil nnd about 1150 acres on the poorer grades in order to y M d an income for a family The bet ter land shoulrf re turn a gross anshynual income of from $10 to $55 an acre after the development

Uwyhee project lt ireyon 5SS59 acres of first-class land well adapted to produce satisfactory yield of crops while there is raquo15140 acres of second class lund that cannot produce more than about 75 per cent of the yield of the first-class land A good farm with a variety of [gtrod4rts ought to produce as much as $00 an acre annual ly

Salt Lake basin project U t a h 110000 acres will be directly beneshyfited and there a re excellent marke t ing and t ranspor t ing facilities Mixed crops should yield from $50 to $80 per acre u year The lands to be Irrigatshyed a re already colonized and settled on small farms

Spanish Springs project N e v a d a Including 39H50 acres of high-grade land adap tab le to a wide variety of crops

Airplane vs the Battleship in Congress

REGAKDLRSS of the outcome of

the investigation now being made by the general board of the navy under Instructions by

the secre tary and at the instigation of the Pres ident a showdown light in the old airplane-bat t leship controvershysy looms when congress reopens in December

Whatever the findings of the hoard and it is admit ted on all sides that they must be predicated on the basis tha t the bat t leship is still the main reliance in sen power a i r en thus ias t s a re laying plans for a drive on conshygress to get full recognition of the increaslnc importance of aviation In the national defense with a sepa ra t e air force as their final objective

Hear tened by President Coolidges recent u t te rances In which he voiced his belief in the possibility of the airshyp lane superseding the surface fighting ship they propose to demand that an impart ia l tr ibunal hear their case and tha t the aerial fighting forces be placed In a position to be developed free from the obstruct ionis ts in the mil i tary services

On the other hand naval officers are gravely concerned over the recent developments realizing the popular appeal of the aviation propaganda with Its promise of cheap and effecshytive nat ional preparedness They fear that as Intimated by the Presi dent no provision will be made fo modernizinc the older bat t leships for proper maintenance of the fleet and for construction unless the controvershysy over the relative meri ts of aircraft nnd bat t leships Is finally and definiteshyly settled

T h e round-the-world flight by the army flyers spectacular and epochal ns it was did not in the opinion of the majority of exper ts war ran t the conclusions drawn in some quar te rs

The one outs tanding lesson of the achievement they say was that it demonst ra ted conclusively the dependshyence of aircraft on surface ships in long-distance work It is pointed out tha t while the flyers were covering their twenty-odd thousand miles apshyproximately 87000 miles of s teaming was done hy United S ta t e s naval vesshysels in helping to put the flight across

Flag With Only 40 Stars Causes Stir

GEN FRANK T HTNES direcshy

tor of the veterans bureau Ims begun an Investigation of the origin nnd history of the

flag with only 40 stars which was disshyplayed by Mrs Lillian R Sire before de legates of the New York Sta te Fedshyera t ion of Womens Clubs in New York

So far a s he has been aide to learn only one of the freak flags ever has appeared in the ve terans bureau service I t was shipped from Perry-rille Md along with five other flags FelaVnary 7 1922 and w a s received at Hospital No 49 Philadelphia Februshya r y 16 1raquo22 At tha t t ime Perryvll ie w a s a United S t a t e s public hea l th bull bull t r i c e depot

Cteseral H lnes deplored published Assertions the bureau had contracted l o r 800000 cheap shoddy flags for the coffins of dead ve te rans

8 O B M tUne ago according to the dishyrector compUUnt was made tha t t h e eofta of s soldier who died in Hosshypital NO 48 W t t covered with a flag SafUtt on ly 4 0 bull H e immediately

officer in chart whether the

regarding flags a M SOS osssptttef with and whether

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the flag in question had been Inshyspected

The answer to both quest ions was in the affirmative The oflieer also stated according to the director tha t all o ther Macs in stock had been found to be regulat ion

A brother of Har ry H Pench the veteran whose coffin was covered with the improperly made flag hart reported the m a t t e r to the bureau It was the flag which covered Benchs coffin that Mrs Sire showed the deleshygates

T h e New York City Federa t ion of Women s Clubs has appointed a comshymittee consisting of Mrs Belle de Rivera honorary p re s iden t Mrs Lilshylian R Sire who brought the m a t t e r to public a t tent ion nnd who is presishydent of the Womens National Demoshycra t ic club nnd Mrs William Albert Lewis

Char les A Bench bro ther of Har ry H Bench a soldier who served his country 20 years and died in the Vetshyerans hospital at Phi ladelphia gave Mrs Sire a cheap 40-star flag which had been draped about the coffla when it reached the family home in Readshying Pa Mr Bench replaced it with a flag he taodght more suitable

SaginawmdashJ W Ferdney former m e m b e r of congress from the eighth distr ict baa taken in his annua l deer hunt ing t r ip in Luce county this year He is 71 yea r s old

Owosso mdash Mason Ri lenberry 72 yea r s old a farmer living near Banshycroft was found dead in his barn A physician said that he evidently had suffered a hear t a t tack while loading a wagon

SturgismdashCity Attorney Paul Wal t broke his arm in an a t t emp t to c rank his automobile A few mnu tes la te r his mother- in law Mrs El izabeth Cole t r ied to open a heavy ga te at her husshyband s farm and the ga te fell on tier f rac tur ing her hip

FlintmdashAfter going to a local newsshypaper office to announce that he would main ta in his record of voting for evshyery Pres iden t since Lincoln Theodore V Canright 94 years old fell from his porch while r e tu rn ing to his home and was seriously injured

OwossomdashJohn McAvoy 52 years old a p rominen t New Haven Townshyship lar jner waa found dead in the wa te r t ank on his farm It is beshylieved that he sat down on the edge of the tank to lest and suffered a s t roke falling irto the tank and drowning

Detroi t Majorities of nearly 10 to 1 were rolled up by the Republ ican s t a t e and county t ickets in Wayne county according to complete reshytu rns In pract ical ly every case the con tes t s were decided upon s t ra igh t par ty l ines with but sl ight fluctuashyt ions in the voe

Por t HuronmdashMiss Lau ra Copeland of Boston is in Port Huron to car ry on the work of the Rotary clubs cripshypled chi ldren s clinic She will carry out the recommendat ions of the recent clinic and be of service to local medishycal men also teaching pa ren t s proper mas sage methods in the care of cripshypled children

RomeomdashTwo I ta l ians demanding repr i sa l s for wounds one suffered tn a domest ic feud were killed here as they s tormed the home of Joseph Pill-eri to Identification of one of the men as Patsy Prris a former enemy of Pi l ler l to was t s t ab i l shed soon after the shooting Pillerito said he had never seen the third man before

Det ro i tmdashResumpt ion of activity at the Monnier road studio of the Deshytroit Motion P ic ture company within a few weeks has been announced folshylowing the annual meet ing of stockshyholders It was voted to assume a mor tgage of $150000 on the proper ty l iquidate ou ts tand ing obl igat ions and r e sume the production of pic tures

Grand RapidsmdashErect ion of a memorshyial to the Grand Rapids service men of the Civil Spanish-American and world wars now rests upon the city commission a s the result of the comshypletion of a general design by a civilshyian commit tee appointed by former Mayor Jul ius Tisch a year ago The project it is es t imated will cost $300000

Detroi tmdashForeign capital is pouring into Germany due to the excessively high rates of in teres t at which money-Is loaned and Jackie Coogan created as much a t ten t ion in Berlin as the Zeppelin ZR-3 These observat ions along with m a n o thers were brought back to Detroit fcy C Leidich who reshyturned a few days ago from his 73rd t r ip abroad in the past 30 years

Grand RapidsmdashThe Commercial Savings bank and the People s Savshyings bank has b ten merged with the Kent S ta te bank in the largest t ransshyact ion in Grand Rapids banking hisshytory The deal involved $6000000 asse t s Stockholders of the Comshymercial and People s banks gave thei r consent at special meet ings after the deal had won the sanct ion of the s ta te banking i epa r tmen t

Marsha l lmdashEvery precinct in Batt le Creek voted in favor or eas te rn standshyard t ime Marshall had been holding off apparen t ly to see what action Bat t le Creek would take A great many Marshall people work in Battle Creek and the result ing inconvenience of the two towns were using different t ime probably would be sufficient to influence Marshal l s decision it was believed This city it is believed will r emain on eas te rn s t anda rd t ime the year around

LAnsemdashMrs Cora Reynolds Andershyson of LAnse has been elected Repshyre sen ta t ive of t i e Iron dis t r ic t in the S ta t e House )f Represen ta t ives She ran on the Republican t icket wi thout Democrat ic opposition and will reshyplace Rep Pat r ick OBrien ve te ran Upper Pen insuK legislator wbo reshyt i red following the special session of 1923 Mrs Anderson is the first woman to become a member of the House and the second to become a m e m b e r of the legislature

KalamazoomdashRais ing of $150000 for the expansion of the Bronson Methoshydist Hospi ta l in the next three yea rs has been announced here The fund was obtained through subscr ip t ions of $100000 fulfilling the condi t ions imshyposed in t en ta t ive gifts of 125000 each by Mrs Dorothy Peck Clark of Kalamazoo and Mr and Mrs W M Earnart of Ann Arbor The larger proportion of the fund was obtained ia Methodist congregations throughout the state The proposed expansion would give the hospital almost double its capaci ty and equipment

HillsdalemdashO C Dickinson of this ci ty an employe of the New York Censhyt ra l ra i l road since 1882 local t icket agen t for the last 28 years has reshytired after i2 years In the company s employ

S turg ismdashAust in McDonald awaitshying t ranspor ta t ion to J a c k s o n prison for a t e r m of oae to 15 y e a r s for carshyry ing concealed weapons dug a hole th rough the brick walls of the county jail a t Centervil le and escaped

Berk leymdashFrank Wilcox 40 yea r s old w a s c rushed to dea th benea th his house here when a gus t of wind blew it from jacks on which it was s tanding Wilcox who was laying a foundation had jus t crawled under the bouse when it fell

MonroemdashEdward Kitchin Jr 9 y e a r s old shot and killed himself while playing with his fa ther s reshyvolver The bullet en te red the boys left eye and caused ins tan t death The Ki tchins live on a farm six miles west of Monroe

Detroi tmdashMichigan Democracy lost her sole represen ta t ive in Congress in the Republican landsl ide tha t swept the s ta te Rober t H Clancy of Deshytroit r epresen t ing the F i r s t District was badly defeat t d by his Republican opponent John B Sosnowski

Lans ingmdashFores t fires which are preva len t in the nor the rn pa r t of the s t a t e a re general ly under control and confined to s lashings and cut-over land according to repor ts received by John Baird s ta te conserva t ion comshymiss ioner from deputy fire wardens

E s c a n a b a - Irving Micheau 15 years old of Brampton had his r ight hand mut i l a ted and shot in his neck and r ight ear the result of the accidenta l d ischarge of his shotgun Micheau picking the gun up n o r r the ground placed his hand over the end of the ba r r e l

Detroi tmdashAlbert Majewski Ham-t ramck was ar res ted by the police of tha t city on a charge of mans laugh te r following the death of a 10-year-old boy who is s a i l to have fallen from the running board of Majewski s autoshymobile when the la t ter s t a r t ed the mashychine in an effort to shake the boy off

AlbionmdashThe principal fea ture of the Albion election was the naming of a woman for a municipal office for the first t ime in the his tory of the city Mrs Kate Bromeling who has carr ied on a real es ta te and insurance business since the dea th of her husshyband four yea r j ago was named just ice of the peace

LansingmdashMajor i t ies which a re beshylieved to have finally crushed in Michigan any a t tempt to impose an income tax upen the public and furshyther a t t e m p t s o abolish parochial schools were rolled up in the s ta te election The chool a m e n d m e n t was bea ten 2 to 1 while the income tax proposal was beaten near ly 5 to 1

DetroitmdashConvicted solely on his finshyger-prints Onnie Howard 27 was sen tenced to se rve one to five yea r s in Jackson prison for burglary Lieutenshyant Charles Carmody head of the poshylice identification bureau produced at the t r ial pr ints found at the scene of the cr ime and pointed out s t r ik ing l ikenesses in them to the finger-prints of Howard

Grand Rapius mdashDorothy Plucker 2-year-old daughter of Mr and Mrs Clifshyford Plucker was seriously Injured when struck near her home by an aushytomobile in charge of Ted Rice of Howard City The shock of the accishydent revived a nervous trouble in Rice and he was taken to a hospi tal where physicians say he has little chance for recovery

LansingmdashMichigan has elected a 1925 Legis la ture that is solidly Re publican In 1923 the Democra t s had fivemembers i n t h e House and none in the Sena te Four of Lhose five ran for re-election and according to offishycial r e tu rns they have all been de feated The fifth Democrat Dr De-nias Dawe of Monroe did not run for renomna t ion and his place has also been taken by a Republican

Grand RapidsmdashJohn Ormand 52 years old was killed when he was s t ruck by a Fere A^aiquette passenger t rain at F rank l in s crossing Orraond was walking mine from work and is said to have^ t epped around the crossshying ga tes and walked direct ly into the path of the train A 3ister Rose Ormond was at the cross ing when the accident occurred but did not reshyalize the victim was he r b ro the r unshytil he was identified an hour la ter

De t ro i tmdashPurchase of 85 ac res and condemnat ion -jf 11 and one-half more to c o m p l e x the recrea t ion deshypa r tmen t s summer camp on Eular lake near Howell has been ordered by the Detroit common council Alshythough 40 acres of the first t r ac t is half a mile from the l ake it was s ta ted tha t the remain ing 45 ac res could not be bought for less than $20-000 the price to be paid for the whole 85 When the two proper t i es a re acshyquired the a m o will su r round the lake

Lans ingmdashPres iden t Calvin Coolidge carr ied Michigan by a major i ty of 600-000 votes over the combined tota ls of his two r ivals a sweep that has not even been approached in the s t a t e s political h is tory according to complete r e tu rns He polled near ly 80 per cent of the total vote compared with 72 per cent of the total vote given Hardshying In 1920 Davis received only about 13 per cent of the to ta l The LaFol-lette third party failed to attract more than 9 per cent of the Michigaa vote Oroesbeck and Couxens were more than W0000 ahead of their rivals

HOW THE STATES CAST VOTE FOR PRESIDENT

U gt

S t a t e f I O Q

o u a -J

12mdashAlabama 3mdashArizona 9 A r k a n s a s

13mdashCalifornia 6mdashColorado 7mdashConnect icut 3mdashDelaware 6- -F lor ida

14mdashGeorgia 4mdashIdaho

29mdashIllinois 15mdashIndiana 13mdashIowa 10mdashKansas 13mdashKentucky 10mdashLouisiana

6mdashMaine 8mdashMaryland

18mdashMassachuse t t s 15mdashMichigan 12mdashMinnesota 10mdashMississippi 18mdashMissouri 4mdashMontana 8mdashNebraska 3mdashNevada 4mdashNew H a m p s h i r e

14mdashNew J e r s e y 3mdashNew Mexico

45mdashNew York 12mdashNorth Carol ina

5mdashNorth Dakota 24mdashOhio 10mdashOklahoma

5mdashOregon 38mdashPennsylvania

5mdashRhode Island 9mdashSouth Carolina 6mdashSouth Dakota

12mdashTennessee 20mdashTexas

4mdashUtah 4mdashVermont

12mdashVirginia 7mdashWashington

8mdashWest Virginia 13mdashWisconsin

3mdashWyoming

12

9 13 6 7 3

4 29 15 13 10 13

6 S

18 15 12

18 4 8 o ltJ

4 14 3

45

5 24

5 38

6 14

10

10

12

10

4

4

7 8

12 20

12

Wouldnt Have Autoist Think He Was Curious

A motorcar apparent ly afflicted with dropsy or some such malady s topped in front of t h e res idence of Gap Johnson of Rumpus Ridge After examining the machine s upper shell the drfver seized cer ta in tools and reshyclining on his back scuffed himself under the car and began thumping on Its s tomach Mr Johnson who had

| been rest ing for some t ime by hanging

J onto his own fence with his elbows

I hooked over the top rail kept silent

j for a short season and then inqu i red

I dont reckon you re aiming to go

to Fiddle Creek a t t e r you get that

I t h e r e contrapt ion fixed

No replied the gent under the car

j Aw to Slippery Slap m e b b y T i No I H m To Sandy Mush t h e n

No Well dont get the idy t h a t I keer

j2 whur the hmdash1 youre going t o mdash Kansas City Star

631 Tota ls 382 136 13 Necessa ry to elect 266

HIGHLIGHTS FROM ELECTION RETURNS

Wash ing tonmdashWil l i am E Borah of j Idaho will be the Republ ican leader Of the s ena t e in the next congress i

St Paul MinnmdashMagnus Johnson Minnesota s widely known dir t farmshye r sena tor was defeated for re-elecshytion by Thomas D Schall Republican

New YorkmdashBy running near ly a million votes ahead of his t icket Alshyfred E Smi th Democra t defeated Colonel Roosevel t for the office of governor of t h e Empi re s ta te

Sena tor F r a n c i s E War ren Repubshyl ican 80 and father-in-law of General John J Pe r sh ing has been re-elected to the sena te He has a l ready served the re a quar te r of a century

Wil l iam Allen Whi te Independent for governor of Kansas who camshypaigned on but one ou t s t and ing issue opposit ion to the Ku Klux Klan was snowed under by a klan-indorsed canshydida te

Atlas TRACM MARK

The Atlas Speaker makes audible the impulses of the silent radio receivshying set The tones of Atlas Radio Reshyproduction whether of music or voice are clear true to the original and adjustshyable for volume

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Two women were elected governors of s ta tes for the first t ime in his tory The new governors are Mrs Wil l iam

A Ferguson in Texas and Mrs Nellie G Ross in Wyoming Both a re Demshyocra t s

Des Moines IamdashComplete check of unofficial r e t u r n s in the senator ia l j contes t in Iowa showed tha t Sena tor

Smi th W Brookhar t had a major i ty of less than 1200 over his Democrat ic opponent Daniel F Steck j

| ChicagomdashThe first Negro ever j elected to a municipal judgeship roll-

ed into office on the Republican land- si Me Albert B George 51 a lawyer j

defeated his Democra t ic opponent by i a majori ty of be tween 65000 and 70-

000 votes

New YorkmdashTabula t ion of the popu- lar vote for p res iden t of the United I S t a t e s ind ica tes tha t P res iden t Cool- I idge has a c lear lead of more than 7500000 over John Davis The tabu- | la t ion shows tha t the LaFol le t te- ] W h e e l e r t icke t polled near ly 4500000 gt votes J

Lexington KymdashVirgil M Chap- man Lexington and Pa r i s Democrat e lected wi thou t opposition represent - j a t ive from th i s the seventh H e n r y Clays old dis t r ic t to congress will ]

be t he younges t member of e i the r i house of the new congress H e was born March 15 1895 J

Wash ing tonmdashUnless official tabula-lat ion of votes upsets the resu l t s he re is the complexion of the new Congress S e n a t e Republ icans 54 Democra t s 40 Farmer-Labor 1 v cancy 1 (Connec t icu t ) House Reshypublicans 246 Democrats 184 Fanner-Labor 3 Socialists 2 At adshyjournment of CongreM In June there ware In the Senate 51 Republicans 48 Democrats and 2 Fanner-Labor itea and in the House 226 Republishycan 207 Democrat 1 Socialist 1 Fannor-Labortta aad 1 Independent

Pertnantnt roods are a good

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America Must Have More Paved Highways

Almost every section of the United States is conshyfronted by a traffic probshylem

Month by month this problem is becoming more and more serious

Hundreds of cars pass a given point every hour on many of our state and county roads Down-town city streets are jammed with traffic

Think toohow narrow many of our read are and how comshyparatively lew paved highways there are in proporticp to the bullreadily increasing number oicara

If the motor vehicle is to can-tinne giving the bullconomictarvkt of which it is capable we most have more Conotta highways and widen tboat near large canshyters of population

Every drJsen should discus highway needs of hiaconununitf with his local aotboridtm

Your highway officials will do their part if given your support

Wny postpone meeting this pressing need

An early start nteassaarlt relief

PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION

111 West Wi

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D Events in the Lives of Little Men D Along the Concrete DO

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By frac34 PERCYt CROSBY

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ncem Uvingrtoo Comity Public Health Service will

rflnfeft lht a i l a t l Cferina Seed Sale as usual this yew Watch spac each week The penny Christshymas Health Swrf aids in promoting the health of the children of Livingston County

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44

THE PMCMNEY DISPATCH bull39c

1 mm) mumming MAKING 6O0D IN A SMALL TOWN

Reml- Stories About Reml Girls mdash

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By MRS HARLAND H ALLEN

DYEING FOR YOUR FRIENDS

SETTIN6 THUMfP ONTUKRHHWIS

F R r E C H E S T CLIN1C8 KCEP TUBERCULOSIS INFECTION

UNDER CONTROL

Baby Betty is just one of the many hundred children who each year arc brought to the Free Chest Clinics ei

^A I ff

flwrsday November 20th Sale Begins at 10 oclock Sharp

FREE LUNCH AT NOON

HORSES Black mare 15 yrs old wt 1000 Black mare 14 wt 1000 lbs CATTLE

Halfblood Brown Swiss cow 9 giving milk bred Oct 5

Durham Cow 7 giving milk Three quarter Brown Swiss cow

amp giving milk Durham Heifer 2 due Jan 30 Durham-Heifer 2 fat 2 Durham calves 2 Durham Calves 9 months old 1 Durham Calf 4 months old HOGS

i oland China Sow one year old 5 Spring Shoats HAY AND GRAIN ETC Quantity of Hay Stack of Rye Straw Corn Stalks 600 bu Sorted Yellow Dent Corn CO Fence Potts 70 f t Black Wahrat Lumber FARM TOOLS Land Roller YcouW 2 Horse Cultivator 1 Horse Cultivator |L F Michel Fanning Mill

600 lb Scales Feed Cooker Truck Wagon Osborne Mower 60 Tooth Drag Favorite Grain Drill Bean Poller Hay Rake Tank Header Grindstone Corn Sheller Corn Planter Crosscut Saw Grain Cradle Log Chain Platform Spring Buggy Road Cart Spring Buggy Grain Bags 21 Potato Crates Hay Knife Hay Rope Harpoon Fork Set Work Harness 2 Single Harnesses 2 Ladders Drmp Boards Barrel Chum Water Separator 10 Gal Milk Can Coal Stove And Many Other Articles Too

Numerous to Mention

Terms of Sale All sums of $10 and under cash over that amount one years time will be given on good bankable notes at 6 per cent

Lambert PERCY ELLIS Auctioned

Pmckney 14 Fowlerville 7

Continwed from ftrat page

Then Captain Hourbonrwiis called Ms men around him and scathingly deshylivered his opinion of the team whose mediocre playing was giving their opshyponents an easy vctory He exhorted fhetn to yet in the jrame and show Iowlerville the real simon-pure Pinck-ney brand of football After this ) enrt-to-heart tongue lashing came a t omplete reversal of form for the conshytesting elevens Pinckney secured the lgtal and the lMnrkney fighting spirit domineered the battle until the whistle thrieked the finish with two touchshydowns nnd goals to the credit of the rnti-muendnirnt warriors nnd i final wore of 11 to 7

The score does not tell the real story laquogtf the game ns all the breaks of luck verc in favor of the visitors At one Itntc iVickncy h-nl t-ikM iilt Iill and Mriroming the stubborn resistance 1 as steadily ga ltbull until only a few i bullbull( separated (he pigskin from goal bull he opposition growing weaker and vcsker when the whistle signalled the 1 nd of that quarter stopped proceed-bulllraquogt gave Fowlerville a very much de-ftred chance to rent and recuperate and plated the bull in safer territory for then The Fowlerville boys wrrr accomshypanied by a large number of enthosi lStic supporters who thronged the sde-

bull bullbullIfet and cheered their favorites ltereU|rhout the entire jrame Kven j bullvhen their team frJsjr weary and dis- j

^ ffceartened under Hnckneys repeated t-l -JlSlaUgftts the Fowlerville supporters vS^raquosielaquond skirted were untiring in their

w -ltrifofts for encouragement This loy-^ tIty was worthy of better results but vftet that first disastrous touchdown bull f

Vv traquolaquo nnckney team was transformed ^bullbullbulltfioinbend of mHd football players

bull lnttf a flatting writhing unleashed rjrcjfciie of veritable fury bucking the vi skirting the ends ineaking

tkc seeratagjy invulnerable bullf basic wStfV laquoraquod siaew for rain j

iffifm|tMi amp victory Anally reward- Leoisjeir -aespersee saons ^JHKfc4ampampmMttradere nd with

ience be-

j to the last was outclassed after the ( firlt| touchdown At one time with the ball in their own possession--the bitjirr team was forced back back ajrain and a^ain for larjre losses until

conipelled to ineffectually resort to the i forward pass There is the lesson of loyalty at lest to be learned from football jrames played here this voir ler visiting teiii has been accompanied by enthusshyiastic contingents of its home town supporters who came to help with their

ipiesence while their players were I buttling in the arena Why not folshylow this example in loyalty and when liickrtey visits other towns for an afshyternoon contest lets show- our appreshyciation of a really fine football team

by ffoinjr alonjr and showing the ltiut-sifi world how proud wc are of the 1 DJ V Pitickney team

Friday Nov 1 linckney ]i|ays a reinrn jrame at Fowlerville Inless there is a complete reversal of form raquoin either team Pincknev should win this jrame Hut they will hae to work for it as Fowlerville players are ( -Ic-mincd to win

Wedding The wedding anniversaries are

First cotton seroml paper third lenther fourth rruit and flowers fifth wooden sixth sugar seventh woolen eighth India rubber ninth willow tenth tin eleventh steel twelfth silk and linen thirteenth Ince fourteenth Ivory fifteenth crysshytal twentieth chisa twenty-fifth silver thirtieth pearl fortieth ruby fiftieth golden seventy-fifth diashymond

n ^ R B Itinerant dyer-by-the-day brings Mohimmed to the mountainmdashthe

Mohammed of the paint pots to the mountain of almost Immovable davenshyports and armchairs

The woman toucher-up may renshyovate with her magic dyes houseshyhold fnrnlshinss that cannot be dipped She has and needs no ofshyfice she simply Soelaquo from house to house office to office or to dubs theshyaters hallsmdashwherever in fact there is touching up to be donemdashcarrying with her a simple but efficient dyeing Service

Theres a iure to the business of freshening and brightening by the strokes of a brush says a woman who Is known as interior redecorator of her small town The work reshyquires nothing but an eye for color ami a certain skill with the brush And it supplies earthly necessities as wii as esthetic satisfaction

The plan is simply this The special dye intended for the purpose is applied to sofa carpet wall coveringsmdashanyshything about the house hall or office that needs recoiwringmdashwith an ordishynary paint brush scrub brush or on larpe surfaces a special kind of tank spray which mary be had from the manufacturers of the dye This colorshying process is much simpler than dyo-inir by dipping It is almost as easy as palntinj Thefdyer can do the rugs rUht on the floorwall coverings right 01 the wall

The dyer may also get the job of dyeing things othter than the unremov-aMe ones then_she will not use her special dyes suitable only for heavy textiles rugs hanfttigs couch ami chair coverings For dyeing by lipshyping she will -use the ordinary dyes with which the average person Is best acquainted tine ones for coloring blouses handkerchiefs and other delishycate articles The interior redecorate does well to carry both kinltN of dye and to understand the methods of usshying both

The successful dyer-by-the-day Is sure to make good financial returns She will probably have practically no competition for the line is ns yet little known She should advertise In the local papers for her customers and spread the news of her project to her friends by personal communication

The dyer will of course never ex poriment on the possessions of tier customers Cntil she becomes export sip must read even-thing she can find on the technical details of dyeing proc esses and she must follow directions Implidtly

(SJ l lt4 WMlirr Nlaquowspaplaquor Union)

ALL FOR HEALTH HEALTH FOR ALL

THATS THI8 CRUSADERS WAR CRY AS SHE FIGHTS FOR

BETTER HEALTH

Betty Awaits The Doctors Verdict

the Michigan Tuberculosis Associashytion Her parents are wiBe They know that 65 per cent of all children in the United States between Ave and fifteen are infected with the germ of tuberculosis

It is but a step from tuberculosis infection to the disease itself Herein lies the wisdom and necessity of frequent chest examinations by comshypetent physicians

Tuberculosis Christmas Seals supshyport Free Chest Clinics all over Miebi

gan Such clinics j are a ctitch in I time against the most insidious of c o u r s e s t h e plague which in the last ten years killed 31196 men women and chilshy

dren of Michigan Christmas Seals fight tuberculosis

Buy them Give Health Ready-Made Critic

Man must serve his time to every trade Save censure critics all are reidy mademdashByron

Doubter Not Wanted I will listen to any ones convicshy

tions but pray keep your doubts to yourselfmdashGoethe

iHiiiiniimiHMnmniiHiiiHuimmniliiii

Santa Makes Merry llilliliillll(iiitiliiliiilililllillllllllllllillll

Mamp

Heres Mary Elisabeth all ready to wage war against dirty hands falte and teeth enemies of Better Health Shes a Modern Health Crusader of the Michigan Tuberculosis Association

ftwiiiMm M_II

Santa Claus sometimes jokes with f( Iks big and little nnd he nearly always has some comic toys for the children This yerr ho will leave them fvnny spoon dolls made of paper picnic spoons and dressed in crepe paper clothes A clown doil with dangling less a Chinaman and a Puritan have had their pictures taken so that any one can make them

mdasho-

LUDENS MFNTHOL CfiJCH SKCPS

fV il f f

mdash which fights disease of all kinds She sleeps at least ten hours erery nifht with her windows open she likes milk and she eats only those oods that healthy happy children should have

Healthy children cant succumb to tubercntoej Making frail children strong is one 0 the duties of the Christmas Tuberculosis Seals Buy Christmas Seals and help Mary Elisshyabeth and other Crusaders fight tushyberculosis which strikes where toast expected

State of Michiirtn the Probate Court for the County of Livingston

t i session of sfiid Court held at the Probate Office in the City of Hov-ell in said County on the 24th dny ot October A D 1924

Present Hon Willis L Lyons Judge of Probate

In the matter of the estate of Perry Blunt Deceased

A M Roche having filed in said court his petition praying for license to sell the interest of said estate in certnin real estate therein described

It is ordrred thnt the 24th day of November A D 1924 at l e n oclock In the forenoon at said probate office be and is hereby appointed for hearshying said petition nnd that all persons interested in said estate appear before said court at said time and place to show cause why a license to sell the interest of said estate in said real esshytate should qot be granted

It is further ordered that public noshytice thereof be given by publication of a copy of this order for three sue-cMwdve weeks previous to said day of hearing in the Pinckney Dispatch a newspaper printed nnd circulated in said county

WILLIS L LYONS Judge of Probate

A true copy Celestla ParshaU

Register of Prtbats

f l

s

are in styles that are very late

Most of them fur-trimmed

Beautiful shades of reds and browns aswell as grays and blacks Suedine cloths velours and Bolivia

The prices are most reasonable

$1676 $2475 $3975 $5275 We should like to show you any time

JJ

MEN who come to us from Pinckshyney always have demanded style and quality

OUR answer has always Y pound Smdash-and even morlt a moderate price

been

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Just Now t 1 laquo

we are showing a fine line of all wool suits at

$25 $30 $35 $40 We will be pleased to show you

Mmikg m-

Page 3: PINCKNEY DISPATCHpinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1924-11-12.pdf · mi in.iii«i(i.jAHf .^fi| :C WW VV1 PINCKNEY DISPATCH ^¾ f IL,," ••'« ^ a. i Vol. 41 Pinckney. Liyingston

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THE PINCKNEY DISPATCH

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CHILDREN WHO ARE SICKLY Mothers who rata the

health of their children should never be without NOTHEB QUAYS SWEET POWDEBSlsr CHILDREN for use when needed They tend to Break up Colas Relieve Feverish

CHAINS ARE REAL SKID STOPPERS

ness Worms Constip Greatest Danger Besetting tion Headache Teethuu disorders and Stoniacl TBAOB XAJUt

Don t acocsil Troubles Used by Moth laquo a y Sokistitate srt for over thirty yean

Sold by DnigMts everywhere Ask today Trial packageFREE Address MOTHER GRAY C O LC ROY N Y

Idea for Making Use of Wood Now Wasted

No less than 60 per cea t of a t ree U wasted In i ts conversion into lumshyber At present the twigs branches bark roots s awdus t and plank and log t r immings a r e entirely l o s t A new process for the ut i l izat ion of these was te products and the production of synthet ic lumber is being t r ied out In the United Sta tes T h e process is a conversion of the w a s t e Into a cellshyulose compound of a plast ic n a t u r e t h a t can be pressed or molded into all conceivable shapes and bulks from boards to ra f te rs

T h e development of the process h a s passed beyond t h e initial exper imental s tages and has been taken In hand by t h e National Lumber Manufac ture rs association If it is commercially pract icable It may be extremely valushyab le as a s tep to the conservat ion of the world t imber supplies

WOMEN NEED SWAMP-ROOT Thousands of women have kidney and

bladder trouble and never suspect it Womens complaints often prove to be

nothing else but kidney trouble or the result of kidney or bladder disease

If the kidneys are not in a healthy conshydition they may cause the other organs to become diseased

Pain in the back headache loss of ambition nervousness are oftentimes symptoms of kidney trouble

Dont delay starting treatment Dr Kilmers Swamp-Root a physicians preshyscription obtained at any drug store may be just the remedy needed to overcome such conditions

Get a medium or large size bottle immeshydiately from any drug store

However if you vmh first to test- this great preparation send ten cents to Dr Kilmer amp Co Binphamton N Y for a sample bottle When writing be SUM and mention this papermdashAdvertisement

Misunderstanding Elsie De Wolfe said at a re-at her residence in Sut ton

Miss ceptlon p l ace

Some women branch out into polshyit ics and reform before they a re qui te up to it A banker told me the other day that a woman asked him recently to address her club on internat ional finance

I am sorry madam said the banker but I have sworn off all public speaking

Butmdash said the woman No the banker cut her off firmly

bullNo I have burned my bridges 4 Oh but In that case said the

woman I can easily lend you a pair of my husbands mdashWall Street Journa l

DEMAND BAYER ASPIRIN

Aspirin Marked With Bayer Cross Has Been Proved Safe by Millions

W a r n i n g Unless you see the n a m e Baye r on package or on tab le ts you a r e not get t ing the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physic ians for 23 years

Say Bayer when you buy Aspirin Imi ta t ions may prove dangerousmdashAdv

Lost Record Found The last records of an explorer lost

In the desert In Africa 45 years ago have just been discovered In 1S70 Fr iedr ich Rolfe undertook to cross the Lybian desert one of the most barren and pitiless w a s t e s In the world He never was heard of again This year an expedition sent out by Prince Ke-mal ed Din found a cairn of s tones and when they took it apar t discovshyered witrrin it a sealed bot t le contain tng a manuscr ip t The la t te r proved to be the records of t h e lost explorer These were forwarded to Germany and were found to contain scientific da ta of considerable Interest and value

Shave Wi th Ctrticura Soap And double your razor efficiency as well a s promote skin pur i ty skin comshyfort and skin hea l th No mug no s l imy soap no germs no was te no Irrishyt a t ion even when shaved twice daily One soap for all usesmdashshaving bathshying and shampooing mdashAdver t i sement

One Thing at a Tim DorcasmdashDo you ever allow a m a n to

kiss yon when you re out motoring with h tm

Phi l ippamdashNever If a m a n can drive safely while k iss ing me he s not givshying the kiss t h e a t t en t ion it deserves mdash K a n s a s City S ta r

will d o w h a t w s d a i m for I tmdash

of Cata r rh o r Deafnssj

Halls Catarrh Medicine tld ycnt e s o s s d b r

raquo f C H E N E Y fr C O T o l e d o O M s

so - K ^amp REMEDY S t ST

COLDS-GRIP

Motorist Calls for Preshyventive Measures

(By I R W I N OREER President Greer Colshylec t of Automot ive Engineer ing Chicago)

Every motorist who has experienced the seusation of having his car franshytically try to slide from under him and go sli thering into a tree curb or passshying vehicle la well aware that skidding Is a dangerous fact that calls for drasshytic preventive measures

Skidding is the greatest danger t ha t besets the motorist It comes without warning turns p leasure Into peril and takes enormous toil in human lives and wrecked cars

To match man s s t rength against the crushing power of a skidding car Is usually futile often fatal a lways folly

Skidding is no respecter of person purse t ime p lace or conditions Pr ide s trength will and bank accounts fall before tts re lent less force

Accidents Due to Skidding

Stat is t ics prove tha t fully 90 per cent of motor car accidents and fatalshyities a re due directly or Indirectly to skidding When a car stnrta to go Its usually a goner There Is no t ime to wait or cogitate There Is no time to adjust differences between the car and the slippery street Life can be lost but oncemdashfrightful injuries may happen frequently

Nothing has ever been Invented In the way of anti-skd devices to equal t i re chains and it doesnt require the gift of second sight to see why this is true

Wheels equipped with chains autoshymatically lay their own traction surshyface Friction Is effected without afshyfecting the t ires They strike the ground squarelymdashhold and release Inshystantly They fight for firm contact a lways gain their ground prevent side-skid and drive-slip

Chains Make Best

Anti-skid chains make the best of bad going wherever you go You may be lulled Into a false sense of security by the good behavior of your car on dry paved s t reets But what about t h e country runs To motor on ley or muddy roads without tire chains Is like rocking a rowboat In mtdehannel

Take your chains and youll t ake no chances Go as far and as fast as you likemdashup hill down dale through mud slush and slime Tire chains will prove pathfinders to peace comshyfort and safety No mat ter how mudshydy the road they hold on like a bullshydog It Is as If you were to t ransfer your own Instinct for self-preservation to the wheels of your car They are as essential to your car as wheels brakes oil or gasoline

Old Man Friction Often Is an Unseen Passenger

No mat te r what kind of a car you drive how many passengers It holds or where or when you drive there s an extra passenger along with you says a garage man

It s Old Man Friction You can t see him but you can notice the effect of his sly damaging tactics He runs up your gasoline and repair bills and wears out your car a lot quicker as long as he has his own way

Frict ion must be eliminated by the use of a good lubricant and I have found the graphi te lubricants mcst efshyfective The selected flake graphi te in the grease forms an unusually long-wearing coating that keeps the metal contact surfaces from the rasping grind that wears away the par ts Graphite is especially good for cars used in t ravel ing a hilly country

I t t

t

Shortcut for Valve Grinding Outlined

In cases where a badly pit ted valve requires regrlnding here Is a shortcut Cut a piece of emery cloth in dimensions a l i t t le bit wider than the valve seat ing and twice as long and then double it over so that both surfaces are cut t ing surfaces Next cut a hole In the cloth so t h a t the valve s tem may be passed through and the emery cloth brought close up agains t the valve head The valve is then placed In position for grinding under comparat ively high pressure Both sides of the emery cloth will conform to the valve head and the seatshying cloth and if the valve turns and the emery cloth remains s ta t ionary the valve will be ground on the upper emery whereas if the cloth revolves the valve seat ing will be ground on the lower emerv

t

Clutch Lubrication Is Quite Often Neglected

In some cars lubrication of the clutch throwout collar means removal of the floor boards and the turning down of a grease cup It seems tha t it is a hardsh ip for many owners to tu rn down a grease cup even though it is exposed to view This class rarely if ever takes the t ime to atshytend to -the clutch throwout unless there is clutch and gear-shift ing troushyble Where there Is no provision for lubrication of this par t by turning down a cup extending through the floor boards or the side of the frame the owner had best have an oil line installed A good repai rman can easily a r r ange to have a large cup feed through a small opening into a piece of metal tubing running to the throw-out The small opening is necessary so the oil feed will not be rapid othershywise the reservoir will be exhausted quicTdy Or a self-feeding oil cup many types of which a re on the marshyket might he installed in place of the g rease cup under the floor boards

Automobile Tire Should Be Kept Well Inflated

Tt Is well known that after a long fast run the t i res of an automobile are found to he hot Many have supposed this the result of the friction of the t i re on the road Such is however not the case

The real cause of heat ing Is the inshyternal friction of the tire Itself Ai the tire Is being constantly deflected by contact with the road the various plis or layers which compose the t ire do not act uniformly Consequentshyly there is more or less motion beshytween them that resul ts In friction and heat

The greater the change in shape In t i re as It contacts with the road the grea ter will he the friction Of course the more the t i re Is Inflated the lesraquo will be the deflection but It Is evident that while a perfectly rigid t i re would generate but little heat It would fall In giving easy riding Hence one must put up with some heat ing and consequent tire wear

B a l l C h e c k R e p a i r In engines having pressure feed oilshy

ing there Is generally a regulator with a ball check valve In a housing If this ball gets stuck or lacks sphericity it Is difficult to remove tt for replaceshyment About the best way of get t ing it out Is to take an L-shaped tube or rod of a d iameter slightly smaller t han the ball On the end of this rod or tube stick a small lump of grease Putshyting the rod through the opening careshyfully the grease on the end will usualshyly pick up the ball and bring it o u t

IS THE CHAMPION AUTOMOBILE TIRE CHANGER

H

Famous Forts in U S History

By E L M O S C O T T W A T S O N

t

t

l(c 1S1pound4 Wcaiern Newspaper Lnlun gt

W h e n D u t c h a n d S w e d e s

F o u g h t o n U S S o i l When Liustuvus Adolpbus the great

king of Sweden saw the success of o ther European nat ions in plant ing colonies in the New World he resolved to establish a colony -of Swedes In America Accordingly he formed a colonizing compuny for that purpose but his death prevented the plan from being carr ied out

Queen Chris t ina and Oxenstlern Adolphus famous minister however renewed the project and in ltxW they sent out a colony of plain s t rong industrious people who settled la what Is now the s ta te of De laware and called it New Sweden There they built a fort which stood near the present city of Wilmington and they named it Von Christ ina In honor of their queen

The new colons was soon In trouble This ground was claimed by the Dutch who had settled New Amstershydam a qua r t e r of a century before and after several years of bi t ter disshypute between the Dutch and the Swedes Peter Stuyvesant the choleric old governor of New Amsterdam reshysolved to put an end to the trouble by expelling the Swedes from the country

in 1GO4 Stuyvesant sailed from New Amsterdam with a fleet to cap ture Fort Christ ina Washington Irving in bis inimitable Knickerbocker s Hisshytory of New York tells how Govershynor Stuyvesant called upon Gov J a n Kisingh to surrender how the proshyposal was scornfully rejected and how the doughty Dutch warriors following their ancient rule of a lways fighting upon a full stomach a te a mighty dinshyner in prepar ing for the fray Then according to this historian brimful of wratl) and cabbage they moved forshyward to the a t tack Jus t before reachshying the fort they paused lighted the i r pipes gave a furious puff and charged gallantly under the cover of the smoke After un Homeric struggle In which Governor Stuyvesant vanshyquished Governor Hisingh in single combat the fort was carried without the loss of a single man

Although we cannot accept Irvings story unreservedly the assault on Fort Qhristina must have been something of an opera boufTe affair unique in the annals of warfare But the trishyumph of the Dutch was short-lived for In 1664 the English took possession of all the Dutch colonies in America j and the Brit ish flag supplanted the Dutch banner over Fort Christina To-d$y no t race of the fort remains but nfaiby s tands the little gray stone c iurch built in 1608 the successor o the chapel in the fort where the

yedish colonists worshiped as a re-lder of the fort where once Pu tch -

|n and Swede fought In America

Charles Paine of Philadelphia h a s made a study of changing t i res He has a definite system worked out for each m a k e of t i remdasha system with the least possible number of moves His assoc ia tes claim t h a t he took off a 80 s ampH clincher t i re and replaced it in less t h a n a minutemdashworking with bis ba re

M o n u m e n t o f F o l l y uch has been writ ten about the

ab kdoned fa rms of New England but he i l abandoned forts are not RO well known Of all of these obsolete s t ro igholds none Is more interes t ing than Fort Knox on the Narrows of the Penotiscot river at Prospect Maine

This fort which darived Its name from the fact that It was built on land once owned by Henry Knox the Boston bookseller who became Washshyingtons chief of arti l lery In the Revshyolution and the first secretary of war for the United States was begun In the early forties to protect the shipshybuilding and commerce of the Penobshyscot which was then at Its he igh t Work had progressed far enough a t the outbreak of the Civil war to enshyable the War depar tment to use For t Knox as a t ra in ing school for many of the ar t i l lery officers who served in the Union army This was the nearshyest that Fort Knox ever came to a war record however for It never heard the shot of a hostile gun and In 1S69 af ter construct ion had been In progress for 26 years work on it was abandoned

Costing about a million dollars it s tands a monument of human folly wri tes one historian The recent adshyvance In the science of war is such that Fort Knox would be scarcely more effective In time of danger t han an ancient feudal cas t le of the Middle Ages Monument of folly though Fort Knox may be it is also a monushyment to the days when masonry was a fine ar t Huge white slabs of granshyite quarr ied from Mount Waldo a few miles nor th and floated down the river In scows are set In Its wal ls edge on edge with beautiful precision and a great c i rcular s ta i rcase of solid pieces of g ran i te Is the crowning piece of workmansh ip N e a r the shore ba t te r ies can still be seen the brick ovens where the 42-pound canshynon balls were heated but nearly all of the ar t i l lery placed in the fort durshying the Civil w a r has been removed to adorn p a r k s a rmor ies and o ther public places in New England

Designed to be the finest fortress on the Atlant ic coast For t Knox is now abandoned and it is one of the several forts whose sa l e has been authorized hy congress wi th in recent years Alshythough it l acks the historic backshyground of many other forts there a re few which a r e a s pic turesque as this grim old monument of folly which s tands guard over an unfulfilled nope s a the b a n k s of the Rhine of Amershyica the Penobscot r ivet

ATV

GOOTgt

Important News jix Cocoa Drinkers

C u t cocoa b i l k 4 0 to 5 0 b y askshyi n g f o r M o n a r c h w h e n y o u b u y D u t c h P roces s C o c o a mdash b y ask ing for F a r m H o u s e w h e n y o u w a n t A m e r shyi c a n P r o c e s s Note the low prices

R E 1 D M U R D O C H amp C O

Manufacturer and Importer Ewblihed 1833

Chicago Boston N e w York Pi t t sburgh

Q R O C E R S Retd Murdoch amp Cos food products are sold only by the Regular Retail Grocer who owes and operates his own store We never tell lo Chain Store

Drop as a postal for shipping

tags pncM and

instruction

You Can Ship Your Poultry to Market Yourself

Save buyers profit or Co-op expense Highest cash prices paid for quality poultry

NEWHALL MARKET CO Wholesale Poultry

2 6 0 2 O r l e a n s S t D e t r o i t M i c h

In Business Over 50 Years Reference mdash Banks mdash Commercial Agencies

Of all the pes ts that go unhung Its the bird with a scheme and a well-oiled tonguemdashGood Hurdware

Talking and eloquence a re not thf same To speak and to speak well are too things

When smiling-

you give - J o u b e r t

give with Joy and Be fair In all your dealings and for the highest

^^33

SAY BAYER ASPIRIN and INSIST Unless you see the Bayer Cross on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years for

Colds Pain

Headache Toothache

Neuralgia Lumbago Neuritis Rheumatism

Sfi Accept only Bayer package which contains proven directions Hahdv Bayer boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100mdashDruggists

Ssptta Is ths trad mart of Ssjar Manmictarraquo of MonoacUclaquocdlaquoraquoter of SalicjUcacU

Ship Carries Tailor Shop In the most exact ing sense the Atshy

lant ic liner Homeric carr ies a s h i p s tai lor I l ls shop is so well (itted up t h a t a man or woman may select the goods be measured fitted and refitted so as to have a new outfit between t ime of embark ing nnri leaving the ship at the o ther end of the vnynglaquo

Girls Turn Expressmen Girls in London ho drove motof

cycles during the war are now conducts lng parcel delivery service using SldS cars to hold the packages

Poverty Is not romant ic to the poor nnd wealth often becomes t i resome t l the rich

Castoria is a pleasant harmshyless Substitute for Castor Oil Paregoric Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups espeshycially prepared for Infant in arms and Children aU

To avoid imhatiooi always look for (as tfanatva of frozen drreerions on each package Fkjiirlsii siSfjrwhafs racuiisimiJ it

vv

bull 2 i v lt raquo bull

THE PaNCKWEY DISPATCH

m^ praquo bull

CtMETtUSFOR

HOME GOODS Sf every itscriftiw

At liwest prices

Tkanbgivmg Cards One Cent Each

lines Bazaar HflwcH Opposite Courthouse

GREGORY MARION

Hon Shoeing General Repairing mdash - a l s o Ford Repairing

F C BRENNINGSTALL PetteysviUe - Michigan

Funeral Director P H SWARTHOUT

Phone No 39 Pinckney Mich

PERCY ELLIS Expert Auctioneer

SclU Anything for Anyonemdash AnytimemdashAnywhere

I am conversant with Cattle and Hog Pedigrees

For dates and terms call phone or write Anderson Corners

Pinckney or Dispatch Office

Phone No 19FU Pinckney

WANTED POULTRY amp EGGS

Will payjcash for poultry and eggs delivered at my poultry plant and will pay all the market affords at all times

E FARNAM

E W DANIELS General Auctioneer

Chelsea Michigan P O Address

Gregory Mich R F D 2 Phone 116-2L-2S

HIRAM R SMITH Lawyer

Office Opposite Court House D D Monroe Bldg

Howell Mich

laquoraquoraquoraquoraquoraquoraquoraquowraquoraquovraquoraquoraquoraquo raquoraquoraquoraquoraquoraquobullraquolaquo

Drs HFampCLSIGLER PINCKNEY

Office Hour

1230 to 230 P M

Sunday 1 to 2 P M

STATE OF MICHIGAN BANKING DEPARTMENT OFFICE OF T H E

COMMISSIONER

Olive Hetninger and Fave Hill spent bullSaturday night and Sunday at the l l rminger home at Webnervil lr

Mrs iibnie Saddler ltgtf California who haigt been among relatives and friends in this vicinity for some time spent a few days last week with Mrs Kmily Har r i s

The eldest son of Clifton Osborn who recently broke one of his lower limbs had to have it reuroken last week and set again

Mrs Sara Cicario of Detroit was the winner of the s t r ing of pearls pu t in H K Marshall s raquotore by a soap comshypany

At the home of the brides parentis Mr and Mrs Charles Ellsworth Ust Wednesday evening occurred the mar riage of their eldest daughter Miss Lela to Russell Grosshaus They leave Monday Nov 10 accompanied by his brother John Grosshaus and wife for an overland trip to Florida

It will be remembered that the lashydies of this 1 A S will have for sale Nov -gty afternoon and evening quiltshyed and tied quilts rugs and -ill kinds of fancy work also will serve a chickshyen pie supper

In the j u ry trial of Mrs Cora Brewshyer of Jackson and H K Munsell last Thursday Mr Munsell was the winshyner

Mrs Iillie Burden and Mrs Klla Benjamin of Fowlerville visited among friends and relatives here last week

F A Hill and Sterns Smith unshyloaded a car load of lumber last week at Stockbridge belonging to Charles B Clark of River Rouge Mr Clark havshying bought several acres of the Rockshywell Island farm and will erect a cotshytage at once

Mr and Mrs Win George and daughter Blanch and Clare Ti tus of Rochester were recent guests with C M Titus and family

Stanley Quinn and family of Chesan-ing anil Miss Iuiiii v^uinn of Harr ison were callers at Mrs Hills and C M Titus last Sunday

- - - -o- --

APRON SOCIAL

The Kings Daughters felt much gratified and justifiably so in the reshysults of the Apron Social held at the Iarsoriage last Friday afternoon Deshyspite threa tening weather condition approximately 150 were in a t tendance and the contr ibut ions from these as well as from absent friends were genshyerous indeed more than S10D having bullilnady been received to iid in carryshying out the good work of the organisashytion

A line progrniit was given consisting nf vocjl solos b Mrs Farl Baughn iiul Mrs H F Maycroft readings b x Mrs Meihns of Detroit piano duets o M I-Mlaquo v adi1 I InrHs n n 1 111fi lw Martin and piano solos by Misses Bessie Swurtliout and Dorothy Cnrr

A luncheon WHS served mdasho

Mrs Ar thu r White visited her sis-ter in Saginaw over the week end

Mrs Burr Clark visited relatives in Rose city last week

Leslie Muycoek is on a hunt ing tr ip in the north - Walter Karzidofer and wife were given a farewell par ty Friday evening They are leaving the Ccphelus farm to move to New Balt imore Fdwin F Roberts who has been sershyiously ill with heart trouble and scarlet fever the past week is slowly improvshying

Fugene Smith and wife of Cavan-augh Fake are spending the winter months with their daughter Mrs Mac Martin

John M Har r i s and family of Pinckshyney were Sunday visitors at J D Whites

Mrs Adam Gehringer has sold Tier farm at Tr iangle Lake and is moving to Howell this week

Jessie White and family of Howell visited at Ray Kllsworths Wednesday evening

Win Ru t tmau and family spent Sunshyday at Mel Dunns in Iosco

Herbert Lane has moved to his new home which was the Coral Drew farm near the Sani tor ium

Mr and Mrs Ray T Bentley of Grand Kupids fisited at J I) Whiles Friday evening

Mr Sarle and family are leaving the Archie Gorton farm to spend the winter in southern Florida

Charles P Reed and family were in Corunna Sunday

Albin Pfau Alfred Lange and famshyilies were reclaquoat visitors at Frank Langes in Aon Arbor

The Ladies AW served chicken pie at Edwin Webbs Wednesday evening A good crowd was present Proceed 37oo

SCHOOL NOTES

| Kd Brown former right halfback i on the Pinckney High School football j t eam is now pllaquoying in the back field j of the freshmen squad at the Inivur- sily of Michigan

The universifv coaches have picked Kd as one of Hie best hacks to cntci Michigan in some time

mdash - o Merlynne Aiuburgey has left schoo Miss Catheritte Canade of Ferndale

visited school the past week Phyllis Sprout has returnee

school Miss ShuriK visited school

Thursday Tho our members now ugtre few We are t rying our best to do And if ou only do the same Youll find school one great game

Kvrryonr is now busy at his sew ing

JACKSON COUPLE SPEAK MARRIAGE

VOWS THURSDAY

M I M Helen V Craves and Albert Boucher Are Wed at Brides Home

An au tumn wedding of charm and at t ract ion was the marr iage Wednesshyday noon of Miss Helen Virginia Graves of this city to Albert L Bouchshyer son of Mr and Mrs J F Bouchshyer 8iy West Morrell street

The marr iage was solemnized ut high noon at the home of the bride s parshyents Mr ajid Mrs Marcus T Graves in Pinckney

Only immediate members of the two families were present to witness the ceremony which was performed by Rev A T Camburn of the Methodist Kpiseopal church of Stockbridge

The bride was unat tended and was charming in a costume suit of russet brown cloth with brown fur t r immings with which she wore a small modish hat of gold cloth Her flowers were pink roses

Following the exchanges of the bridshyal vows a wedding breakfast was servshyed to the company of 15 guests

Clirv santheums of golden hue were used to adorn the home and fall foliage added to the a t t ract ive effect of the decorative note

Mr and Mrs Boucher l e f t l a t e r in the day for a wedding tr ip by motor to Cleveland Detroit and Chicago and after Nov 20 will he at home at 321 West Morrell street- Citizen Patr iot

Miss Graves is well known in this vicinity being a graduate of Pinckshyney High school of the class of 1920 and for the past I years has been em-employed as bookkeeper with the Conshysumers Power Co of Jackson Mr Boucher is a g radua te of the Jackson schools and a prosperous youngbusiness man

ELECTION AFTERMATH

S T

JOINT BANK ACCOUNT

bull A great many people deposit money bull bull in joint accounts Some have joint check- bull bull accounts and some have joint savings ac- bull bull counts By this we mean that the account j bull is payable to either of the parties mention g bull ed in the account during their lifetime or in J bull case of death of one the account is immed- J bull iately payable to the survivor without legal 2 5 proceedings9

s This method is not only used by husband and wife but may also be used by any parties who wish to havetheir money matters arranged in this way

s 5

tlt

l St

CHUBBS CORNERS

J

WHKRKAS by satisfactory evishydence presented to the undersigned it lias been nmdc to appear thnt The Pinckney State Bank in the Village of Pinckney in the County of Livingston State of Michigan has complied with nil the provisions of the General Bankshying lftws of the State of Michigan reshyquired to he complied with before a corporation shall be aiithomed to commence the business of Banking

NOW THKRKKORK I HUGH A McPHERSON Commissioner of the State Banking Department do hereby certify that The Pinckney State Bank in the Village of Pinckney in the County of Mivingstnn and State of Michigan is authorised to commence the business of Banking as provided in section seven of the General Banking laws of the State of Michigan

IN TESTIMONY WHEKK-OF Witness my hand and

(Seal) Seal of Office at Lansing thil First day of October 1M4

_ HUGH A McPHERSON ^ Commissioner of the Banking

Department

Mr and Mrs Fri Hrigham were in Ann Arbor last Wednesday

Mrs Dell Gnffney visited her daughshyter Mrs Louis Gehringer of Howell bull vt Wednesday

Mrs Kingsley visited her parents Rev N W Pierce and wife of Marion one day last week

Mrs Nettie Hennett has sold her farm to a Mr Roberts of Detroi t

Mr Mr Goodspeed of Detroit visited at the Ezra Hrighum home over Sunshyday

Mrraquo and Mrs Jay Rrigham spent last Thursday at tho home of Thomas Moshier and wife of Ann Arbor

Mr and Mrs F W Allison spent Sunday in Hyron the guest of Mrs Allisons daugh te r and family

Albert Dinklc has purchased a new busker and is busy husking corn

Mrs Roiit Granger spent ltraquo irvr days last week in I inrkney with her father Thos Richardson

Mr and Mrs Butlin anil daugh te r Marion of Detroit were calling on ail their old neighbors here Sunday

Mr and Mrs Ed Hoisel and daughshyter of Howell called on M ) Hoisel and family Sunday

MCP Mark Allison and family spent Tuesday night at San ford Reasons listening to the election re turns over I he radio

- - - - - o mdash

PRIZES FOR BEST ARTICLE

HAMBONES MEDITATIONS r ZoSS LOW P t H A R P

TIMES MIT HIM M O H A R P E R H IT H I T Mpound - - AH DON KNOW BOUT PAT BUT T SHO K N 0 C K E P gtAO O U T E N

defeatshy

ed unty

carr ied

Cm 111 ty McOu

jJ[ltfi

bull bull -bull BmUHm Staff VmmU bull bull titt raquobullbull are be-m W nm b

Open to All Students Attending School in Putnam Township

The Dispatch will give five prires total value 1150 to any student atshytending school in Putnam township for an laquortiele on the following subject How I WoiHd Make Pinckney A More Desirable Village to Live In

The first prire will be valued at 500 second $300 third $200 fourth 810laquo fifth 50 cents

The only conditions of the contest are that the article shall not exceed 500 words In length and that all must be submitted ^o the Dispatch office beshyfore December 1st 1924

Competent disinterested iodjres will decide the winners

mdash o

MmglUh Soger BmdashU Two tbftBMQrt people la England

ratted rasir bmsnn 18X00 ncrm fatt

No Wealth in Oil Shml-The Unlterl States bnreati of mine

has conducted tests whleh disprove the hysterical reports that gold diver platinum and potash have been obshytained in paying qnantities from oil shales That it la not commercially possible to recover any of these mateshyrials has been demonstrated by the assays

MajMty o th Law Eight magistrates the clerk anpound bis

assistants n police superintendent an tnspector a sergeant a detective sii constables and two pressmen attended Epplng pollee eonrt when two men were snmmoned for riding bicycles on the footpath neither of whom put In an appearancemdashLondon TJf-Blts

TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN Youwill please take notice that the

undersigned Wendelin Altman a resishydent of the County of Livin^stonyj Michigan for a year last past hereby gives notice that he will make applishycation to the Honorable Jodge of Proshybate in and for the County of Livingshyston and State of Michigan on the 18 day of December 1994 at 1000 A M in the office of said Judge of Probate in the Court Houae of the City of Howell Michigan for a change of his said name to Wendelin Sorg

Wendelin Altman

The outs tanding features of the elecshytion in Pu tnam township were as folshylows

The school amendment was defeated 3-Ki No M Yes

Lynn Gardner for state legislature on Republican ticket ran ahead of his ticket hut behind his opponent H votes

Hiram R Smith for prosecuting atshytorney also made an excellent showing cut t ing Don Van Winkles majori ty down to 11

Davis democrat ic nominee for presishydent received 31 majority

Groesbeck and Couzens were ed here by 25 majority

Miss Nellie Gardner for t reasurer on Democrat ticket the township by 91 majority

Cloirles Hoff on Democratic ticket for Sheriff defeated Ired Teeple Reshypublican by H 2 majority Tins big showing is admit ted by Teeples friends to be on account of the popular i ty of the Hoff shrievalty service in this vicshyinity Before election two c a r s ago Hoff promised the voters in this par t of the county that if elected he would do all in his power towards the en-foreement of law and it would seem from bis splendid showing at the polls I this year that the Voters were satisfied i with his efforts He appointed Irvin I Kennedy local deputy sheriff and gave him all the backing requested T h e result is tha t Kennedy has made good i as i peace officer and although his chief was defeated by a very small ] majori ty in Livingston county the t i t - i ens of this township regrdless of par ty affiliations would like to see Kennedy retained here as deputy shershyiff so that the good work for law enshyforcement may he continued And we unders tand that influential Republishycans have volunteered to petition the Sheriff-elect to reappoint Kennedy to the office

bull - o

Dishonett Borrower$ Vhv does the nvernjre man or womshy

an who borrows honks lose all sense of property rights and fall to return them ovrr-pr imlaquohraquor compulsion Othlaquor things fivtpmrlv come back to the lender hi f it is n book he is lucky bull ullt ffiins possesvinn of it

Tgt-ltgti T laquo i j i s r r i t

PINCKNEY STATE BANK] Officers Director bull

C L SIGLER C L SIGLER President W E FARNAM THOS READ ___Vice-president Q W TttPLE S A H MURPHY Cashier THOS READ bull

nitration ampmnrra

(Enmmmtitij Qlnngrrgattimal QHjitrrij ftnrknri fHirtjtgatt

3fatmnbrr lfi IB 10 2fl 1024

SUNDAY

Dedication Service 1030 Dr J W Sutherland Speaker

Super intendent Michigan Congregational Conference

Evening Service 730 Rev C H Harder Speaker Missionary Michigan Congregational Conference

bull TUESDAY j

Home-Coming s 4 Supper Served in New Dining Room

Evening Service ^^ __730 Former Pastors of Pinckney Speakers

WEDNESDAY

Evening Service Mr Geo W Soerheide Speaker

City Mission Cleveland O

730

THURSDAY

Evening Service 730 Rev Paul Voelker Speaker

President Olivet College

Special Music at Each Service

The Public u Cordially invited

rr

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bull~plusmnAJ m laquoraquolt ^ W raquo M -wrymuw

NOTICE Keep your credit good by paying you account before October 1st No more credit after tbat date if acct not settled

We Offer the FoUowkg Articles for Cash A $2400mdash3-Burner Ofl Cooker for $17 00 A $3000 4 B laquo u u OQ Cooker for $20 00 A 75c Pocket Knife for ^ A $125 tad $150 Pocket Knife for I trade 9 0 c A $150 Ahrm Clock for j i laquoa A $150 Watck for I j bdquo A $300 RacSofite Watch for L t g A $3000 Bom Poller far ^ bdquo _ I I I $ i a 0 0

Teeple i lctraware gt

lea l f^ ^bullbullxampamsiampai- mrfimL

f

mm ^^^m

bullbullWfl

W

mm THE P1NCKNEY DISPATCH mmmmmmmy W

t

^ r

I- v

OUR PRICES ON BEEF Are as follows

Round Steak 25c lb Loin and Porterhouse 28c Shoulder Roast 15c Rib Stew 8 to 10c

8 I

With every other food getting higher EAT MORE MEAT

Reason amp Reason mm

bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull

Full Line of Accessories and Genuine Ford Parts

Expert Repairmen Satisfaction Guaranteed

Full line of Oils and Greases Stop Lights Spot Lights Bulbs and Heaters

Special price on 30x3 1-2 Fabrics $10 for Tire and Tube while they last

R DAY BIRD Pinckney Ford Sales and Service

M i H i i m m m n M i H u i

Ciiicf Justice White am

Mr Justice Harlan chewed tobacco in the Supreme Court room and lived to a ripe old age and in full vigor at 76 and 78 yean respectively Chew Beech-Nut and remain strong and vigorous

Over2S0MiHkn Packages SoMf in laquo

Single Year

Childrens Ailments TIS0RDERS of the stomach and constipation are U the most common diseases of children To

correct them you will find nothing better than srlains Tablets One tablet at bed time will

do th$ work and will make your child bright and fcheeriiil the following morning Do not punish

jour Children by giving them castor oil Chamber-are better and more pleasant to take-

r him berl a irVs Tablets M- iVs H7-

felM

i

P i n c k n e y D i s p a t c h

Entered at the Postofficeat Finck-oey Mich araquo Second Claos Matter

LINCOLN E SI ITH PUBLISHER

Subscription $126 a Year la Advauc

Mr B r o w n ot N u r t h v i l l c m a n a g e r of t h i s d i s t r i c t l o r t he D e t r o i t Kdison C o t u p a u y a n d his a s s i s t a n t Mr Wi lk in son w e r e p l e a s a n t c a l l e r s a t t h e Disshyp a t c h office M o n d a y

T h e m a r r i a g e of Dr J D S i n g e r a n d Miss M a r g a r e t I r m i t both of B r i g h t o n w a s sulcinni cd at tin- home of Mr a n d Mrs G e o r g e W S m i t h of E a s t Cirand l i ive r s t r e e t tliii (W edshyn e s d a y ) a f t e r n o o n it J 00 o c lock Rev K K J ) u r k e e of tin- W M cl iurcl i officiatetl a n d uuly t he i j iunedi-LI11 r e l a t i v e s were prese j i t T h e y left on t he a f t e r n o o n t r a in for a w e d d i n g l o u r to I cnnsyU anni the Dr s old iionie - A r g u s

T h e F a r m i n g t o n t o w n s h i p boa rd h a v e a d o p t e d a r e s o l u t i o n t o s u b m i t the q u e s t i o n of l i gh t i ng G r a n d Rivet road f rom t h e W a y n e c o u n t y in te r see -thfh on the east to the N o s i t o w n s h i p

Mrs F r e d G r i e v e of A n n A r b o r a n d I l i u deg t i u w l s t T l u ^ e n f will he M r s Hiram S m i t h of H o w e l l we re Mipplied by the D e t r o i t Kdison Co if

LOCAL AND GENERAL

M r s Al ice P r i c e of D e t r o i t is visitshying M r s E H Bye r

Mrs K H B y e r v is i ted a t W a l k e r shysilk O n t a few d a s s l as t week

v i s i t o r s a t t h e h o m e of G VV T h u r s d a y

R e iso n f a v o r a b l e ac t ion is t a k e n by the vo te rs

I lvmoiUh Mail

F l o y d R e a s o n was in Howe l l Tues - j d a I TUBERCULOSIS CLINIC

D o n a l d Mgk-r of D e t r o i t spen t the j A ] u r m a n t n t t- t u b e r c u l o s i s cl inic week end with his p a r e n t s Dr and w i bdquo ]) ^ ^ | ( t t ) u ^ ^ o f t h M r s L i - S i g l e r e o u n t y n u r s e H o w e l l on S a t u r d a y

Mrs Rex S m i t h a n d Mrs C J i N ovember bullgt 19JI a n d t i i r rp a f t e r the C l i n t o n w e r e Arm A r b o r v is i tors tiiirff S a t u rday of each m o n t h Hourgt T h u r s d a y imi to -l-oo a m a n d 2 00 to Vltgtgt

i i bull ^ raquo I- l n- 1 be c o n d u c t e d bv L i v i n g s t o n 1 s o s e t t e r s b r ed in D e n m a r k and

i m p o r t e d on a c c o u n t of t h e i r line pedshyig rees a n d i n d i v i d u a l i t y w e r e t a k e n to t h e d o g r a n c h n e a r 1 u t te rson l ake this w e e k

M r and Mrs C l a u d e fteason and fami ly were Ann A r b o r v is i tors Sun-d a )

Mr a n d Mrs Wiil T i p l a d y a n d fam- ily of W e b s t e r were S u n d a y vis i tors a t t he h o m e of C l a r e n c e S t a c k a b l e j

P a t L a v e s a n d L e e Lavey were1

J a c k s o n vrs i tors S u n d a y

Mr a n d Mrs W 11 M a n n i n g and Mr a n d M r s R a l p h S c h r o d e r of Lai is-ing w e r e v is i to rs a t the h o m e of C S 1 l a r g e r T h u r s d a y

Miss P a u l i n e Reason s p e n t the week j end wi th A n n A r b o r r e l a t i ve s

lti sp l e of Hie d i s a g r e e a b l e sveather las t l r i d a a stiff cold ga le of ssindf b l o v i n g tlie a t t e n d a n c e at t he f o o t b a l l g a m e was good A l a r g e n u m b e r oi Fnwic rv i l l c s u p p o r t e r s w e r e p r e s e n t

gt 11 C a r r has been a s s i s t i ng R o b e r t J a c k e rec t a c o t t a g e at L a k e l a n d

j l o i i r d v Pub l i c H e a l t h S e r v i c e u n d e r the d i r e c t i o n of Dr L ] P i e rce of

j the Si a t e S a n a t o r i u m - - - i

P e a r l T h i m b l e s Ludi i s of high da-vs in Chin use

t h e d a i n t i e s t t h i m b l e s i iuag innb ie some of tliiin be ing c a r v e d out of

pioM-rtious p e a r l s and o r n a m e n t e d wi th j Viands of fine gold on w h i c h all nnin-I nee of q u a i n t imd f a n t a s t i c d e s i g n s Hre engrived

Ind i rec t S i g h t His VfltmdashIt s a s h a m e t h a t big

fat w o m a n hnd to t a k e t h e sea t dishyrec t ly rn front of you Y o u r e missshying the w h o l e s h o w Mr L i t t l e t o n mdash v o nor all of it S h e s r e a d i n g all the t i t l e s a loud mdashBuf fa lo E x p r e s s

C alder onn Busy Pen lt a h b V o t t rgt- r e | o t n - i ed S p a n i s h

hu ai 1 i - f a n d p o r t ltbull - bulllt i ude f u t i g -

l i l e W o l k e l I l e i-oe i- bull i i l l i n ^ h is

i i l e 111 p l a y s a n d 7 S I O I - i t i pluVS

for t h e i l i u r e l a H e e i t j o v r d t X t m o -

dinars pepulnr i tv

CHURCH NOTES A i i i imir is c i r c u l a t i n g a r o u n d town t h a t doe G e n t i l e cNpects to aga in con duc t a fruit s to re and ice c r e a m p a r shylor h e r e

G P L a m h e i d s o n will sell his pershysonal p m p e r t s at the f a rm l l i u r s d a v Nov J i b begiiii i Dg at 1lt) o c lock L u n c h at noon

Miss Rose L a v e y spen t las l Thur s shyd a y wi th Mr a n d Mrs C l a r e n c e S t a c k ab le

Dr H V Sigki svas i Ann A r b o r 1 u e s d a y

Mr a n d M r s R W Bird and chil d r e n spen t S u n d a y with W h i t m o r e L ke f r i ends

B o r n to Mr and Mrs F r e d R e a d of D e t r o i t Nov l o t h a d a u g h t e r

Mr a n d M r gt M Ni le a n d son ot J a c k s o n w e r e v is i tors at the P a t L a v e y h o m e last F r i d a v and S a tu rdav

L woo] buck I- v r a r s old Mr a n d Mrs 1 red B o w m a n visd-d ~ -ltbull j bull

I or t H u r o n r e l a t ives severa l d a v s last

C o m m u n i t y C o n g r e g a t i o n a l Church

II L M A V C L O I T P a s t o r

M o r n i n g W o r s h i p liPJo a in Su nda v School I 1 0 a in

N o r t h H a m b u r g

Suudav School J 0() p in

W o r s h i p 3d)0 p Mi

The Most Exquisite Taste can be Satisfied at Our

Ice Cream Parlors The Connor Ice Cream Co make special efforts to produce someshything newmdashsomething different in Ice Cream Flavors Just now they are specializing on

Cherry Ice Cream a most deled able frozen dainty with ^he ripened cherry crushed and mingled into a beautiful and satisfying congealed refreshment

Also Maple-Nut Ice Cream in which the purest Maple Juices flavor various Nut Meats blended and frozen for your approval

If you have not yet tried eitherof these new creations a pleasant surshyprise awaits you

BARRYS JO N Y A L DRUGS STORE

Cooking by Current

WANTS FOR SALE ETC

L KOH S A L K Brown m i re l o wt

a b o u t 1 1 Vi C r a d c Belg ian g e l d i n g fi wt about KioO R e g i s t e r e d finc-

i m p n c

PINCKNEY BAKERY ^ OUR BREAD SPECIALTIES

The ever growing demand for Blue Ribbon Bread Proves Its Popularity

Nice Sweet Raisin Bread YOUD Be Pleased With a Trial of Our Different Pastries

I Try Our Graham Bread and Sandwich Bread

G B b A N K E N Prop

week

S U C a r r A e l C a r p e n t e r and H a r r y Lee a r e enjoying 1 a h u n t i n g t r i p in v rn Mich igan

i V Yince a n d son r e t u r n e d to eir h o m e a t I i y r o n S u n d a y

Mri A l f r ed M o n k s is v is i t ing S t o c k -b r idge r e l a t i ves

MLsses Nel l ie G a r d n e r Drus i l l a a n d F l o r e n c e M u r p h y and L o r e n z o M u r p h y a t t e n d e d the foo tba l l g a m e a t A n n Ar shybor S a t u r d a y

M r a n d M r s L o u i s M o n k s a n d da ugh t e r M a r i e of J a c k s o n s p e n t S u n d a y wi th Miss L u c y H a r r i s

M r s K a t e S a l i s b u r y who has been v i s i t ing seve ra l w e e k s wi th h e r vSigler c o u s i n s w e n t to A n n A r b o r T h u r s d a y las t to visi t in t h e h o m e of J u d g e N e w -kirk fc AJLiil

Mr and Mrs S J Ashenbrenner and daughter of Detroit were visitors at the Fred Bowman home the first of the week

Miss Minnie Reason was a fioweU caller Tuesday

Mrs S H Carr Miss Ijiura Hofl and Mrs Robt Jack and Mrs Milo Kettier were inn Arbor visitors Thursday

Mr jnd Mrs Frank Jioycc of Stock-bridge were Sunday guests of Mr and Mrs Floyd Reason

Mr and Mrs Geo Barnes of St Johns spent several days last week with her sister Mrs Floyd Reason

Mr and Mrs J M Harris and famshyily spent Sunday with Mr and Mrs John White near Howell

Mr and Mrs Frank Kennedy and family of Detroit are visiting Mr and Mr Patrick Kennedy

W Uurn Dancer of Stockbridge transacted business in Pinckney Tuesshyday

The Pinckney fire department WHS called to the Frank Barton farm two miles west of Anderson Monday aftershynoon A Are in a nearby marsh wa spreading so rapidly in the hifh wind er Two gangs of men threshing and putting up sifo corn in the neighborshyhood turned ia and by hard work

off the blase before it reached Jkrton buiidtifs

C i R A I l l O N O L A sVioo i n s t r u m e n t with lti r e c o r d s Will sell for $1000 I n q u i r e D i spa tch office

F O R HI NT The R u d o l p h I azalo f a r m one mile nor th of A n d e r s o n

( i O O D K A T l N C i Or Inn

T U M I S for s a l e L C R o g e r s

1

CIDER APPLES for sale William Doyle

RabCs Sulkey FOR SALEMrs Roy Hannctt

Thoroughbred Hereford bull and 0 I C boar for sale Robert Kelley

House for sale or rent Inquire J C Pinkie DOLL l l TIIK OLD H U S - A n d

make it look as if it had some pep David Jones automobile finishing

CASH PAIDmdashFor false teeth gold i crowns and bridges old magnet points and old gold Mail tn Hoke Smelting and Refining Co Otsego Mich Let us hear from you

FOR SALEmdashTo reduce stock will sell a few Silver Canipine hens cheap

Ben E White FOR SERVICEmdashPoland China boar

(W K Livingston strain) Paul Fohcy

WILL CALLmdashWednesday of every week for junk of all kinds Rags rubbers papers magasines metal etc Notify Dispatch office Also pay highest prices for second hand furnishyture

H Storey Phone 97M Dexter MONEY TO LOANmdashOn improved

farms at 6 per cent For particushylars write Brown Cress amp Company First National Bank Building Ann Arbor Michigan

FOR SALEmdashA quantity of hay and cum John R Marthv

FLUFF RUGSmdashIf you have any carshypet to make into rugsmdashdrop us a card We famish border free You will like our work and our prices Pinekney Fluff Rug Co Pmckaey Mich

FOR SERVICEmdashShorthorn Durham Bull elifJblt for registry

Ed Spoan JUffTICft OF T M PEACB

Cooking without fire smoke or aslns without fui c or gases cooking with a steady unchanging heat cooking at no greater bother than the snapping of a switchmdashthat is electric cooking

The electric range now so widely used has brought great comfort into the kitchen it has done away with the troubles the watchfulness the anxieties of the old time cookshying and has substituted a sure cleanly and comparatively effortless method of preparing food for the table

XHE DETROIT EDISON COMPANY

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w5 7-THE PINCKNEY DISPATCH

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HMITI STATE NEWS IN BRIEF

S

Coolidge Puts Up Presidents Cup

WASHINGTON mdash President Coolidge has taken a long Step toward arousing greatshye r interest in athlet ics in the

army and the navy and in the counshytry general ly by present ing to athshyletic representa t ives of the army and of t h e scout ing fUet a challenge cup for football between service teams of the two b rand ie s

Indicat ion a re that as a result of this one of the great annual athlet ic events of the future will center about the Coolidge cup or as it will be offishycially called the Pres ident s ( up

T h e Pres ident summoned athlet ic representa t ives of the army and the navy to the Whi te House He then formally turned over to them a cup to be contested for every year by two football teams chosen from officers and enlisted men of the two forces

T h e first contest for the cup was set for November Uigt at Griffith s tadium Each team will be composed of one officer and ten enlisted men

Pres ident Coolidge himself will bulltart the game and there is every inshydication that it will be a social and athletic event rivaling the contest between West Point and Annapolis

Maj Paul Baade infantry represhysen t ing the array from Fort Benning and Lieut Com Hamil ton V Bryan scouting fleet athlet ic officer together with Coxswain Claude A Ezell and

Staff Sergt Har ry O Troupe represhysent ing the enlisted men of the army nnd the fleet received the cup It ia of generous proport ions embossed Ua blue and gold and su rmounted by the American eagle

In connection with the presenta t ion the Pres ident made this s t a tement

As President of the United Sta tes of America in the interest of good clean Ileal thy recreat ion for the peoshyple of the ent i re country and to enshycourage and s t imula te athlet ics among the enlisted men of the servshyices I offer this cup to be known as the Presid nt s cup for contest beshytween footkil l teams of the army and navy from units or subdivisions of forces urn -r such te rms as the secshyre tary of war and the secretary of navy may de t e rmine provided howshyever tha t the teams shall be coin posed of enlisted men and officers in about the same proportion as a re offishycers and enlisted men in the services

I desire to mention the grea t beneshyfits to mind and body that result from part icipat ion in good clean whole some sport The people of the United S ta tes have a lways been devoted to manly contests and I know of no betshyter way to give to them a t rue examshyple of sport in its best form than to offer such a cup as this for a trophy to be contested for by the army and the navy

Six New Reclamation Projects Approved

SIX new Western reclamation projshyects embracing more than 400-000 acres have been approved as feasible from an engineering

economic agricul tural and land develshyopment s tandpoint by investigating commit tees whose reports are made public by the Interior depar tment

Studies of the projects were conshyducted by professors of agr icul tural colleges In s ta tes In which they a re located s t a te agricultural officials and bankers In their development it Is recommended tha t policies and methshyods proposed by the committee of speshycial advisors of reclamation be folshylowed T h e projects

VaJe project Oregon 28305 acres msifily sage brush with an est imated gross annual crop re turn after irrigashytion of $35 an acre Ninety per cent of the land will require subdivision and se t t lement and will provide farms for 2fi0 to 300 set t lers

Baker project Oregon Irr igable land es t imated at 26031 acres which Should yield a gross annual re turn of between $30no t6 $3750 per acre The value of the raw land Is fixed at between $250 to $5 an acre

Kittitas project Washington W38U

acres of Irrigable land Including 48-402 acres of agricultural n a t u r e 21-925 of pas ture and 20071 of waste land It is recommended that farm units should not he less than laquoS0 acres on the best grade soil nnd about 1150 acres on the poorer grades in order to y M d an income for a family The bet ter land shoulrf re turn a gross anshynual income of from $10 to $55 an acre after the development

Uwyhee project lt ireyon 5SS59 acres of first-class land well adapted to produce satisfactory yield of crops while there is raquo15140 acres of second class lund that cannot produce more than about 75 per cent of the yield of the first-class land A good farm with a variety of [gtrod4rts ought to produce as much as $00 an acre annual ly

Salt Lake basin project U t a h 110000 acres will be directly beneshyfited and there a re excellent marke t ing and t ranspor t ing facilities Mixed crops should yield from $50 to $80 per acre u year The lands to be Irrigatshyed a re already colonized and settled on small farms

Spanish Springs project N e v a d a Including 39H50 acres of high-grade land adap tab le to a wide variety of crops

Airplane vs the Battleship in Congress

REGAKDLRSS of the outcome of

the investigation now being made by the general board of the navy under Instructions by

the secre tary and at the instigation of the Pres ident a showdown light in the old airplane-bat t leship controvershysy looms when congress reopens in December

Whatever the findings of the hoard and it is admit ted on all sides that they must be predicated on the basis tha t the bat t leship is still the main reliance in sen power a i r en thus ias t s a re laying plans for a drive on conshygress to get full recognition of the increaslnc importance of aviation In the national defense with a sepa ra t e air force as their final objective

Hear tened by President Coolidges recent u t te rances In which he voiced his belief in the possibility of the airshyp lane superseding the surface fighting ship they propose to demand that an impart ia l tr ibunal hear their case and tha t the aerial fighting forces be placed In a position to be developed free from the obstruct ionis ts in the mil i tary services

On the other hand naval officers are gravely concerned over the recent developments realizing the popular appeal of the aviation propaganda with Its promise of cheap and effecshytive nat ional preparedness They fear that as Intimated by the Presi dent no provision will be made fo modernizinc the older bat t leships for proper maintenance of the fleet and for construction unless the controvershysy over the relative meri ts of aircraft nnd bat t leships Is finally and definiteshyly settled

T h e round-the-world flight by the army flyers spectacular and epochal ns it was did not in the opinion of the majority of exper ts war ran t the conclusions drawn in some quar te rs

The one outs tanding lesson of the achievement they say was that it demonst ra ted conclusively the dependshyence of aircraft on surface ships in long-distance work It is pointed out tha t while the flyers were covering their twenty-odd thousand miles apshyproximately 87000 miles of s teaming was done hy United S ta t e s naval vesshysels in helping to put the flight across

Flag With Only 40 Stars Causes Stir

GEN FRANK T HTNES direcshy

tor of the veterans bureau Ims begun an Investigation of the origin nnd history of the

flag with only 40 stars which was disshyplayed by Mrs Lillian R Sire before de legates of the New York Sta te Fedshyera t ion of Womens Clubs in New York

So far a s he has been aide to learn only one of the freak flags ever has appeared in the ve terans bureau service I t was shipped from Perry-rille Md along with five other flags FelaVnary 7 1922 and w a s received at Hospital No 49 Philadelphia Februshya r y 16 1raquo22 At tha t t ime Perryvll ie w a s a United S t a t e s public hea l th bull bull t r i c e depot

Cteseral H lnes deplored published Assertions the bureau had contracted l o r 800000 cheap shoddy flags for the coffins of dead ve te rans

8 O B M tUne ago according to the dishyrector compUUnt was made tha t t h e eofta of s soldier who died in Hosshypital NO 48 W t t covered with a flag SafUtt on ly 4 0 bull H e immediately

officer in chart whether the

regarding flags a M SOS osssptttef with and whether

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the flag in question had been Inshyspected

The answer to both quest ions was in the affirmative The oflieer also stated according to the director tha t all o ther Macs in stock had been found to be regulat ion

A brother of Har ry H Pench the veteran whose coffin was covered with the improperly made flag hart reported the m a t t e r to the bureau It was the flag which covered Benchs coffin that Mrs Sire showed the deleshygates

T h e New York City Federa t ion of Women s Clubs has appointed a comshymittee consisting of Mrs Belle de Rivera honorary p re s iden t Mrs Lilshylian R Sire who brought the m a t t e r to public a t tent ion nnd who is presishydent of the Womens National Demoshycra t ic club nnd Mrs William Albert Lewis

Char les A Bench bro ther of Har ry H Bench a soldier who served his country 20 years and died in the Vetshyerans hospital at Phi ladelphia gave Mrs Sire a cheap 40-star flag which had been draped about the coffla when it reached the family home in Readshying Pa Mr Bench replaced it with a flag he taodght more suitable

SaginawmdashJ W Ferdney former m e m b e r of congress from the eighth distr ict baa taken in his annua l deer hunt ing t r ip in Luce county this year He is 71 yea r s old

Owosso mdash Mason Ri lenberry 72 yea r s old a farmer living near Banshycroft was found dead in his barn A physician said that he evidently had suffered a hear t a t tack while loading a wagon

SturgismdashCity Attorney Paul Wal t broke his arm in an a t t emp t to c rank his automobile A few mnu tes la te r his mother- in law Mrs El izabeth Cole t r ied to open a heavy ga te at her husshyband s farm and the ga te fell on tier f rac tur ing her hip

FlintmdashAfter going to a local newsshypaper office to announce that he would main ta in his record of voting for evshyery Pres iden t since Lincoln Theodore V Canright 94 years old fell from his porch while r e tu rn ing to his home and was seriously injured

OwossomdashJohn McAvoy 52 years old a p rominen t New Haven Townshyship lar jner waa found dead in the wa te r t ank on his farm It is beshylieved that he sat down on the edge of the tank to lest and suffered a s t roke falling irto the tank and drowning

Detroi t Majorities of nearly 10 to 1 were rolled up by the Republ ican s t a t e and county t ickets in Wayne county according to complete reshytu rns In pract ical ly every case the con tes t s were decided upon s t ra igh t par ty l ines with but sl ight fluctuashyt ions in the voe

Por t HuronmdashMiss Lau ra Copeland of Boston is in Port Huron to car ry on the work of the Rotary clubs cripshypled chi ldren s clinic She will carry out the recommendat ions of the recent clinic and be of service to local medishycal men also teaching pa ren t s proper mas sage methods in the care of cripshypled children

RomeomdashTwo I ta l ians demanding repr i sa l s for wounds one suffered tn a domest ic feud were killed here as they s tormed the home of Joseph Pill-eri to Identification of one of the men as Patsy Prris a former enemy of Pi l ler l to was t s t ab i l shed soon after the shooting Pillerito said he had never seen the third man before

Det ro i tmdashResumpt ion of activity at the Monnier road studio of the Deshytroit Motion P ic ture company within a few weeks has been announced folshylowing the annual meet ing of stockshyholders It was voted to assume a mor tgage of $150000 on the proper ty l iquidate ou ts tand ing obl igat ions and r e sume the production of pic tures

Grand RapidsmdashErect ion of a memorshyial to the Grand Rapids service men of the Civil Spanish-American and world wars now rests upon the city commission a s the result of the comshypletion of a general design by a civilshyian commit tee appointed by former Mayor Jul ius Tisch a year ago The project it is es t imated will cost $300000

Detroi tmdashForeign capital is pouring into Germany due to the excessively high rates of in teres t at which money-Is loaned and Jackie Coogan created as much a t ten t ion in Berlin as the Zeppelin ZR-3 These observat ions along with m a n o thers were brought back to Detroit fcy C Leidich who reshyturned a few days ago from his 73rd t r ip abroad in the past 30 years

Grand RapidsmdashThe Commercial Savings bank and the People s Savshyings bank has b ten merged with the Kent S ta te bank in the largest t ransshyact ion in Grand Rapids banking hisshytory The deal involved $6000000 asse t s Stockholders of the Comshymercial and People s banks gave thei r consent at special meet ings after the deal had won the sanct ion of the s ta te banking i epa r tmen t

Marsha l lmdashEvery precinct in Batt le Creek voted in favor or eas te rn standshyard t ime Marshall had been holding off apparen t ly to see what action Bat t le Creek would take A great many Marshall people work in Battle Creek and the result ing inconvenience of the two towns were using different t ime probably would be sufficient to influence Marshal l s decision it was believed This city it is believed will r emain on eas te rn s t anda rd t ime the year around

LAnsemdashMrs Cora Reynolds Andershyson of LAnse has been elected Repshyre sen ta t ive of t i e Iron dis t r ic t in the S ta t e House )f Represen ta t ives She ran on the Republican t icket wi thout Democrat ic opposition and will reshyplace Rep Pat r ick OBrien ve te ran Upper Pen insuK legislator wbo reshyt i red following the special session of 1923 Mrs Anderson is the first woman to become a member of the House and the second to become a m e m b e r of the legislature

KalamazoomdashRais ing of $150000 for the expansion of the Bronson Methoshydist Hospi ta l in the next three yea rs has been announced here The fund was obtained through subscr ip t ions of $100000 fulfilling the condi t ions imshyposed in t en ta t ive gifts of 125000 each by Mrs Dorothy Peck Clark of Kalamazoo and Mr and Mrs W M Earnart of Ann Arbor The larger proportion of the fund was obtained ia Methodist congregations throughout the state The proposed expansion would give the hospital almost double its capaci ty and equipment

HillsdalemdashO C Dickinson of this ci ty an employe of the New York Censhyt ra l ra i l road since 1882 local t icket agen t for the last 28 years has reshytired after i2 years In the company s employ

S turg ismdashAust in McDonald awaitshying t ranspor ta t ion to J a c k s o n prison for a t e r m of oae to 15 y e a r s for carshyry ing concealed weapons dug a hole th rough the brick walls of the county jail a t Centervil le and escaped

Berk leymdashFrank Wilcox 40 yea r s old w a s c rushed to dea th benea th his house here when a gus t of wind blew it from jacks on which it was s tanding Wilcox who was laying a foundation had jus t crawled under the bouse when it fell

MonroemdashEdward Kitchin Jr 9 y e a r s old shot and killed himself while playing with his fa ther s reshyvolver The bullet en te red the boys left eye and caused ins tan t death The Ki tchins live on a farm six miles west of Monroe

Detroi tmdashMichigan Democracy lost her sole represen ta t ive in Congress in the Republican landsl ide tha t swept the s ta te Rober t H Clancy of Deshytroit r epresen t ing the F i r s t District was badly defeat t d by his Republican opponent John B Sosnowski

Lans ingmdashFores t fires which are preva len t in the nor the rn pa r t of the s t a t e a re general ly under control and confined to s lashings and cut-over land according to repor ts received by John Baird s ta te conserva t ion comshymiss ioner from deputy fire wardens

E s c a n a b a - Irving Micheau 15 years old of Brampton had his r ight hand mut i l a ted and shot in his neck and r ight ear the result of the accidenta l d ischarge of his shotgun Micheau picking the gun up n o r r the ground placed his hand over the end of the ba r r e l

Detroi tmdashAlbert Majewski Ham-t ramck was ar res ted by the police of tha t city on a charge of mans laugh te r following the death of a 10-year-old boy who is s a i l to have fallen from the running board of Majewski s autoshymobile when the la t ter s t a r t ed the mashychine in an effort to shake the boy off

AlbionmdashThe principal fea ture of the Albion election was the naming of a woman for a municipal office for the first t ime in the his tory of the city Mrs Kate Bromeling who has carr ied on a real es ta te and insurance business since the dea th of her husshyband four yea r j ago was named just ice of the peace

LansingmdashMajor i t ies which a re beshylieved to have finally crushed in Michigan any a t tempt to impose an income tax upen the public and furshyther a t t e m p t s o abolish parochial schools were rolled up in the s ta te election The chool a m e n d m e n t was bea ten 2 to 1 while the income tax proposal was beaten near ly 5 to 1

DetroitmdashConvicted solely on his finshyger-prints Onnie Howard 27 was sen tenced to se rve one to five yea r s in Jackson prison for burglary Lieutenshyant Charles Carmody head of the poshylice identification bureau produced at the t r ial pr ints found at the scene of the cr ime and pointed out s t r ik ing l ikenesses in them to the finger-prints of Howard

Grand Rapius mdashDorothy Plucker 2-year-old daughter of Mr and Mrs Clifshyford Plucker was seriously Injured when struck near her home by an aushytomobile in charge of Ted Rice of Howard City The shock of the accishydent revived a nervous trouble in Rice and he was taken to a hospi tal where physicians say he has little chance for recovery

LansingmdashMichigan has elected a 1925 Legis la ture that is solidly Re publican In 1923 the Democra t s had fivemembers i n t h e House and none in the Sena te Four of Lhose five ran for re-election and according to offishycial r e tu rns they have all been de feated The fifth Democrat Dr De-nias Dawe of Monroe did not run for renomna t ion and his place has also been taken by a Republican

Grand RapidsmdashJohn Ormand 52 years old was killed when he was s t ruck by a Fere A^aiquette passenger t rain at F rank l in s crossing Orraond was walking mine from work and is said to have^ t epped around the crossshying ga tes and walked direct ly into the path of the train A 3ister Rose Ormond was at the cross ing when the accident occurred but did not reshyalize the victim was he r b ro the r unshytil he was identified an hour la ter

De t ro i tmdashPurchase of 85 ac res and condemnat ion -jf 11 and one-half more to c o m p l e x the recrea t ion deshypa r tmen t s summer camp on Eular lake near Howell has been ordered by the Detroit common council Alshythough 40 acres of the first t r ac t is half a mile from the l ake it was s ta ted tha t the remain ing 45 ac res could not be bought for less than $20-000 the price to be paid for the whole 85 When the two proper t i es a re acshyquired the a m o will su r round the lake

Lans ingmdashPres iden t Calvin Coolidge carr ied Michigan by a major i ty of 600-000 votes over the combined tota ls of his two r ivals a sweep that has not even been approached in the s t a t e s political h is tory according to complete r e tu rns He polled near ly 80 per cent of the total vote compared with 72 per cent of the total vote given Hardshying In 1920 Davis received only about 13 per cent of the to ta l The LaFol-lette third party failed to attract more than 9 per cent of the Michigaa vote Oroesbeck and Couxens were more than W0000 ahead of their rivals

HOW THE STATES CAST VOTE FOR PRESIDENT

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S t a t e f I O Q

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12mdashAlabama 3mdashArizona 9 A r k a n s a s

13mdashCalifornia 6mdashColorado 7mdashConnect icut 3mdashDelaware 6- -F lor ida

14mdashGeorgia 4mdashIdaho

29mdashIllinois 15mdashIndiana 13mdashIowa 10mdashKansas 13mdashKentucky 10mdashLouisiana

6mdashMaine 8mdashMaryland

18mdashMassachuse t t s 15mdashMichigan 12mdashMinnesota 10mdashMississippi 18mdashMissouri 4mdashMontana 8mdashNebraska 3mdashNevada 4mdashNew H a m p s h i r e

14mdashNew J e r s e y 3mdashNew Mexico

45mdashNew York 12mdashNorth Carol ina

5mdashNorth Dakota 24mdashOhio 10mdashOklahoma

5mdashOregon 38mdashPennsylvania

5mdashRhode Island 9mdashSouth Carolina 6mdashSouth Dakota

12mdashTennessee 20mdashTexas

4mdashUtah 4mdashVermont

12mdashVirginia 7mdashWashington

8mdashWest Virginia 13mdashWisconsin

3mdashWyoming

12

9 13 6 7 3

4 29 15 13 10 13

6 S

18 15 12

18 4 8 o ltJ

4 14 3

45

5 24

5 38

6 14

10

10

12

10

4

4

7 8

12 20

12

Wouldnt Have Autoist Think He Was Curious

A motorcar apparent ly afflicted with dropsy or some such malady s topped in front of t h e res idence of Gap Johnson of Rumpus Ridge After examining the machine s upper shell the drfver seized cer ta in tools and reshyclining on his back scuffed himself under the car and began thumping on Its s tomach Mr Johnson who had

| been rest ing for some t ime by hanging

J onto his own fence with his elbows

I hooked over the top rail kept silent

j for a short season and then inqu i red

I dont reckon you re aiming to go

to Fiddle Creek a t t e r you get that

I t h e r e contrapt ion fixed

No replied the gent under the car

j Aw to Slippery Slap m e b b y T i No I H m To Sandy Mush t h e n

No Well dont get the idy t h a t I keer

j2 whur the hmdash1 youre going t o mdash Kansas City Star

631 Tota ls 382 136 13 Necessa ry to elect 266

HIGHLIGHTS FROM ELECTION RETURNS

Wash ing tonmdashWil l i am E Borah of j Idaho will be the Republ ican leader Of the s ena t e in the next congress i

St Paul MinnmdashMagnus Johnson Minnesota s widely known dir t farmshye r sena tor was defeated for re-elecshytion by Thomas D Schall Republican

New YorkmdashBy running near ly a million votes ahead of his t icket Alshyfred E Smi th Democra t defeated Colonel Roosevel t for the office of governor of t h e Empi re s ta te

Sena tor F r a n c i s E War ren Repubshyl ican 80 and father-in-law of General John J Pe r sh ing has been re-elected to the sena te He has a l ready served the re a quar te r of a century

Wil l iam Allen Whi te Independent for governor of Kansas who camshypaigned on but one ou t s t and ing issue opposit ion to the Ku Klux Klan was snowed under by a klan-indorsed canshydida te

Atlas TRACM MARK

The Atlas Speaker makes audible the impulses of the silent radio receivshying set The tones of Atlas Radio Reshyproduction whether of music or voice are clear true to the original and adjustshyable for volume

For literature send your name to the

manufacturer

Multiple Electric Products Co IDC

371 OffltUnStrlaquot Newark New Jersey

Guarantee A T L A S Products i

Two women were elected governors of s ta tes for the first t ime in his tory The new governors are Mrs Wil l iam

A Ferguson in Texas and Mrs Nellie G Ross in Wyoming Both a re Demshyocra t s

Des Moines IamdashComplete check of unofficial r e t u r n s in the senator ia l j contes t in Iowa showed tha t Sena tor

Smi th W Brookhar t had a major i ty of less than 1200 over his Democrat ic opponent Daniel F Steck j

| ChicagomdashThe first Negro ever j elected to a municipal judgeship roll-

ed into office on the Republican land- si Me Albert B George 51 a lawyer j

defeated his Democra t ic opponent by i a majori ty of be tween 65000 and 70-

000 votes

New YorkmdashTabula t ion of the popu- lar vote for p res iden t of the United I S t a t e s ind ica tes tha t P res iden t Cool- I idge has a c lear lead of more than 7500000 over John Davis The tabu- | la t ion shows tha t the LaFol le t te- ] W h e e l e r t icke t polled near ly 4500000 gt votes J

Lexington KymdashVirgil M Chap- man Lexington and Pa r i s Democrat e lected wi thou t opposition represent - j a t ive from th i s the seventh H e n r y Clays old dis t r ic t to congress will ]

be t he younges t member of e i the r i house of the new congress H e was born March 15 1895 J

Wash ing tonmdashUnless official tabula-lat ion of votes upsets the resu l t s he re is the complexion of the new Congress S e n a t e Republ icans 54 Democra t s 40 Farmer-Labor 1 v cancy 1 (Connec t icu t ) House Reshypublicans 246 Democrats 184 Fanner-Labor 3 Socialists 2 At adshyjournment of CongreM In June there ware In the Senate 51 Republicans 48 Democrats and 2 Fanner-Labor itea and in the House 226 Republishycan 207 Democrat 1 Socialist 1 Fannor-Labortta aad 1 Independent

Pertnantnt roods are a good

inlaquolaquotmlaquont ^ X ^ l f k V f mdashnot an txfxnu

America Must Have More Paved Highways

Almost every section of the United States is conshyfronted by a traffic probshylem

Month by month this problem is becoming more and more serious

Hundreds of cars pass a given point every hour on many of our state and county roads Down-town city streets are jammed with traffic

Think toohow narrow many of our read are and how comshyparatively lew paved highways there are in proporticp to the bullreadily increasing number oicara

If the motor vehicle is to can-tinne giving the bullconomictarvkt of which it is capable we most have more Conotta highways and widen tboat near large canshyters of population

Every drJsen should discus highway needs of hiaconununitf with his local aotboridtm

Your highway officials will do their part if given your support

Wny postpone meeting this pressing need

An early start nteassaarlt relief

PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION

111 West Wi

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f r it^Jfa pound$pound$gt -1 J aJL-V gt^V A ltv^

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THE PINCKNEY DISPATCH

V

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MCKIE THE PRINTERS DEVIL By Chtrtea Sughroe

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WHATS THE USE By L F Van Zelm He Went Prepared AJHAT TELIX- IWAGNES T h e ftEST OP | TKE C U 5 T O M E laquo 9 A 2 e T H I N K I N G

^BOUT H I M

HE M U S T

BE A C H E A P

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S O M E T H I N G T H E M A T T E L ^ I T M

HICgt HAirs

- f H E N E X T T I M E T E L I

W E M T TOC A HAt2 C u T

BUT

JUltST SJAHT A

H M c t f T WW ^ u

D Events in the Lives of Little Men D Along the Concrete DO

HOME WANTED FOR A BABY MCLL ENOUGHS fco W C H j

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Clancy Kids This Way Out

By frac34 PERCYt CROSBY

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bullbullKV

ncem Uvingrtoo Comity Public Health Service will

rflnfeft lht a i l a t l Cferina Seed Sale as usual this yew Watch spac each week The penny Christshymas Health Swrf aids in promoting the health of the children of Livingston County

- i j

44

THE PMCMNEY DISPATCH bull39c

1 mm) mumming MAKING 6O0D IN A SMALL TOWN

Reml- Stories About Reml Girls mdash

amppound

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By MRS HARLAND H ALLEN

DYEING FOR YOUR FRIENDS

SETTIN6 THUMfP ONTUKRHHWIS

F R r E C H E S T CLIN1C8 KCEP TUBERCULOSIS INFECTION

UNDER CONTROL

Baby Betty is just one of the many hundred children who each year arc brought to the Free Chest Clinics ei

^A I ff

flwrsday November 20th Sale Begins at 10 oclock Sharp

FREE LUNCH AT NOON

HORSES Black mare 15 yrs old wt 1000 Black mare 14 wt 1000 lbs CATTLE

Halfblood Brown Swiss cow 9 giving milk bred Oct 5

Durham Cow 7 giving milk Three quarter Brown Swiss cow

amp giving milk Durham Heifer 2 due Jan 30 Durham-Heifer 2 fat 2 Durham calves 2 Durham Calves 9 months old 1 Durham Calf 4 months old HOGS

i oland China Sow one year old 5 Spring Shoats HAY AND GRAIN ETC Quantity of Hay Stack of Rye Straw Corn Stalks 600 bu Sorted Yellow Dent Corn CO Fence Potts 70 f t Black Wahrat Lumber FARM TOOLS Land Roller YcouW 2 Horse Cultivator 1 Horse Cultivator |L F Michel Fanning Mill

600 lb Scales Feed Cooker Truck Wagon Osborne Mower 60 Tooth Drag Favorite Grain Drill Bean Poller Hay Rake Tank Header Grindstone Corn Sheller Corn Planter Crosscut Saw Grain Cradle Log Chain Platform Spring Buggy Road Cart Spring Buggy Grain Bags 21 Potato Crates Hay Knife Hay Rope Harpoon Fork Set Work Harness 2 Single Harnesses 2 Ladders Drmp Boards Barrel Chum Water Separator 10 Gal Milk Can Coal Stove And Many Other Articles Too

Numerous to Mention

Terms of Sale All sums of $10 and under cash over that amount one years time will be given on good bankable notes at 6 per cent

Lambert PERCY ELLIS Auctioned

Pmckney 14 Fowlerville 7

Continwed from ftrat page

Then Captain Hourbonrwiis called Ms men around him and scathingly deshylivered his opinion of the team whose mediocre playing was giving their opshyponents an easy vctory He exhorted fhetn to yet in the jrame and show Iowlerville the real simon-pure Pinck-ney brand of football After this ) enrt-to-heart tongue lashing came a t omplete reversal of form for the conshytesting elevens Pinckney secured the lgtal and the lMnrkney fighting spirit domineered the battle until the whistle thrieked the finish with two touchshydowns nnd goals to the credit of the rnti-muendnirnt warriors nnd i final wore of 11 to 7

The score does not tell the real story laquogtf the game ns all the breaks of luck verc in favor of the visitors At one Itntc iVickncy h-nl t-ikM iilt Iill and Mriroming the stubborn resistance 1 as steadily ga ltbull until only a few i bullbull( separated (he pigskin from goal bull he opposition growing weaker and vcsker when the whistle signalled the 1 nd of that quarter stopped proceed-bulllraquogt gave Fowlerville a very much de-ftred chance to rent and recuperate and plated the bull in safer territory for then The Fowlerville boys wrrr accomshypanied by a large number of enthosi lStic supporters who thronged the sde-

bull bullbullIfet and cheered their favorites ltereU|rhout the entire jrame Kven j bullvhen their team frJsjr weary and dis- j

^ ffceartened under Hnckneys repeated t-l -JlSlaUgftts the Fowlerville supporters vS^raquosielaquond skirted were untiring in their

w -ltrifofts for encouragement This loy-^ tIty was worthy of better results but vftet that first disastrous touchdown bull f

Vv traquolaquo nnckney team was transformed ^bullbullbulltfioinbend of mHd football players

bull lnttf a flatting writhing unleashed rjrcjfciie of veritable fury bucking the vi skirting the ends ineaking

tkc seeratagjy invulnerable bullf basic wStfV laquoraquod siaew for rain j

iffifm|tMi amp victory Anally reward- Leoisjeir -aespersee saons ^JHKfc4ampampmMttradere nd with

ience be-

j to the last was outclassed after the ( firlt| touchdown At one time with the ball in their own possession--the bitjirr team was forced back back ajrain and a^ain for larjre losses until

conipelled to ineffectually resort to the i forward pass There is the lesson of loyalty at lest to be learned from football jrames played here this voir ler visiting teiii has been accompanied by enthusshyiastic contingents of its home town supporters who came to help with their

ipiesence while their players were I buttling in the arena Why not folshylow this example in loyalty and when liickrtey visits other towns for an afshyternoon contest lets show- our appreshyciation of a really fine football team

by ffoinjr alonjr and showing the ltiut-sifi world how proud wc are of the 1 DJ V Pitickney team

Friday Nov 1 linckney ]i|ays a reinrn jrame at Fowlerville Inless there is a complete reversal of form raquoin either team Pincknev should win this jrame Hut they will hae to work for it as Fowlerville players are ( -Ic-mincd to win

Wedding The wedding anniversaries are

First cotton seroml paper third lenther fourth rruit and flowers fifth wooden sixth sugar seventh woolen eighth India rubber ninth willow tenth tin eleventh steel twelfth silk and linen thirteenth Ince fourteenth Ivory fifteenth crysshytal twentieth chisa twenty-fifth silver thirtieth pearl fortieth ruby fiftieth golden seventy-fifth diashymond

n ^ R B Itinerant dyer-by-the-day brings Mohimmed to the mountainmdashthe

Mohammed of the paint pots to the mountain of almost Immovable davenshyports and armchairs

The woman toucher-up may renshyovate with her magic dyes houseshyhold fnrnlshinss that cannot be dipped She has and needs no ofshyfice she simply Soelaquo from house to house office to office or to dubs theshyaters hallsmdashwherever in fact there is touching up to be donemdashcarrying with her a simple but efficient dyeing Service

Theres a iure to the business of freshening and brightening by the strokes of a brush says a woman who Is known as interior redecorator of her small town The work reshyquires nothing but an eye for color ami a certain skill with the brush And it supplies earthly necessities as wii as esthetic satisfaction

The plan is simply this The special dye intended for the purpose is applied to sofa carpet wall coveringsmdashanyshything about the house hall or office that needs recoiwringmdashwith an ordishynary paint brush scrub brush or on larpe surfaces a special kind of tank spray which mary be had from the manufacturers of the dye This colorshying process is much simpler than dyo-inir by dipping It is almost as easy as palntinj Thefdyer can do the rugs rUht on the floorwall coverings right 01 the wall

The dyer may also get the job of dyeing things othter than the unremov-aMe ones then_she will not use her special dyes suitable only for heavy textiles rugs hanfttigs couch ami chair coverings For dyeing by lipshyping she will -use the ordinary dyes with which the average person Is best acquainted tine ones for coloring blouses handkerchiefs and other delishycate articles The interior redecorate does well to carry both kinltN of dye and to understand the methods of usshying both

The successful dyer-by-the-day Is sure to make good financial returns She will probably have practically no competition for the line is ns yet little known She should advertise In the local papers for her customers and spread the news of her project to her friends by personal communication

The dyer will of course never ex poriment on the possessions of tier customers Cntil she becomes export sip must read even-thing she can find on the technical details of dyeing proc esses and she must follow directions Implidtly

(SJ l lt4 WMlirr Nlaquowspaplaquor Union)

ALL FOR HEALTH HEALTH FOR ALL

THATS THI8 CRUSADERS WAR CRY AS SHE FIGHTS FOR

BETTER HEALTH

Betty Awaits The Doctors Verdict

the Michigan Tuberculosis Associashytion Her parents are wiBe They know that 65 per cent of all children in the United States between Ave and fifteen are infected with the germ of tuberculosis

It is but a step from tuberculosis infection to the disease itself Herein lies the wisdom and necessity of frequent chest examinations by comshypetent physicians

Tuberculosis Christmas Seals supshyport Free Chest Clinics all over Miebi

gan Such clinics j are a ctitch in I time against the most insidious of c o u r s e s t h e plague which in the last ten years killed 31196 men women and chilshy

dren of Michigan Christmas Seals fight tuberculosis

Buy them Give Health Ready-Made Critic

Man must serve his time to every trade Save censure critics all are reidy mademdashByron

Doubter Not Wanted I will listen to any ones convicshy

tions but pray keep your doubts to yourselfmdashGoethe

iHiiiiniimiHMnmniiHiiiHuimmniliiii

Santa Makes Merry llilliliillll(iiitiliiliiilililllillllllllllllillll

Mamp

Heres Mary Elisabeth all ready to wage war against dirty hands falte and teeth enemies of Better Health Shes a Modern Health Crusader of the Michigan Tuberculosis Association

ftwiiiMm M_II

Santa Claus sometimes jokes with f( Iks big and little nnd he nearly always has some comic toys for the children This yerr ho will leave them fvnny spoon dolls made of paper picnic spoons and dressed in crepe paper clothes A clown doil with dangling less a Chinaman and a Puritan have had their pictures taken so that any one can make them

mdasho-

LUDENS MFNTHOL CfiJCH SKCPS

fV il f f

mdash which fights disease of all kinds She sleeps at least ten hours erery nifht with her windows open she likes milk and she eats only those oods that healthy happy children should have

Healthy children cant succumb to tubercntoej Making frail children strong is one 0 the duties of the Christmas Tuberculosis Seals Buy Christmas Seals and help Mary Elisshyabeth and other Crusaders fight tushyberculosis which strikes where toast expected

State of Michiirtn the Probate Court for the County of Livingston

t i session of sfiid Court held at the Probate Office in the City of Hov-ell in said County on the 24th dny ot October A D 1924

Present Hon Willis L Lyons Judge of Probate

In the matter of the estate of Perry Blunt Deceased

A M Roche having filed in said court his petition praying for license to sell the interest of said estate in certnin real estate therein described

It is ordrred thnt the 24th day of November A D 1924 at l e n oclock In the forenoon at said probate office be and is hereby appointed for hearshying said petition nnd that all persons interested in said estate appear before said court at said time and place to show cause why a license to sell the interest of said estate in said real esshytate should qot be granted

It is further ordered that public noshytice thereof be given by publication of a copy of this order for three sue-cMwdve weeks previous to said day of hearing in the Pinckney Dispatch a newspaper printed nnd circulated in said county

WILLIS L LYONS Judge of Probate

A true copy Celestla ParshaU

Register of Prtbats

f l

s

are in styles that are very late

Most of them fur-trimmed

Beautiful shades of reds and browns aswell as grays and blacks Suedine cloths velours and Bolivia

The prices are most reasonable

$1676 $2475 $3975 $5275 We should like to show you any time

JJ

MEN who come to us from Pinckshyney always have demanded style and quality

OUR answer has always Y pound Smdash-and even morlt a moderate price

been

amp bull

Just Now t 1 laquo

we are showing a fine line of all wool suits at

$25 $30 $35 $40 We will be pleased to show you

Mmikg m-

Page 4: PINCKNEY DISPATCHpinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1924-11-12.pdf · mi in.iii«i(i.jAHf .^fi| :C WW VV1 PINCKNEY DISPATCH ^¾ f IL,," ••'« ^ a. i Vol. 41 Pinckney. Liyingston

THE PaNCKWEY DISPATCH

m^ praquo bull

CtMETtUSFOR

HOME GOODS Sf every itscriftiw

At liwest prices

Tkanbgivmg Cards One Cent Each

lines Bazaar HflwcH Opposite Courthouse

GREGORY MARION

Hon Shoeing General Repairing mdash - a l s o Ford Repairing

F C BRENNINGSTALL PetteysviUe - Michigan

Funeral Director P H SWARTHOUT

Phone No 39 Pinckney Mich

PERCY ELLIS Expert Auctioneer

SclU Anything for Anyonemdash AnytimemdashAnywhere

I am conversant with Cattle and Hog Pedigrees

For dates and terms call phone or write Anderson Corners

Pinckney or Dispatch Office

Phone No 19FU Pinckney

WANTED POULTRY amp EGGS

Will payjcash for poultry and eggs delivered at my poultry plant and will pay all the market affords at all times

E FARNAM

E W DANIELS General Auctioneer

Chelsea Michigan P O Address

Gregory Mich R F D 2 Phone 116-2L-2S

HIRAM R SMITH Lawyer

Office Opposite Court House D D Monroe Bldg

Howell Mich

laquoraquoraquoraquoraquoraquoraquoraquowraquoraquovraquoraquoraquoraquo raquoraquoraquoraquoraquoraquobullraquolaquo

Drs HFampCLSIGLER PINCKNEY

Office Hour

1230 to 230 P M

Sunday 1 to 2 P M

STATE OF MICHIGAN BANKING DEPARTMENT OFFICE OF T H E

COMMISSIONER

Olive Hetninger and Fave Hill spent bullSaturday night and Sunday at the l l rminger home at Webnervil lr

Mrs iibnie Saddler ltgtf California who haigt been among relatives and friends in this vicinity for some time spent a few days last week with Mrs Kmily Har r i s

The eldest son of Clifton Osborn who recently broke one of his lower limbs had to have it reuroken last week and set again

Mrs Sara Cicario of Detroit was the winner of the s t r ing of pearls pu t in H K Marshall s raquotore by a soap comshypany

At the home of the brides parentis Mr and Mrs Charles Ellsworth Ust Wednesday evening occurred the mar riage of their eldest daughter Miss Lela to Russell Grosshaus They leave Monday Nov 10 accompanied by his brother John Grosshaus and wife for an overland trip to Florida

It will be remembered that the lashydies of this 1 A S will have for sale Nov -gty afternoon and evening quiltshyed and tied quilts rugs and -ill kinds of fancy work also will serve a chickshyen pie supper

In the j u ry trial of Mrs Cora Brewshyer of Jackson and H K Munsell last Thursday Mr Munsell was the winshyner

Mrs Iillie Burden and Mrs Klla Benjamin of Fowlerville visited among friends and relatives here last week

F A Hill and Sterns Smith unshyloaded a car load of lumber last week at Stockbridge belonging to Charles B Clark of River Rouge Mr Clark havshying bought several acres of the Rockshywell Island farm and will erect a cotshytage at once

Mr and Mrs Win George and daughter Blanch and Clare Ti tus of Rochester were recent guests with C M Titus and family

Stanley Quinn and family of Chesan-ing anil Miss Iuiiii v^uinn of Harr ison were callers at Mrs Hills and C M Titus last Sunday

- - - -o- --

APRON SOCIAL

The Kings Daughters felt much gratified and justifiably so in the reshysults of the Apron Social held at the Iarsoriage last Friday afternoon Deshyspite threa tening weather condition approximately 150 were in a t tendance and the contr ibut ions from these as well as from absent friends were genshyerous indeed more than S10D having bullilnady been received to iid in carryshying out the good work of the organisashytion

A line progrniit was given consisting nf vocjl solos b Mrs Farl Baughn iiul Mrs H F Maycroft readings b x Mrs Meihns of Detroit piano duets o M I-Mlaquo v adi1 I InrHs n n 1 111fi lw Martin and piano solos by Misses Bessie Swurtliout and Dorothy Cnrr

A luncheon WHS served mdasho

Mrs Ar thu r White visited her sis-ter in Saginaw over the week end

Mrs Burr Clark visited relatives in Rose city last week

Leslie Muycoek is on a hunt ing tr ip in the north - Walter Karzidofer and wife were given a farewell par ty Friday evening They are leaving the Ccphelus farm to move to New Balt imore Fdwin F Roberts who has been sershyiously ill with heart trouble and scarlet fever the past week is slowly improvshying

Fugene Smith and wife of Cavan-augh Fake are spending the winter months with their daughter Mrs Mac Martin

John M Har r i s and family of Pinckshyney were Sunday visitors at J D Whites

Mrs Adam Gehringer has sold Tier farm at Tr iangle Lake and is moving to Howell this week

Jessie White and family of Howell visited at Ray Kllsworths Wednesday evening

Win Ru t tmau and family spent Sunshyday at Mel Dunns in Iosco

Herbert Lane has moved to his new home which was the Coral Drew farm near the Sani tor ium

Mr and Mrs Ray T Bentley of Grand Kupids fisited at J I) Whiles Friday evening

Mr Sarle and family are leaving the Archie Gorton farm to spend the winter in southern Florida

Charles P Reed and family were in Corunna Sunday

Albin Pfau Alfred Lange and famshyilies were reclaquoat visitors at Frank Langes in Aon Arbor

The Ladies AW served chicken pie at Edwin Webbs Wednesday evening A good crowd was present Proceed 37oo

SCHOOL NOTES

| Kd Brown former right halfback i on the Pinckney High School football j t eam is now pllaquoying in the back field j of the freshmen squad at the Inivur- sily of Michigan

The universifv coaches have picked Kd as one of Hie best hacks to cntci Michigan in some time

mdash - o Merlynne Aiuburgey has left schoo Miss Catheritte Canade of Ferndale

visited school the past week Phyllis Sprout has returnee

school Miss ShuriK visited school

Thursday Tho our members now ugtre few We are t rying our best to do And if ou only do the same Youll find school one great game

Kvrryonr is now busy at his sew ing

JACKSON COUPLE SPEAK MARRIAGE

VOWS THURSDAY

M I M Helen V Craves and Albert Boucher Are Wed at Brides Home

An au tumn wedding of charm and at t ract ion was the marr iage Wednesshyday noon of Miss Helen Virginia Graves of this city to Albert L Bouchshyer son of Mr and Mrs J F Bouchshyer 8iy West Morrell street

The marr iage was solemnized ut high noon at the home of the bride s parshyents Mr ajid Mrs Marcus T Graves in Pinckney

Only immediate members of the two families were present to witness the ceremony which was performed by Rev A T Camburn of the Methodist Kpiseopal church of Stockbridge

The bride was unat tended and was charming in a costume suit of russet brown cloth with brown fur t r immings with which she wore a small modish hat of gold cloth Her flowers were pink roses

Following the exchanges of the bridshyal vows a wedding breakfast was servshyed to the company of 15 guests

Clirv santheums of golden hue were used to adorn the home and fall foliage added to the a t t ract ive effect of the decorative note

Mr and Mrs Boucher l e f t l a t e r in the day for a wedding tr ip by motor to Cleveland Detroit and Chicago and after Nov 20 will he at home at 321 West Morrell street- Citizen Patr iot

Miss Graves is well known in this vicinity being a graduate of Pinckshyney High school of the class of 1920 and for the past I years has been em-employed as bookkeeper with the Conshysumers Power Co of Jackson Mr Boucher is a g radua te of the Jackson schools and a prosperous youngbusiness man

ELECTION AFTERMATH

S T

JOINT BANK ACCOUNT

bull A great many people deposit money bull bull in joint accounts Some have joint check- bull bull accounts and some have joint savings ac- bull bull counts By this we mean that the account j bull is payable to either of the parties mention g bull ed in the account during their lifetime or in J bull case of death of one the account is immed- J bull iately payable to the survivor without legal 2 5 proceedings9

s This method is not only used by husband and wife but may also be used by any parties who wish to havetheir money matters arranged in this way

s 5

tlt

l St

CHUBBS CORNERS

J

WHKRKAS by satisfactory evishydence presented to the undersigned it lias been nmdc to appear thnt The Pinckney State Bank in the Village of Pinckney in the County of Livingston State of Michigan has complied with nil the provisions of the General Bankshying lftws of the State of Michigan reshyquired to he complied with before a corporation shall be aiithomed to commence the business of Banking

NOW THKRKKORK I HUGH A McPHERSON Commissioner of the State Banking Department do hereby certify that The Pinckney State Bank in the Village of Pinckney in the County of Mivingstnn and State of Michigan is authorised to commence the business of Banking as provided in section seven of the General Banking laws of the State of Michigan

IN TESTIMONY WHEKK-OF Witness my hand and

(Seal) Seal of Office at Lansing thil First day of October 1M4

_ HUGH A McPHERSON ^ Commissioner of the Banking

Department

Mr and Mrs Fri Hrigham were in Ann Arbor last Wednesday

Mrs Dell Gnffney visited her daughshyter Mrs Louis Gehringer of Howell bull vt Wednesday

Mrs Kingsley visited her parents Rev N W Pierce and wife of Marion one day last week

Mrs Nettie Hennett has sold her farm to a Mr Roberts of Detroi t

Mr Mr Goodspeed of Detroit visited at the Ezra Hrighum home over Sunshyday

Mrraquo and Mrs Jay Rrigham spent last Thursday at tho home of Thomas Moshier and wife of Ann Arbor

Mr and Mrs F W Allison spent Sunday in Hyron the guest of Mrs Allisons daugh te r and family

Albert Dinklc has purchased a new busker and is busy husking corn

Mrs Roiit Granger spent ltraquo irvr days last week in I inrkney with her father Thos Richardson

Mr and Mrs Butlin anil daugh te r Marion of Detroit were calling on ail their old neighbors here Sunday

Mr and Mrs Ed Hoisel and daughshyter of Howell called on M ) Hoisel and family Sunday

MCP Mark Allison and family spent Tuesday night at San ford Reasons listening to the election re turns over I he radio

- - - - - o mdash

PRIZES FOR BEST ARTICLE

HAMBONES MEDITATIONS r ZoSS LOW P t H A R P

TIMES MIT HIM M O H A R P E R H IT H I T Mpound - - AH DON KNOW BOUT PAT BUT T SHO K N 0 C K E P gtAO O U T E N

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Open to All Students Attending School in Putnam Township

The Dispatch will give five prires total value 1150 to any student atshytending school in Putnam township for an laquortiele on the following subject How I WoiHd Make Pinckney A More Desirable Village to Live In

The first prire will be valued at 500 second $300 third $200 fourth 810laquo fifth 50 cents

The only conditions of the contest are that the article shall not exceed 500 words In length and that all must be submitted ^o the Dispatch office beshyfore December 1st 1924

Competent disinterested iodjres will decide the winners

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MmglUh Soger BmdashU Two tbftBMQrt people la England

ratted rasir bmsnn 18X00 ncrm fatt

No Wealth in Oil Shml-The Unlterl States bnreati of mine

has conducted tests whleh disprove the hysterical reports that gold diver platinum and potash have been obshytained in paying qnantities from oil shales That it la not commercially possible to recover any of these mateshyrials has been demonstrated by the assays

MajMty o th Law Eight magistrates the clerk anpound bis

assistants n police superintendent an tnspector a sergeant a detective sii constables and two pressmen attended Epplng pollee eonrt when two men were snmmoned for riding bicycles on the footpath neither of whom put In an appearancemdashLondon TJf-Blts

TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN Youwill please take notice that the

undersigned Wendelin Altman a resishydent of the County of Livin^stonyj Michigan for a year last past hereby gives notice that he will make applishycation to the Honorable Jodge of Proshybate in and for the County of Livingshyston and State of Michigan on the 18 day of December 1994 at 1000 A M in the office of said Judge of Probate in the Court Houae of the City of Howell Michigan for a change of his said name to Wendelin Sorg

Wendelin Altman

The outs tanding features of the elecshytion in Pu tnam township were as folshylows

The school amendment was defeated 3-Ki No M Yes

Lynn Gardner for state legislature on Republican ticket ran ahead of his ticket hut behind his opponent H votes

Hiram R Smith for prosecuting atshytorney also made an excellent showing cut t ing Don Van Winkles majori ty down to 11

Davis democrat ic nominee for presishydent received 31 majority

Groesbeck and Couzens were ed here by 25 majority

Miss Nellie Gardner for t reasurer on Democrat ticket the township by 91 majority

Cloirles Hoff on Democratic ticket for Sheriff defeated Ired Teeple Reshypublican by H 2 majority Tins big showing is admit ted by Teeples friends to be on account of the popular i ty of the Hoff shrievalty service in this vicshyinity Before election two c a r s ago Hoff promised the voters in this par t of the county that if elected he would do all in his power towards the en-foreement of law and it would seem from bis splendid showing at the polls I this year that the Voters were satisfied i with his efforts He appointed Irvin I Kennedy local deputy sheriff and gave him all the backing requested T h e result is tha t Kennedy has made good i as i peace officer and although his chief was defeated by a very small ] majori ty in Livingston county the t i t - i ens of this township regrdless of par ty affiliations would like to see Kennedy retained here as deputy shershyiff so that the good work for law enshyforcement may he continued And we unders tand that influential Republishycans have volunteered to petition the Sheriff-elect to reappoint Kennedy to the office

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Dishonett Borrower$ Vhv does the nvernjre man or womshy

an who borrows honks lose all sense of property rights and fall to return them ovrr-pr imlaquohraquor compulsion Othlaquor things fivtpmrlv come back to the lender hi f it is n book he is lucky bull ullt ffiins possesvinn of it

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PINCKNEY STATE BANK] Officers Director bull

C L SIGLER C L SIGLER President W E FARNAM THOS READ ___Vice-president Q W TttPLE S A H MURPHY Cashier THOS READ bull

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SUNDAY

Dedication Service 1030 Dr J W Sutherland Speaker

Super intendent Michigan Congregational Conference

Evening Service 730 Rev C H Harder Speaker Missionary Michigan Congregational Conference

bull TUESDAY j

Home-Coming s 4 Supper Served in New Dining Room

Evening Service ^^ __730 Former Pastors of Pinckney Speakers

WEDNESDAY

Evening Service Mr Geo W Soerheide Speaker

City Mission Cleveland O

730

THURSDAY

Evening Service 730 Rev Paul Voelker Speaker

President Olivet College

Special Music at Each Service

The Public u Cordially invited

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NOTICE Keep your credit good by paying you account before October 1st No more credit after tbat date if acct not settled

We Offer the FoUowkg Articles for Cash A $2400mdash3-Burner Ofl Cooker for $17 00 A $3000 4 B laquo u u OQ Cooker for $20 00 A 75c Pocket Knife for ^ A $125 tad $150 Pocket Knife for I trade 9 0 c A $150 Ahrm Clock for j i laquoa A $150 Watck for I j bdquo A $300 RacSofite Watch for L t g A $3000 Bom Poller far ^ bdquo _ I I I $ i a 0 0

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OUR PRICES ON BEEF Are as follows

Round Steak 25c lb Loin and Porterhouse 28c Shoulder Roast 15c Rib Stew 8 to 10c

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With every other food getting higher EAT MORE MEAT

Reason amp Reason mm

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Full Line of Accessories and Genuine Ford Parts

Expert Repairmen Satisfaction Guaranteed

Full line of Oils and Greases Stop Lights Spot Lights Bulbs and Heaters

Special price on 30x3 1-2 Fabrics $10 for Tire and Tube while they last

R DAY BIRD Pinckney Ford Sales and Service

M i H i i m m m n M i H u i

Ciiicf Justice White am

Mr Justice Harlan chewed tobacco in the Supreme Court room and lived to a ripe old age and in full vigor at 76 and 78 yean respectively Chew Beech-Nut and remain strong and vigorous

Over2S0MiHkn Packages SoMf in laquo

Single Year

Childrens Ailments TIS0RDERS of the stomach and constipation are U the most common diseases of children To

correct them you will find nothing better than srlains Tablets One tablet at bed time will

do th$ work and will make your child bright and fcheeriiil the following morning Do not punish

jour Children by giving them castor oil Chamber-are better and more pleasant to take-

r him berl a irVs Tablets M- iVs H7-

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P i n c k n e y D i s p a t c h

Entered at the Postofficeat Finck-oey Mich araquo Second Claos Matter

LINCOLN E SI ITH PUBLISHER

Subscription $126 a Year la Advauc

Mr B r o w n ot N u r t h v i l l c m a n a g e r of t h i s d i s t r i c t l o r t he D e t r o i t Kdison C o t u p a u y a n d his a s s i s t a n t Mr Wi lk in son w e r e p l e a s a n t c a l l e r s a t t h e Disshyp a t c h office M o n d a y

T h e m a r r i a g e of Dr J D S i n g e r a n d Miss M a r g a r e t I r m i t both of B r i g h t o n w a s sulcinni cd at tin- home of Mr a n d Mrs G e o r g e W S m i t h of E a s t Cirand l i ive r s t r e e t tliii (W edshyn e s d a y ) a f t e r n o o n it J 00 o c lock Rev K K J ) u r k e e of tin- W M cl iurcl i officiatetl a n d uuly t he i j iunedi-LI11 r e l a t i v e s were prese j i t T h e y left on t he a f t e r n o o n t r a in for a w e d d i n g l o u r to I cnnsyU anni the Dr s old iionie - A r g u s

T h e F a r m i n g t o n t o w n s h i p boa rd h a v e a d o p t e d a r e s o l u t i o n t o s u b m i t the q u e s t i o n of l i gh t i ng G r a n d Rivet road f rom t h e W a y n e c o u n t y in te r see -thfh on the east to the N o s i t o w n s h i p

Mrs F r e d G r i e v e of A n n A r b o r a n d I l i u deg t i u w l s t T l u ^ e n f will he M r s Hiram S m i t h of H o w e l l we re Mipplied by the D e t r o i t Kdison Co if

LOCAL AND GENERAL

M r s Al ice P r i c e of D e t r o i t is visitshying M r s E H Bye r

Mrs K H B y e r v is i ted a t W a l k e r shysilk O n t a few d a s s l as t week

v i s i t o r s a t t h e h o m e of G VV T h u r s d a y

R e iso n f a v o r a b l e ac t ion is t a k e n by the vo te rs

I lvmoiUh Mail

F l o y d R e a s o n was in Howe l l Tues - j d a I TUBERCULOSIS CLINIC

D o n a l d Mgk-r of D e t r o i t spen t the j A ] u r m a n t n t t- t u b e r c u l o s i s cl inic week end with his p a r e n t s Dr and w i bdquo ]) ^ ^ | ( t t ) u ^ ^ o f t h M r s L i - S i g l e r e o u n t y n u r s e H o w e l l on S a t u r d a y

Mrs Rex S m i t h a n d Mrs C J i N ovember bullgt 19JI a n d t i i r rp a f t e r the C l i n t o n w e r e Arm A r b o r v is i tors tiiirff S a t u rday of each m o n t h Hourgt T h u r s d a y imi to -l-oo a m a n d 2 00 to Vltgtgt

i i bull ^ raquo I- l n- 1 be c o n d u c t e d bv L i v i n g s t o n 1 s o s e t t e r s b r ed in D e n m a r k and

i m p o r t e d on a c c o u n t of t h e i r line pedshyig rees a n d i n d i v i d u a l i t y w e r e t a k e n to t h e d o g r a n c h n e a r 1 u t te rson l ake this w e e k

M r and Mrs C l a u d e fteason and fami ly were Ann A r b o r v is i tors Sun-d a )

Mr a n d Mrs Wiil T i p l a d y a n d fam- ily of W e b s t e r were S u n d a y vis i tors a t t he h o m e of C l a r e n c e S t a c k a b l e j

P a t L a v e s a n d L e e Lavey were1

J a c k s o n vrs i tors S u n d a y

Mr a n d Mrs W 11 M a n n i n g and Mr a n d M r s R a l p h S c h r o d e r of Lai is-ing w e r e v is i to rs a t the h o m e of C S 1 l a r g e r T h u r s d a y

Miss P a u l i n e Reason s p e n t the week j end wi th A n n A r b o r r e l a t i ve s

lti sp l e of Hie d i s a g r e e a b l e sveather las t l r i d a a stiff cold ga le of ssindf b l o v i n g tlie a t t e n d a n c e at t he f o o t b a l l g a m e was good A l a r g e n u m b e r oi Fnwic rv i l l c s u p p o r t e r s w e r e p r e s e n t

gt 11 C a r r has been a s s i s t i ng R o b e r t J a c k e rec t a c o t t a g e at L a k e l a n d

j l o i i r d v Pub l i c H e a l t h S e r v i c e u n d e r the d i r e c t i o n of Dr L ] P i e rce of

j the Si a t e S a n a t o r i u m - - - i

P e a r l T h i m b l e s Ludi i s of high da-vs in Chin use

t h e d a i n t i e s t t h i m b l e s i iuag innb ie some of tliiin be ing c a r v e d out of

pioM-rtious p e a r l s and o r n a m e n t e d wi th j Viands of fine gold on w h i c h all nnin-I nee of q u a i n t imd f a n t a s t i c d e s i g n s Hre engrived

Ind i rec t S i g h t His VfltmdashIt s a s h a m e t h a t big

fat w o m a n hnd to t a k e t h e sea t dishyrec t ly rn front of you Y o u r e missshying the w h o l e s h o w Mr L i t t l e t o n mdash v o nor all of it S h e s r e a d i n g all the t i t l e s a loud mdashBuf fa lo E x p r e s s

C alder onn Busy Pen lt a h b V o t t rgt- r e | o t n - i ed S p a n i s h

hu ai 1 i - f a n d p o r t ltbull - bulllt i ude f u t i g -

l i l e W o l k e l I l e i-oe i- bull i i l l i n ^ h is

i i l e 111 p l a y s a n d 7 S I O I - i t i pluVS

for t h e i l i u r e l a H e e i t j o v r d t X t m o -

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CHURCH NOTES A i i i imir is c i r c u l a t i n g a r o u n d town t h a t doe G e n t i l e cNpects to aga in con duc t a fruit s to re and ice c r e a m p a r shylor h e r e

G P L a m h e i d s o n will sell his pershysonal p m p e r t s at the f a rm l l i u r s d a v Nov J i b begiiii i Dg at 1lt) o c lock L u n c h at noon

Miss Rose L a v e y spen t las l Thur s shyd a y wi th Mr a n d Mrs C l a r e n c e S t a c k ab le

Dr H V Sigki svas i Ann A r b o r 1 u e s d a y

Mr a n d M r s R W Bird and chil d r e n spen t S u n d a y with W h i t m o r e L ke f r i ends

B o r n to Mr and Mrs F r e d R e a d of D e t r o i t Nov l o t h a d a u g h t e r

Mr a n d M r gt M Ni le a n d son ot J a c k s o n w e r e v is i tors at the P a t L a v e y h o m e last F r i d a v and S a tu rdav

L woo] buck I- v r a r s old Mr a n d Mrs 1 red B o w m a n visd-d ~ -ltbull j bull

I or t H u r o n r e l a t ives severa l d a v s last

C o m m u n i t y C o n g r e g a t i o n a l Church

II L M A V C L O I T P a s t o r

M o r n i n g W o r s h i p liPJo a in Su nda v School I 1 0 a in

N o r t h H a m b u r g

Suudav School J 0() p in

W o r s h i p 3d)0 p Mi

The Most Exquisite Taste can be Satisfied at Our

Ice Cream Parlors The Connor Ice Cream Co make special efforts to produce someshything newmdashsomething different in Ice Cream Flavors Just now they are specializing on

Cherry Ice Cream a most deled able frozen dainty with ^he ripened cherry crushed and mingled into a beautiful and satisfying congealed refreshment

Also Maple-Nut Ice Cream in which the purest Maple Juices flavor various Nut Meats blended and frozen for your approval

If you have not yet tried eitherof these new creations a pleasant surshyprise awaits you

BARRYS JO N Y A L DRUGS STORE

Cooking by Current

WANTS FOR SALE ETC

L KOH S A L K Brown m i re l o wt

a b o u t 1 1 Vi C r a d c Belg ian g e l d i n g fi wt about KioO R e g i s t e r e d finc-

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PINCKNEY BAKERY ^ OUR BREAD SPECIALTIES

The ever growing demand for Blue Ribbon Bread Proves Its Popularity

Nice Sweet Raisin Bread YOUD Be Pleased With a Trial of Our Different Pastries

I Try Our Graham Bread and Sandwich Bread

G B b A N K E N Prop

week

S U C a r r A e l C a r p e n t e r and H a r r y Lee a r e enjoying 1 a h u n t i n g t r i p in v rn Mich igan

i V Yince a n d son r e t u r n e d to eir h o m e a t I i y r o n S u n d a y

Mri A l f r ed M o n k s is v is i t ing S t o c k -b r idge r e l a t i ves

MLsses Nel l ie G a r d n e r Drus i l l a a n d F l o r e n c e M u r p h y and L o r e n z o M u r p h y a t t e n d e d the foo tba l l g a m e a t A n n Ar shybor S a t u r d a y

M r a n d M r s L o u i s M o n k s a n d da ugh t e r M a r i e of J a c k s o n s p e n t S u n d a y wi th Miss L u c y H a r r i s

M r s K a t e S a l i s b u r y who has been v i s i t ing seve ra l w e e k s wi th h e r vSigler c o u s i n s w e n t to A n n A r b o r T h u r s d a y las t to visi t in t h e h o m e of J u d g e N e w -kirk fc AJLiil

Mr and Mrs S J Ashenbrenner and daughter of Detroit were visitors at the Fred Bowman home the first of the week

Miss Minnie Reason was a fioweU caller Tuesday

Mrs S H Carr Miss Ijiura Hofl and Mrs Robt Jack and Mrs Milo Kettier were inn Arbor visitors Thursday

Mr jnd Mrs Frank Jioycc of Stock-bridge were Sunday guests of Mr and Mrs Floyd Reason

Mr and Mrs Geo Barnes of St Johns spent several days last week with her sister Mrs Floyd Reason

Mr and Mrs J M Harris and famshyily spent Sunday with Mr and Mrs John White near Howell

Mr and Mrs Frank Kennedy and family of Detroit are visiting Mr and Mr Patrick Kennedy

W Uurn Dancer of Stockbridge transacted business in Pinckney Tuesshyday

The Pinckney fire department WHS called to the Frank Barton farm two miles west of Anderson Monday aftershynoon A Are in a nearby marsh wa spreading so rapidly in the hifh wind er Two gangs of men threshing and putting up sifo corn in the neighborshyhood turned ia and by hard work

off the blase before it reached Jkrton buiidtifs

C i R A I l l O N O L A sVioo i n s t r u m e n t with lti r e c o r d s Will sell for $1000 I n q u i r e D i spa tch office

F O R HI NT The R u d o l p h I azalo f a r m one mile nor th of A n d e r s o n

( i O O D K A T l N C i Or Inn

T U M I S for s a l e L C R o g e r s

1

CIDER APPLES for sale William Doyle

RabCs Sulkey FOR SALEMrs Roy Hannctt

Thoroughbred Hereford bull and 0 I C boar for sale Robert Kelley

House for sale or rent Inquire J C Pinkie DOLL l l TIIK OLD H U S - A n d

make it look as if it had some pep David Jones automobile finishing

CASH PAIDmdashFor false teeth gold i crowns and bridges old magnet points and old gold Mail tn Hoke Smelting and Refining Co Otsego Mich Let us hear from you

FOR SALEmdashTo reduce stock will sell a few Silver Canipine hens cheap

Ben E White FOR SERVICEmdashPoland China boar

(W K Livingston strain) Paul Fohcy

WILL CALLmdashWednesday of every week for junk of all kinds Rags rubbers papers magasines metal etc Notify Dispatch office Also pay highest prices for second hand furnishyture

H Storey Phone 97M Dexter MONEY TO LOANmdashOn improved

farms at 6 per cent For particushylars write Brown Cress amp Company First National Bank Building Ann Arbor Michigan

FOR SALEmdashA quantity of hay and cum John R Marthv

FLUFF RUGSmdashIf you have any carshypet to make into rugsmdashdrop us a card We famish border free You will like our work and our prices Pinekney Fluff Rug Co Pmckaey Mich

FOR SERVICEmdashShorthorn Durham Bull elifJblt for registry

Ed Spoan JUffTICft OF T M PEACB

Cooking without fire smoke or aslns without fui c or gases cooking with a steady unchanging heat cooking at no greater bother than the snapping of a switchmdashthat is electric cooking

The electric range now so widely used has brought great comfort into the kitchen it has done away with the troubles the watchfulness the anxieties of the old time cookshying and has substituted a sure cleanly and comparatively effortless method of preparing food for the table

XHE DETROIT EDISON COMPANY

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Quality the best and priced Right

C V V A N WINKLE

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w5 7-THE PINCKNEY DISPATCH

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HMITI STATE NEWS IN BRIEF

S

Coolidge Puts Up Presidents Cup

WASHINGTON mdash President Coolidge has taken a long Step toward arousing greatshye r interest in athlet ics in the

army and the navy and in the counshytry general ly by present ing to athshyletic representa t ives of the army and of t h e scout ing fUet a challenge cup for football between service teams of the two b rand ie s

Indicat ion a re that as a result of this one of the great annual athlet ic events of the future will center about the Coolidge cup or as it will be offishycially called the Pres ident s ( up

T h e Pres ident summoned athlet ic representa t ives of the army and the navy to the Whi te House He then formally turned over to them a cup to be contested for every year by two football teams chosen from officers and enlisted men of the two forces

T h e first contest for the cup was set for November Uigt at Griffith s tadium Each team will be composed of one officer and ten enlisted men

Pres ident Coolidge himself will bulltart the game and there is every inshydication that it will be a social and athletic event rivaling the contest between West Point and Annapolis

Maj Paul Baade infantry represhysen t ing the array from Fort Benning and Lieut Com Hamil ton V Bryan scouting fleet athlet ic officer together with Coxswain Claude A Ezell and

Staff Sergt Har ry O Troupe represhysent ing the enlisted men of the army nnd the fleet received the cup It ia of generous proport ions embossed Ua blue and gold and su rmounted by the American eagle

In connection with the presenta t ion the Pres ident made this s t a tement

As President of the United Sta tes of America in the interest of good clean Ileal thy recreat ion for the peoshyple of the ent i re country and to enshycourage and s t imula te athlet ics among the enlisted men of the servshyices I offer this cup to be known as the Presid nt s cup for contest beshytween footkil l teams of the army and navy from units or subdivisions of forces urn -r such te rms as the secshyre tary of war and the secretary of navy may de t e rmine provided howshyever tha t the teams shall be coin posed of enlisted men and officers in about the same proportion as a re offishycers and enlisted men in the services

I desire to mention the grea t beneshyfits to mind and body that result from part icipat ion in good clean whole some sport The people of the United S ta tes have a lways been devoted to manly contests and I know of no betshyter way to give to them a t rue examshyple of sport in its best form than to offer such a cup as this for a trophy to be contested for by the army and the navy

Six New Reclamation Projects Approved

SIX new Western reclamation projshyects embracing more than 400-000 acres have been approved as feasible from an engineering

economic agricul tural and land develshyopment s tandpoint by investigating commit tees whose reports are made public by the Interior depar tment

Studies of the projects were conshyducted by professors of agr icul tural colleges In s ta tes In which they a re located s t a te agricultural officials and bankers In their development it Is recommended tha t policies and methshyods proposed by the committee of speshycial advisors of reclamation be folshylowed T h e projects

VaJe project Oregon 28305 acres msifily sage brush with an est imated gross annual crop re turn after irrigashytion of $35 an acre Ninety per cent of the land will require subdivision and se t t lement and will provide farms for 2fi0 to 300 set t lers

Baker project Oregon Irr igable land es t imated at 26031 acres which Should yield a gross annual re turn of between $30no t6 $3750 per acre The value of the raw land Is fixed at between $250 to $5 an acre

Kittitas project Washington W38U

acres of Irrigable land Including 48-402 acres of agricultural n a t u r e 21-925 of pas ture and 20071 of waste land It is recommended that farm units should not he less than laquoS0 acres on the best grade soil nnd about 1150 acres on the poorer grades in order to y M d an income for a family The bet ter land shoulrf re turn a gross anshynual income of from $10 to $55 an acre after the development

Uwyhee project lt ireyon 5SS59 acres of first-class land well adapted to produce satisfactory yield of crops while there is raquo15140 acres of second class lund that cannot produce more than about 75 per cent of the yield of the first-class land A good farm with a variety of [gtrod4rts ought to produce as much as $00 an acre annual ly

Salt Lake basin project U t a h 110000 acres will be directly beneshyfited and there a re excellent marke t ing and t ranspor t ing facilities Mixed crops should yield from $50 to $80 per acre u year The lands to be Irrigatshyed a re already colonized and settled on small farms

Spanish Springs project N e v a d a Including 39H50 acres of high-grade land adap tab le to a wide variety of crops

Airplane vs the Battleship in Congress

REGAKDLRSS of the outcome of

the investigation now being made by the general board of the navy under Instructions by

the secre tary and at the instigation of the Pres ident a showdown light in the old airplane-bat t leship controvershysy looms when congress reopens in December

Whatever the findings of the hoard and it is admit ted on all sides that they must be predicated on the basis tha t the bat t leship is still the main reliance in sen power a i r en thus ias t s a re laying plans for a drive on conshygress to get full recognition of the increaslnc importance of aviation In the national defense with a sepa ra t e air force as their final objective

Hear tened by President Coolidges recent u t te rances In which he voiced his belief in the possibility of the airshyp lane superseding the surface fighting ship they propose to demand that an impart ia l tr ibunal hear their case and tha t the aerial fighting forces be placed In a position to be developed free from the obstruct ionis ts in the mil i tary services

On the other hand naval officers are gravely concerned over the recent developments realizing the popular appeal of the aviation propaganda with Its promise of cheap and effecshytive nat ional preparedness They fear that as Intimated by the Presi dent no provision will be made fo modernizinc the older bat t leships for proper maintenance of the fleet and for construction unless the controvershysy over the relative meri ts of aircraft nnd bat t leships Is finally and definiteshyly settled

T h e round-the-world flight by the army flyers spectacular and epochal ns it was did not in the opinion of the majority of exper ts war ran t the conclusions drawn in some quar te rs

The one outs tanding lesson of the achievement they say was that it demonst ra ted conclusively the dependshyence of aircraft on surface ships in long-distance work It is pointed out tha t while the flyers were covering their twenty-odd thousand miles apshyproximately 87000 miles of s teaming was done hy United S ta t e s naval vesshysels in helping to put the flight across

Flag With Only 40 Stars Causes Stir

GEN FRANK T HTNES direcshy

tor of the veterans bureau Ims begun an Investigation of the origin nnd history of the

flag with only 40 stars which was disshyplayed by Mrs Lillian R Sire before de legates of the New York Sta te Fedshyera t ion of Womens Clubs in New York

So far a s he has been aide to learn only one of the freak flags ever has appeared in the ve terans bureau service I t was shipped from Perry-rille Md along with five other flags FelaVnary 7 1922 and w a s received at Hospital No 49 Philadelphia Februshya r y 16 1raquo22 At tha t t ime Perryvll ie w a s a United S t a t e s public hea l th bull bull t r i c e depot

Cteseral H lnes deplored published Assertions the bureau had contracted l o r 800000 cheap shoddy flags for the coffins of dead ve te rans

8 O B M tUne ago according to the dishyrector compUUnt was made tha t t h e eofta of s soldier who died in Hosshypital NO 48 W t t covered with a flag SafUtt on ly 4 0 bull H e immediately

officer in chart whether the

regarding flags a M SOS osssptttef with and whether

- - bullbull bull bull - bull

ltrf the

the flag in question had been Inshyspected

The answer to both quest ions was in the affirmative The oflieer also stated according to the director tha t all o ther Macs in stock had been found to be regulat ion

A brother of Har ry H Pench the veteran whose coffin was covered with the improperly made flag hart reported the m a t t e r to the bureau It was the flag which covered Benchs coffin that Mrs Sire showed the deleshygates

T h e New York City Federa t ion of Women s Clubs has appointed a comshymittee consisting of Mrs Belle de Rivera honorary p re s iden t Mrs Lilshylian R Sire who brought the m a t t e r to public a t tent ion nnd who is presishydent of the Womens National Demoshycra t ic club nnd Mrs William Albert Lewis

Char les A Bench bro ther of Har ry H Bench a soldier who served his country 20 years and died in the Vetshyerans hospital at Phi ladelphia gave Mrs Sire a cheap 40-star flag which had been draped about the coffla when it reached the family home in Readshying Pa Mr Bench replaced it with a flag he taodght more suitable

SaginawmdashJ W Ferdney former m e m b e r of congress from the eighth distr ict baa taken in his annua l deer hunt ing t r ip in Luce county this year He is 71 yea r s old

Owosso mdash Mason Ri lenberry 72 yea r s old a farmer living near Banshycroft was found dead in his barn A physician said that he evidently had suffered a hear t a t tack while loading a wagon

SturgismdashCity Attorney Paul Wal t broke his arm in an a t t emp t to c rank his automobile A few mnu tes la te r his mother- in law Mrs El izabeth Cole t r ied to open a heavy ga te at her husshyband s farm and the ga te fell on tier f rac tur ing her hip

FlintmdashAfter going to a local newsshypaper office to announce that he would main ta in his record of voting for evshyery Pres iden t since Lincoln Theodore V Canright 94 years old fell from his porch while r e tu rn ing to his home and was seriously injured

OwossomdashJohn McAvoy 52 years old a p rominen t New Haven Townshyship lar jner waa found dead in the wa te r t ank on his farm It is beshylieved that he sat down on the edge of the tank to lest and suffered a s t roke falling irto the tank and drowning

Detroi t Majorities of nearly 10 to 1 were rolled up by the Republ ican s t a t e and county t ickets in Wayne county according to complete reshytu rns In pract ical ly every case the con tes t s were decided upon s t ra igh t par ty l ines with but sl ight fluctuashyt ions in the voe

Por t HuronmdashMiss Lau ra Copeland of Boston is in Port Huron to car ry on the work of the Rotary clubs cripshypled chi ldren s clinic She will carry out the recommendat ions of the recent clinic and be of service to local medishycal men also teaching pa ren t s proper mas sage methods in the care of cripshypled children

RomeomdashTwo I ta l ians demanding repr i sa l s for wounds one suffered tn a domest ic feud were killed here as they s tormed the home of Joseph Pill-eri to Identification of one of the men as Patsy Prris a former enemy of Pi l ler l to was t s t ab i l shed soon after the shooting Pillerito said he had never seen the third man before

Det ro i tmdashResumpt ion of activity at the Monnier road studio of the Deshytroit Motion P ic ture company within a few weeks has been announced folshylowing the annual meet ing of stockshyholders It was voted to assume a mor tgage of $150000 on the proper ty l iquidate ou ts tand ing obl igat ions and r e sume the production of pic tures

Grand RapidsmdashErect ion of a memorshyial to the Grand Rapids service men of the Civil Spanish-American and world wars now rests upon the city commission a s the result of the comshypletion of a general design by a civilshyian commit tee appointed by former Mayor Jul ius Tisch a year ago The project it is es t imated will cost $300000

Detroi tmdashForeign capital is pouring into Germany due to the excessively high rates of in teres t at which money-Is loaned and Jackie Coogan created as much a t ten t ion in Berlin as the Zeppelin ZR-3 These observat ions along with m a n o thers were brought back to Detroit fcy C Leidich who reshyturned a few days ago from his 73rd t r ip abroad in the past 30 years

Grand RapidsmdashThe Commercial Savings bank and the People s Savshyings bank has b ten merged with the Kent S ta te bank in the largest t ransshyact ion in Grand Rapids banking hisshytory The deal involved $6000000 asse t s Stockholders of the Comshymercial and People s banks gave thei r consent at special meet ings after the deal had won the sanct ion of the s ta te banking i epa r tmen t

Marsha l lmdashEvery precinct in Batt le Creek voted in favor or eas te rn standshyard t ime Marshall had been holding off apparen t ly to see what action Bat t le Creek would take A great many Marshall people work in Battle Creek and the result ing inconvenience of the two towns were using different t ime probably would be sufficient to influence Marshal l s decision it was believed This city it is believed will r emain on eas te rn s t anda rd t ime the year around

LAnsemdashMrs Cora Reynolds Andershyson of LAnse has been elected Repshyre sen ta t ive of t i e Iron dis t r ic t in the S ta t e House )f Represen ta t ives She ran on the Republican t icket wi thout Democrat ic opposition and will reshyplace Rep Pat r ick OBrien ve te ran Upper Pen insuK legislator wbo reshyt i red following the special session of 1923 Mrs Anderson is the first woman to become a member of the House and the second to become a m e m b e r of the legislature

KalamazoomdashRais ing of $150000 for the expansion of the Bronson Methoshydist Hospi ta l in the next three yea rs has been announced here The fund was obtained through subscr ip t ions of $100000 fulfilling the condi t ions imshyposed in t en ta t ive gifts of 125000 each by Mrs Dorothy Peck Clark of Kalamazoo and Mr and Mrs W M Earnart of Ann Arbor The larger proportion of the fund was obtained ia Methodist congregations throughout the state The proposed expansion would give the hospital almost double its capaci ty and equipment

HillsdalemdashO C Dickinson of this ci ty an employe of the New York Censhyt ra l ra i l road since 1882 local t icket agen t for the last 28 years has reshytired after i2 years In the company s employ

S turg ismdashAust in McDonald awaitshying t ranspor ta t ion to J a c k s o n prison for a t e r m of oae to 15 y e a r s for carshyry ing concealed weapons dug a hole th rough the brick walls of the county jail a t Centervil le and escaped

Berk leymdashFrank Wilcox 40 yea r s old w a s c rushed to dea th benea th his house here when a gus t of wind blew it from jacks on which it was s tanding Wilcox who was laying a foundation had jus t crawled under the bouse when it fell

MonroemdashEdward Kitchin Jr 9 y e a r s old shot and killed himself while playing with his fa ther s reshyvolver The bullet en te red the boys left eye and caused ins tan t death The Ki tchins live on a farm six miles west of Monroe

Detroi tmdashMichigan Democracy lost her sole represen ta t ive in Congress in the Republican landsl ide tha t swept the s ta te Rober t H Clancy of Deshytroit r epresen t ing the F i r s t District was badly defeat t d by his Republican opponent John B Sosnowski

Lans ingmdashFores t fires which are preva len t in the nor the rn pa r t of the s t a t e a re general ly under control and confined to s lashings and cut-over land according to repor ts received by John Baird s ta te conserva t ion comshymiss ioner from deputy fire wardens

E s c a n a b a - Irving Micheau 15 years old of Brampton had his r ight hand mut i l a ted and shot in his neck and r ight ear the result of the accidenta l d ischarge of his shotgun Micheau picking the gun up n o r r the ground placed his hand over the end of the ba r r e l

Detroi tmdashAlbert Majewski Ham-t ramck was ar res ted by the police of tha t city on a charge of mans laugh te r following the death of a 10-year-old boy who is s a i l to have fallen from the running board of Majewski s autoshymobile when the la t ter s t a r t ed the mashychine in an effort to shake the boy off

AlbionmdashThe principal fea ture of the Albion election was the naming of a woman for a municipal office for the first t ime in the his tory of the city Mrs Kate Bromeling who has carr ied on a real es ta te and insurance business since the dea th of her husshyband four yea r j ago was named just ice of the peace

LansingmdashMajor i t ies which a re beshylieved to have finally crushed in Michigan any a t tempt to impose an income tax upen the public and furshyther a t t e m p t s o abolish parochial schools were rolled up in the s ta te election The chool a m e n d m e n t was bea ten 2 to 1 while the income tax proposal was beaten near ly 5 to 1

DetroitmdashConvicted solely on his finshyger-prints Onnie Howard 27 was sen tenced to se rve one to five yea r s in Jackson prison for burglary Lieutenshyant Charles Carmody head of the poshylice identification bureau produced at the t r ial pr ints found at the scene of the cr ime and pointed out s t r ik ing l ikenesses in them to the finger-prints of Howard

Grand Rapius mdashDorothy Plucker 2-year-old daughter of Mr and Mrs Clifshyford Plucker was seriously Injured when struck near her home by an aushytomobile in charge of Ted Rice of Howard City The shock of the accishydent revived a nervous trouble in Rice and he was taken to a hospi tal where physicians say he has little chance for recovery

LansingmdashMichigan has elected a 1925 Legis la ture that is solidly Re publican In 1923 the Democra t s had fivemembers i n t h e House and none in the Sena te Four of Lhose five ran for re-election and according to offishycial r e tu rns they have all been de feated The fifth Democrat Dr De-nias Dawe of Monroe did not run for renomna t ion and his place has also been taken by a Republican

Grand RapidsmdashJohn Ormand 52 years old was killed when he was s t ruck by a Fere A^aiquette passenger t rain at F rank l in s crossing Orraond was walking mine from work and is said to have^ t epped around the crossshying ga tes and walked direct ly into the path of the train A 3ister Rose Ormond was at the cross ing when the accident occurred but did not reshyalize the victim was he r b ro the r unshytil he was identified an hour la ter

De t ro i tmdashPurchase of 85 ac res and condemnat ion -jf 11 and one-half more to c o m p l e x the recrea t ion deshypa r tmen t s summer camp on Eular lake near Howell has been ordered by the Detroit common council Alshythough 40 acres of the first t r ac t is half a mile from the l ake it was s ta ted tha t the remain ing 45 ac res could not be bought for less than $20-000 the price to be paid for the whole 85 When the two proper t i es a re acshyquired the a m o will su r round the lake

Lans ingmdashPres iden t Calvin Coolidge carr ied Michigan by a major i ty of 600-000 votes over the combined tota ls of his two r ivals a sweep that has not even been approached in the s t a t e s political h is tory according to complete r e tu rns He polled near ly 80 per cent of the total vote compared with 72 per cent of the total vote given Hardshying In 1920 Davis received only about 13 per cent of the to ta l The LaFol-lette third party failed to attract more than 9 per cent of the Michigaa vote Oroesbeck and Couxens were more than W0000 ahead of their rivals

HOW THE STATES CAST VOTE FOR PRESIDENT

U gt

S t a t e f I O Q

o u a -J

12mdashAlabama 3mdashArizona 9 A r k a n s a s

13mdashCalifornia 6mdashColorado 7mdashConnect icut 3mdashDelaware 6- -F lor ida

14mdashGeorgia 4mdashIdaho

29mdashIllinois 15mdashIndiana 13mdashIowa 10mdashKansas 13mdashKentucky 10mdashLouisiana

6mdashMaine 8mdashMaryland

18mdashMassachuse t t s 15mdashMichigan 12mdashMinnesota 10mdashMississippi 18mdashMissouri 4mdashMontana 8mdashNebraska 3mdashNevada 4mdashNew H a m p s h i r e

14mdashNew J e r s e y 3mdashNew Mexico

45mdashNew York 12mdashNorth Carol ina

5mdashNorth Dakota 24mdashOhio 10mdashOklahoma

5mdashOregon 38mdashPennsylvania

5mdashRhode Island 9mdashSouth Carolina 6mdashSouth Dakota

12mdashTennessee 20mdashTexas

4mdashUtah 4mdashVermont

12mdashVirginia 7mdashWashington

8mdashWest Virginia 13mdashWisconsin

3mdashWyoming

12

9 13 6 7 3

4 29 15 13 10 13

6 S

18 15 12

18 4 8 o ltJ

4 14 3

45

5 24

5 38

6 14

10

10

12

10

4

4

7 8

12 20

12

Wouldnt Have Autoist Think He Was Curious

A motorcar apparent ly afflicted with dropsy or some such malady s topped in front of t h e res idence of Gap Johnson of Rumpus Ridge After examining the machine s upper shell the drfver seized cer ta in tools and reshyclining on his back scuffed himself under the car and began thumping on Its s tomach Mr Johnson who had

| been rest ing for some t ime by hanging

J onto his own fence with his elbows

I hooked over the top rail kept silent

j for a short season and then inqu i red

I dont reckon you re aiming to go

to Fiddle Creek a t t e r you get that

I t h e r e contrapt ion fixed

No replied the gent under the car

j Aw to Slippery Slap m e b b y T i No I H m To Sandy Mush t h e n

No Well dont get the idy t h a t I keer

j2 whur the hmdash1 youre going t o mdash Kansas City Star

631 Tota ls 382 136 13 Necessa ry to elect 266

HIGHLIGHTS FROM ELECTION RETURNS

Wash ing tonmdashWil l i am E Borah of j Idaho will be the Republ ican leader Of the s ena t e in the next congress i

St Paul MinnmdashMagnus Johnson Minnesota s widely known dir t farmshye r sena tor was defeated for re-elecshytion by Thomas D Schall Republican

New YorkmdashBy running near ly a million votes ahead of his t icket Alshyfred E Smi th Democra t defeated Colonel Roosevel t for the office of governor of t h e Empi re s ta te

Sena tor F r a n c i s E War ren Repubshyl ican 80 and father-in-law of General John J Pe r sh ing has been re-elected to the sena te He has a l ready served the re a quar te r of a century

Wil l iam Allen Whi te Independent for governor of Kansas who camshypaigned on but one ou t s t and ing issue opposit ion to the Ku Klux Klan was snowed under by a klan-indorsed canshydida te

Atlas TRACM MARK

The Atlas Speaker makes audible the impulses of the silent radio receivshying set The tones of Atlas Radio Reshyproduction whether of music or voice are clear true to the original and adjustshyable for volume

For literature send your name to the

manufacturer

Multiple Electric Products Co IDC

371 OffltUnStrlaquot Newark New Jersey

Guarantee A T L A S Products i

Two women were elected governors of s ta tes for the first t ime in his tory The new governors are Mrs Wil l iam

A Ferguson in Texas and Mrs Nellie G Ross in Wyoming Both a re Demshyocra t s

Des Moines IamdashComplete check of unofficial r e t u r n s in the senator ia l j contes t in Iowa showed tha t Sena tor

Smi th W Brookhar t had a major i ty of less than 1200 over his Democrat ic opponent Daniel F Steck j

| ChicagomdashThe first Negro ever j elected to a municipal judgeship roll-

ed into office on the Republican land- si Me Albert B George 51 a lawyer j

defeated his Democra t ic opponent by i a majori ty of be tween 65000 and 70-

000 votes

New YorkmdashTabula t ion of the popu- lar vote for p res iden t of the United I S t a t e s ind ica tes tha t P res iden t Cool- I idge has a c lear lead of more than 7500000 over John Davis The tabu- | la t ion shows tha t the LaFol le t te- ] W h e e l e r t icke t polled near ly 4500000 gt votes J

Lexington KymdashVirgil M Chap- man Lexington and Pa r i s Democrat e lected wi thou t opposition represent - j a t ive from th i s the seventh H e n r y Clays old dis t r ic t to congress will ]

be t he younges t member of e i the r i house of the new congress H e was born March 15 1895 J

Wash ing tonmdashUnless official tabula-lat ion of votes upsets the resu l t s he re is the complexion of the new Congress S e n a t e Republ icans 54 Democra t s 40 Farmer-Labor 1 v cancy 1 (Connec t icu t ) House Reshypublicans 246 Democrats 184 Fanner-Labor 3 Socialists 2 At adshyjournment of CongreM In June there ware In the Senate 51 Republicans 48 Democrats and 2 Fanner-Labor itea and in the House 226 Republishycan 207 Democrat 1 Socialist 1 Fannor-Labortta aad 1 Independent

Pertnantnt roods are a good

inlaquolaquotmlaquont ^ X ^ l f k V f mdashnot an txfxnu

America Must Have More Paved Highways

Almost every section of the United States is conshyfronted by a traffic probshylem

Month by month this problem is becoming more and more serious

Hundreds of cars pass a given point every hour on many of our state and county roads Down-town city streets are jammed with traffic

Think toohow narrow many of our read are and how comshyparatively lew paved highways there are in proporticp to the bullreadily increasing number oicara

If the motor vehicle is to can-tinne giving the bullconomictarvkt of which it is capable we most have more Conotta highways and widen tboat near large canshyters of population

Every drJsen should discus highway needs of hiaconununitf with his local aotboridtm

Your highway officials will do their part if given your support

Wny postpone meeting this pressing need

An early start nteassaarlt relief

PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION

111 West Wi

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W N Ubdquo DITAOIT NO

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f r it^Jfa pound$pound$gt -1 J aJL-V gt^V A ltv^

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THE PINCKNEY DISPATCH

V

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MCKIE THE PRINTERS DEVIL By Chtrtea Sughroe

a

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WHATS THE USE By L F Van Zelm He Went Prepared AJHAT TELIX- IWAGNES T h e ftEST OP | TKE C U 5 T O M E laquo 9 A 2 e T H I N K I N G

^BOUT H I M

HE M U S T

BE A C H E A P

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HICgt HAirs

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W E M T TOC A HAt2 C u T

BUT

JUltST SJAHT A

H M c t f T WW ^ u

D Events in the Lives of Little Men D Along the Concrete DO

HOME WANTED FOR A BABY MCLL ENOUGHS fco W C H j

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TUKTLft ^ H e l T W 0 0 6 H T

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By frac34 PERCYt CROSBY

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ncem Uvingrtoo Comity Public Health Service will

rflnfeft lht a i l a t l Cferina Seed Sale as usual this yew Watch spac each week The penny Christshymas Health Swrf aids in promoting the health of the children of Livingston County

- i j

44

THE PMCMNEY DISPATCH bull39c

1 mm) mumming MAKING 6O0D IN A SMALL TOWN

Reml- Stories About Reml Girls mdash

amppound

m

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By MRS HARLAND H ALLEN

DYEING FOR YOUR FRIENDS

SETTIN6 THUMfP ONTUKRHHWIS

F R r E C H E S T CLIN1C8 KCEP TUBERCULOSIS INFECTION

UNDER CONTROL

Baby Betty is just one of the many hundred children who each year arc brought to the Free Chest Clinics ei

^A I ff

flwrsday November 20th Sale Begins at 10 oclock Sharp

FREE LUNCH AT NOON

HORSES Black mare 15 yrs old wt 1000 Black mare 14 wt 1000 lbs CATTLE

Halfblood Brown Swiss cow 9 giving milk bred Oct 5

Durham Cow 7 giving milk Three quarter Brown Swiss cow

amp giving milk Durham Heifer 2 due Jan 30 Durham-Heifer 2 fat 2 Durham calves 2 Durham Calves 9 months old 1 Durham Calf 4 months old HOGS

i oland China Sow one year old 5 Spring Shoats HAY AND GRAIN ETC Quantity of Hay Stack of Rye Straw Corn Stalks 600 bu Sorted Yellow Dent Corn CO Fence Potts 70 f t Black Wahrat Lumber FARM TOOLS Land Roller YcouW 2 Horse Cultivator 1 Horse Cultivator |L F Michel Fanning Mill

600 lb Scales Feed Cooker Truck Wagon Osborne Mower 60 Tooth Drag Favorite Grain Drill Bean Poller Hay Rake Tank Header Grindstone Corn Sheller Corn Planter Crosscut Saw Grain Cradle Log Chain Platform Spring Buggy Road Cart Spring Buggy Grain Bags 21 Potato Crates Hay Knife Hay Rope Harpoon Fork Set Work Harness 2 Single Harnesses 2 Ladders Drmp Boards Barrel Chum Water Separator 10 Gal Milk Can Coal Stove And Many Other Articles Too

Numerous to Mention

Terms of Sale All sums of $10 and under cash over that amount one years time will be given on good bankable notes at 6 per cent

Lambert PERCY ELLIS Auctioned

Pmckney 14 Fowlerville 7

Continwed from ftrat page

Then Captain Hourbonrwiis called Ms men around him and scathingly deshylivered his opinion of the team whose mediocre playing was giving their opshyponents an easy vctory He exhorted fhetn to yet in the jrame and show Iowlerville the real simon-pure Pinck-ney brand of football After this ) enrt-to-heart tongue lashing came a t omplete reversal of form for the conshytesting elevens Pinckney secured the lgtal and the lMnrkney fighting spirit domineered the battle until the whistle thrieked the finish with two touchshydowns nnd goals to the credit of the rnti-muendnirnt warriors nnd i final wore of 11 to 7

The score does not tell the real story laquogtf the game ns all the breaks of luck verc in favor of the visitors At one Itntc iVickncy h-nl t-ikM iilt Iill and Mriroming the stubborn resistance 1 as steadily ga ltbull until only a few i bullbull( separated (he pigskin from goal bull he opposition growing weaker and vcsker when the whistle signalled the 1 nd of that quarter stopped proceed-bulllraquogt gave Fowlerville a very much de-ftred chance to rent and recuperate and plated the bull in safer territory for then The Fowlerville boys wrrr accomshypanied by a large number of enthosi lStic supporters who thronged the sde-

bull bullbullIfet and cheered their favorites ltereU|rhout the entire jrame Kven j bullvhen their team frJsjr weary and dis- j

^ ffceartened under Hnckneys repeated t-l -JlSlaUgftts the Fowlerville supporters vS^raquosielaquond skirted were untiring in their

w -ltrifofts for encouragement This loy-^ tIty was worthy of better results but vftet that first disastrous touchdown bull f

Vv traquolaquo nnckney team was transformed ^bullbullbulltfioinbend of mHd football players

bull lnttf a flatting writhing unleashed rjrcjfciie of veritable fury bucking the vi skirting the ends ineaking

tkc seeratagjy invulnerable bullf basic wStfV laquoraquod siaew for rain j

iffifm|tMi amp victory Anally reward- Leoisjeir -aespersee saons ^JHKfc4ampampmMttradere nd with

ience be-

j to the last was outclassed after the ( firlt| touchdown At one time with the ball in their own possession--the bitjirr team was forced back back ajrain and a^ain for larjre losses until

conipelled to ineffectually resort to the i forward pass There is the lesson of loyalty at lest to be learned from football jrames played here this voir ler visiting teiii has been accompanied by enthusshyiastic contingents of its home town supporters who came to help with their

ipiesence while their players were I buttling in the arena Why not folshylow this example in loyalty and when liickrtey visits other towns for an afshyternoon contest lets show- our appreshyciation of a really fine football team

by ffoinjr alonjr and showing the ltiut-sifi world how proud wc are of the 1 DJ V Pitickney team

Friday Nov 1 linckney ]i|ays a reinrn jrame at Fowlerville Inless there is a complete reversal of form raquoin either team Pincknev should win this jrame Hut they will hae to work for it as Fowlerville players are ( -Ic-mincd to win

Wedding The wedding anniversaries are

First cotton seroml paper third lenther fourth rruit and flowers fifth wooden sixth sugar seventh woolen eighth India rubber ninth willow tenth tin eleventh steel twelfth silk and linen thirteenth Ince fourteenth Ivory fifteenth crysshytal twentieth chisa twenty-fifth silver thirtieth pearl fortieth ruby fiftieth golden seventy-fifth diashymond

n ^ R B Itinerant dyer-by-the-day brings Mohimmed to the mountainmdashthe

Mohammed of the paint pots to the mountain of almost Immovable davenshyports and armchairs

The woman toucher-up may renshyovate with her magic dyes houseshyhold fnrnlshinss that cannot be dipped She has and needs no ofshyfice she simply Soelaquo from house to house office to office or to dubs theshyaters hallsmdashwherever in fact there is touching up to be donemdashcarrying with her a simple but efficient dyeing Service

Theres a iure to the business of freshening and brightening by the strokes of a brush says a woman who Is known as interior redecorator of her small town The work reshyquires nothing but an eye for color ami a certain skill with the brush And it supplies earthly necessities as wii as esthetic satisfaction

The plan is simply this The special dye intended for the purpose is applied to sofa carpet wall coveringsmdashanyshything about the house hall or office that needs recoiwringmdashwith an ordishynary paint brush scrub brush or on larpe surfaces a special kind of tank spray which mary be had from the manufacturers of the dye This colorshying process is much simpler than dyo-inir by dipping It is almost as easy as palntinj Thefdyer can do the rugs rUht on the floorwall coverings right 01 the wall

The dyer may also get the job of dyeing things othter than the unremov-aMe ones then_she will not use her special dyes suitable only for heavy textiles rugs hanfttigs couch ami chair coverings For dyeing by lipshyping she will -use the ordinary dyes with which the average person Is best acquainted tine ones for coloring blouses handkerchiefs and other delishycate articles The interior redecorate does well to carry both kinltN of dye and to understand the methods of usshying both

The successful dyer-by-the-day Is sure to make good financial returns She will probably have practically no competition for the line is ns yet little known She should advertise In the local papers for her customers and spread the news of her project to her friends by personal communication

The dyer will of course never ex poriment on the possessions of tier customers Cntil she becomes export sip must read even-thing she can find on the technical details of dyeing proc esses and she must follow directions Implidtly

(SJ l lt4 WMlirr Nlaquowspaplaquor Union)

ALL FOR HEALTH HEALTH FOR ALL

THATS THI8 CRUSADERS WAR CRY AS SHE FIGHTS FOR

BETTER HEALTH

Betty Awaits The Doctors Verdict

the Michigan Tuberculosis Associashytion Her parents are wiBe They know that 65 per cent of all children in the United States between Ave and fifteen are infected with the germ of tuberculosis

It is but a step from tuberculosis infection to the disease itself Herein lies the wisdom and necessity of frequent chest examinations by comshypetent physicians

Tuberculosis Christmas Seals supshyport Free Chest Clinics all over Miebi

gan Such clinics j are a ctitch in I time against the most insidious of c o u r s e s t h e plague which in the last ten years killed 31196 men women and chilshy

dren of Michigan Christmas Seals fight tuberculosis

Buy them Give Health Ready-Made Critic

Man must serve his time to every trade Save censure critics all are reidy mademdashByron

Doubter Not Wanted I will listen to any ones convicshy

tions but pray keep your doubts to yourselfmdashGoethe

iHiiiiniimiHMnmniiHiiiHuimmniliiii

Santa Makes Merry llilliliillll(iiitiliiliiilililllillllllllllllillll

Mamp

Heres Mary Elisabeth all ready to wage war against dirty hands falte and teeth enemies of Better Health Shes a Modern Health Crusader of the Michigan Tuberculosis Association

ftwiiiMm M_II

Santa Claus sometimes jokes with f( Iks big and little nnd he nearly always has some comic toys for the children This yerr ho will leave them fvnny spoon dolls made of paper picnic spoons and dressed in crepe paper clothes A clown doil with dangling less a Chinaman and a Puritan have had their pictures taken so that any one can make them

mdasho-

LUDENS MFNTHOL CfiJCH SKCPS

fV il f f

mdash which fights disease of all kinds She sleeps at least ten hours erery nifht with her windows open she likes milk and she eats only those oods that healthy happy children should have

Healthy children cant succumb to tubercntoej Making frail children strong is one 0 the duties of the Christmas Tuberculosis Seals Buy Christmas Seals and help Mary Elisshyabeth and other Crusaders fight tushyberculosis which strikes where toast expected

State of Michiirtn the Probate Court for the County of Livingston

t i session of sfiid Court held at the Probate Office in the City of Hov-ell in said County on the 24th dny ot October A D 1924

Present Hon Willis L Lyons Judge of Probate

In the matter of the estate of Perry Blunt Deceased

A M Roche having filed in said court his petition praying for license to sell the interest of said estate in certnin real estate therein described

It is ordrred thnt the 24th day of November A D 1924 at l e n oclock In the forenoon at said probate office be and is hereby appointed for hearshying said petition nnd that all persons interested in said estate appear before said court at said time and place to show cause why a license to sell the interest of said estate in said real esshytate should qot be granted

It is further ordered that public noshytice thereof be given by publication of a copy of this order for three sue-cMwdve weeks previous to said day of hearing in the Pinckney Dispatch a newspaper printed nnd circulated in said county

WILLIS L LYONS Judge of Probate

A true copy Celestla ParshaU

Register of Prtbats

f l

s

are in styles that are very late

Most of them fur-trimmed

Beautiful shades of reds and browns aswell as grays and blacks Suedine cloths velours and Bolivia

The prices are most reasonable

$1676 $2475 $3975 $5275 We should like to show you any time

JJ

MEN who come to us from Pinckshyney always have demanded style and quality

OUR answer has always Y pound Smdash-and even morlt a moderate price

been

amp bull

Just Now t 1 laquo

we are showing a fine line of all wool suits at

$25 $30 $35 $40 We will be pleased to show you

Mmikg m-

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OUR PRICES ON BEEF Are as follows

Round Steak 25c lb Loin and Porterhouse 28c Shoulder Roast 15c Rib Stew 8 to 10c

8 I

With every other food getting higher EAT MORE MEAT

Reason amp Reason mm

bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull bull

Full Line of Accessories and Genuine Ford Parts

Expert Repairmen Satisfaction Guaranteed

Full line of Oils and Greases Stop Lights Spot Lights Bulbs and Heaters

Special price on 30x3 1-2 Fabrics $10 for Tire and Tube while they last

R DAY BIRD Pinckney Ford Sales and Service

M i H i i m m m n M i H u i

Ciiicf Justice White am

Mr Justice Harlan chewed tobacco in the Supreme Court room and lived to a ripe old age and in full vigor at 76 and 78 yean respectively Chew Beech-Nut and remain strong and vigorous

Over2S0MiHkn Packages SoMf in laquo

Single Year

Childrens Ailments TIS0RDERS of the stomach and constipation are U the most common diseases of children To

correct them you will find nothing better than srlains Tablets One tablet at bed time will

do th$ work and will make your child bright and fcheeriiil the following morning Do not punish

jour Children by giving them castor oil Chamber-are better and more pleasant to take-

r him berl a irVs Tablets M- iVs H7-

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i

P i n c k n e y D i s p a t c h

Entered at the Postofficeat Finck-oey Mich araquo Second Claos Matter

LINCOLN E SI ITH PUBLISHER

Subscription $126 a Year la Advauc

Mr B r o w n ot N u r t h v i l l c m a n a g e r of t h i s d i s t r i c t l o r t he D e t r o i t Kdison C o t u p a u y a n d his a s s i s t a n t Mr Wi lk in son w e r e p l e a s a n t c a l l e r s a t t h e Disshyp a t c h office M o n d a y

T h e m a r r i a g e of Dr J D S i n g e r a n d Miss M a r g a r e t I r m i t both of B r i g h t o n w a s sulcinni cd at tin- home of Mr a n d Mrs G e o r g e W S m i t h of E a s t Cirand l i ive r s t r e e t tliii (W edshyn e s d a y ) a f t e r n o o n it J 00 o c lock Rev K K J ) u r k e e of tin- W M cl iurcl i officiatetl a n d uuly t he i j iunedi-LI11 r e l a t i v e s were prese j i t T h e y left on t he a f t e r n o o n t r a in for a w e d d i n g l o u r to I cnnsyU anni the Dr s old iionie - A r g u s

T h e F a r m i n g t o n t o w n s h i p boa rd h a v e a d o p t e d a r e s o l u t i o n t o s u b m i t the q u e s t i o n of l i gh t i ng G r a n d Rivet road f rom t h e W a y n e c o u n t y in te r see -thfh on the east to the N o s i t o w n s h i p

Mrs F r e d G r i e v e of A n n A r b o r a n d I l i u deg t i u w l s t T l u ^ e n f will he M r s Hiram S m i t h of H o w e l l we re Mipplied by the D e t r o i t Kdison Co if

LOCAL AND GENERAL

M r s Al ice P r i c e of D e t r o i t is visitshying M r s E H Bye r

Mrs K H B y e r v is i ted a t W a l k e r shysilk O n t a few d a s s l as t week

v i s i t o r s a t t h e h o m e of G VV T h u r s d a y

R e iso n f a v o r a b l e ac t ion is t a k e n by the vo te rs

I lvmoiUh Mail

F l o y d R e a s o n was in Howe l l Tues - j d a I TUBERCULOSIS CLINIC

D o n a l d Mgk-r of D e t r o i t spen t the j A ] u r m a n t n t t- t u b e r c u l o s i s cl inic week end with his p a r e n t s Dr and w i bdquo ]) ^ ^ | ( t t ) u ^ ^ o f t h M r s L i - S i g l e r e o u n t y n u r s e H o w e l l on S a t u r d a y

Mrs Rex S m i t h a n d Mrs C J i N ovember bullgt 19JI a n d t i i r rp a f t e r the C l i n t o n w e r e Arm A r b o r v is i tors tiiirff S a t u rday of each m o n t h Hourgt T h u r s d a y imi to -l-oo a m a n d 2 00 to Vltgtgt

i i bull ^ raquo I- l n- 1 be c o n d u c t e d bv L i v i n g s t o n 1 s o s e t t e r s b r ed in D e n m a r k and

i m p o r t e d on a c c o u n t of t h e i r line pedshyig rees a n d i n d i v i d u a l i t y w e r e t a k e n to t h e d o g r a n c h n e a r 1 u t te rson l ake this w e e k

M r and Mrs C l a u d e fteason and fami ly were Ann A r b o r v is i tors Sun-d a )

Mr a n d Mrs Wiil T i p l a d y a n d fam- ily of W e b s t e r were S u n d a y vis i tors a t t he h o m e of C l a r e n c e S t a c k a b l e j

P a t L a v e s a n d L e e Lavey were1

J a c k s o n vrs i tors S u n d a y

Mr a n d Mrs W 11 M a n n i n g and Mr a n d M r s R a l p h S c h r o d e r of Lai is-ing w e r e v is i to rs a t the h o m e of C S 1 l a r g e r T h u r s d a y

Miss P a u l i n e Reason s p e n t the week j end wi th A n n A r b o r r e l a t i ve s

lti sp l e of Hie d i s a g r e e a b l e sveather las t l r i d a a stiff cold ga le of ssindf b l o v i n g tlie a t t e n d a n c e at t he f o o t b a l l g a m e was good A l a r g e n u m b e r oi Fnwic rv i l l c s u p p o r t e r s w e r e p r e s e n t

gt 11 C a r r has been a s s i s t i ng R o b e r t J a c k e rec t a c o t t a g e at L a k e l a n d

j l o i i r d v Pub l i c H e a l t h S e r v i c e u n d e r the d i r e c t i o n of Dr L ] P i e rce of

j the Si a t e S a n a t o r i u m - - - i

P e a r l T h i m b l e s Ludi i s of high da-vs in Chin use

t h e d a i n t i e s t t h i m b l e s i iuag innb ie some of tliiin be ing c a r v e d out of

pioM-rtious p e a r l s and o r n a m e n t e d wi th j Viands of fine gold on w h i c h all nnin-I nee of q u a i n t imd f a n t a s t i c d e s i g n s Hre engrived

Ind i rec t S i g h t His VfltmdashIt s a s h a m e t h a t big

fat w o m a n hnd to t a k e t h e sea t dishyrec t ly rn front of you Y o u r e missshying the w h o l e s h o w Mr L i t t l e t o n mdash v o nor all of it S h e s r e a d i n g all the t i t l e s a loud mdashBuf fa lo E x p r e s s

C alder onn Busy Pen lt a h b V o t t rgt- r e | o t n - i ed S p a n i s h

hu ai 1 i - f a n d p o r t ltbull - bulllt i ude f u t i g -

l i l e W o l k e l I l e i-oe i- bull i i l l i n ^ h is

i i l e 111 p l a y s a n d 7 S I O I - i t i pluVS

for t h e i l i u r e l a H e e i t j o v r d t X t m o -

dinars pepulnr i tv

CHURCH NOTES A i i i imir is c i r c u l a t i n g a r o u n d town t h a t doe G e n t i l e cNpects to aga in con duc t a fruit s to re and ice c r e a m p a r shylor h e r e

G P L a m h e i d s o n will sell his pershysonal p m p e r t s at the f a rm l l i u r s d a v Nov J i b begiiii i Dg at 1lt) o c lock L u n c h at noon

Miss Rose L a v e y spen t las l Thur s shyd a y wi th Mr a n d Mrs C l a r e n c e S t a c k ab le

Dr H V Sigki svas i Ann A r b o r 1 u e s d a y

Mr a n d M r s R W Bird and chil d r e n spen t S u n d a y with W h i t m o r e L ke f r i ends

B o r n to Mr and Mrs F r e d R e a d of D e t r o i t Nov l o t h a d a u g h t e r

Mr a n d M r gt M Ni le a n d son ot J a c k s o n w e r e v is i tors at the P a t L a v e y h o m e last F r i d a v and S a tu rdav

L woo] buck I- v r a r s old Mr a n d Mrs 1 red B o w m a n visd-d ~ -ltbull j bull

I or t H u r o n r e l a t ives severa l d a v s last

C o m m u n i t y C o n g r e g a t i o n a l Church

II L M A V C L O I T P a s t o r

M o r n i n g W o r s h i p liPJo a in Su nda v School I 1 0 a in

N o r t h H a m b u r g

Suudav School J 0() p in

W o r s h i p 3d)0 p Mi

The Most Exquisite Taste can be Satisfied at Our

Ice Cream Parlors The Connor Ice Cream Co make special efforts to produce someshything newmdashsomething different in Ice Cream Flavors Just now they are specializing on

Cherry Ice Cream a most deled able frozen dainty with ^he ripened cherry crushed and mingled into a beautiful and satisfying congealed refreshment

Also Maple-Nut Ice Cream in which the purest Maple Juices flavor various Nut Meats blended and frozen for your approval

If you have not yet tried eitherof these new creations a pleasant surshyprise awaits you

BARRYS JO N Y A L DRUGS STORE

Cooking by Current

WANTS FOR SALE ETC

L KOH S A L K Brown m i re l o wt

a b o u t 1 1 Vi C r a d c Belg ian g e l d i n g fi wt about KioO R e g i s t e r e d finc-

i m p n c

PINCKNEY BAKERY ^ OUR BREAD SPECIALTIES

The ever growing demand for Blue Ribbon Bread Proves Its Popularity

Nice Sweet Raisin Bread YOUD Be Pleased With a Trial of Our Different Pastries

I Try Our Graham Bread and Sandwich Bread

G B b A N K E N Prop

week

S U C a r r A e l C a r p e n t e r and H a r r y Lee a r e enjoying 1 a h u n t i n g t r i p in v rn Mich igan

i V Yince a n d son r e t u r n e d to eir h o m e a t I i y r o n S u n d a y

Mri A l f r ed M o n k s is v is i t ing S t o c k -b r idge r e l a t i ves

MLsses Nel l ie G a r d n e r Drus i l l a a n d F l o r e n c e M u r p h y and L o r e n z o M u r p h y a t t e n d e d the foo tba l l g a m e a t A n n Ar shybor S a t u r d a y

M r a n d M r s L o u i s M o n k s a n d da ugh t e r M a r i e of J a c k s o n s p e n t S u n d a y wi th Miss L u c y H a r r i s

M r s K a t e S a l i s b u r y who has been v i s i t ing seve ra l w e e k s wi th h e r vSigler c o u s i n s w e n t to A n n A r b o r T h u r s d a y las t to visi t in t h e h o m e of J u d g e N e w -kirk fc AJLiil

Mr and Mrs S J Ashenbrenner and daughter of Detroit were visitors at the Fred Bowman home the first of the week

Miss Minnie Reason was a fioweU caller Tuesday

Mrs S H Carr Miss Ijiura Hofl and Mrs Robt Jack and Mrs Milo Kettier were inn Arbor visitors Thursday

Mr jnd Mrs Frank Jioycc of Stock-bridge were Sunday guests of Mr and Mrs Floyd Reason

Mr and Mrs Geo Barnes of St Johns spent several days last week with her sister Mrs Floyd Reason

Mr and Mrs J M Harris and famshyily spent Sunday with Mr and Mrs John White near Howell

Mr and Mrs Frank Kennedy and family of Detroit are visiting Mr and Mr Patrick Kennedy

W Uurn Dancer of Stockbridge transacted business in Pinckney Tuesshyday

The Pinckney fire department WHS called to the Frank Barton farm two miles west of Anderson Monday aftershynoon A Are in a nearby marsh wa spreading so rapidly in the hifh wind er Two gangs of men threshing and putting up sifo corn in the neighborshyhood turned ia and by hard work

off the blase before it reached Jkrton buiidtifs

C i R A I l l O N O L A sVioo i n s t r u m e n t with lti r e c o r d s Will sell for $1000 I n q u i r e D i spa tch office

F O R HI NT The R u d o l p h I azalo f a r m one mile nor th of A n d e r s o n

( i O O D K A T l N C i Or Inn

T U M I S for s a l e L C R o g e r s

1

CIDER APPLES for sale William Doyle

RabCs Sulkey FOR SALEMrs Roy Hannctt

Thoroughbred Hereford bull and 0 I C boar for sale Robert Kelley

House for sale or rent Inquire J C Pinkie DOLL l l TIIK OLD H U S - A n d

make it look as if it had some pep David Jones automobile finishing

CASH PAIDmdashFor false teeth gold i crowns and bridges old magnet points and old gold Mail tn Hoke Smelting and Refining Co Otsego Mich Let us hear from you

FOR SALEmdashTo reduce stock will sell a few Silver Canipine hens cheap

Ben E White FOR SERVICEmdashPoland China boar

(W K Livingston strain) Paul Fohcy

WILL CALLmdashWednesday of every week for junk of all kinds Rags rubbers papers magasines metal etc Notify Dispatch office Also pay highest prices for second hand furnishyture

H Storey Phone 97M Dexter MONEY TO LOANmdashOn improved

farms at 6 per cent For particushylars write Brown Cress amp Company First National Bank Building Ann Arbor Michigan

FOR SALEmdashA quantity of hay and cum John R Marthv

FLUFF RUGSmdashIf you have any carshypet to make into rugsmdashdrop us a card We famish border free You will like our work and our prices Pinekney Fluff Rug Co Pmckaey Mich

FOR SERVICEmdashShorthorn Durham Bull elifJblt for registry

Ed Spoan JUffTICft OF T M PEACB

Cooking without fire smoke or aslns without fui c or gases cooking with a steady unchanging heat cooking at no greater bother than the snapping of a switchmdashthat is electric cooking

The electric range now so widely used has brought great comfort into the kitchen it has done away with the troubles the watchfulness the anxieties of the old time cookshying and has substituted a sure cleanly and comparatively effortless method of preparing food for the table

XHE DETROIT EDISON COMPANY

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COAL TO MY CUSTOMERS bull c

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Watch for it

Quality the best and priced Right

C V V A N WINKLE

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w5 7-THE PINCKNEY DISPATCH

m

HMITI STATE NEWS IN BRIEF

S

Coolidge Puts Up Presidents Cup

WASHINGTON mdash President Coolidge has taken a long Step toward arousing greatshye r interest in athlet ics in the

army and the navy and in the counshytry general ly by present ing to athshyletic representa t ives of the army and of t h e scout ing fUet a challenge cup for football between service teams of the two b rand ie s

Indicat ion a re that as a result of this one of the great annual athlet ic events of the future will center about the Coolidge cup or as it will be offishycially called the Pres ident s ( up

T h e Pres ident summoned athlet ic representa t ives of the army and the navy to the Whi te House He then formally turned over to them a cup to be contested for every year by two football teams chosen from officers and enlisted men of the two forces

T h e first contest for the cup was set for November Uigt at Griffith s tadium Each team will be composed of one officer and ten enlisted men

Pres ident Coolidge himself will bulltart the game and there is every inshydication that it will be a social and athletic event rivaling the contest between West Point and Annapolis

Maj Paul Baade infantry represhysen t ing the array from Fort Benning and Lieut Com Hamil ton V Bryan scouting fleet athlet ic officer together with Coxswain Claude A Ezell and

Staff Sergt Har ry O Troupe represhysent ing the enlisted men of the army nnd the fleet received the cup It ia of generous proport ions embossed Ua blue and gold and su rmounted by the American eagle

In connection with the presenta t ion the Pres ident made this s t a tement

As President of the United Sta tes of America in the interest of good clean Ileal thy recreat ion for the peoshyple of the ent i re country and to enshycourage and s t imula te athlet ics among the enlisted men of the servshyices I offer this cup to be known as the Presid nt s cup for contest beshytween footkil l teams of the army and navy from units or subdivisions of forces urn -r such te rms as the secshyre tary of war and the secretary of navy may de t e rmine provided howshyever tha t the teams shall be coin posed of enlisted men and officers in about the same proportion as a re offishycers and enlisted men in the services

I desire to mention the grea t beneshyfits to mind and body that result from part icipat ion in good clean whole some sport The people of the United S ta tes have a lways been devoted to manly contests and I know of no betshyter way to give to them a t rue examshyple of sport in its best form than to offer such a cup as this for a trophy to be contested for by the army and the navy

Six New Reclamation Projects Approved

SIX new Western reclamation projshyects embracing more than 400-000 acres have been approved as feasible from an engineering

economic agricul tural and land develshyopment s tandpoint by investigating commit tees whose reports are made public by the Interior depar tment

Studies of the projects were conshyducted by professors of agr icul tural colleges In s ta tes In which they a re located s t a te agricultural officials and bankers In their development it Is recommended tha t policies and methshyods proposed by the committee of speshycial advisors of reclamation be folshylowed T h e projects

VaJe project Oregon 28305 acres msifily sage brush with an est imated gross annual crop re turn after irrigashytion of $35 an acre Ninety per cent of the land will require subdivision and se t t lement and will provide farms for 2fi0 to 300 set t lers

Baker project Oregon Irr igable land es t imated at 26031 acres which Should yield a gross annual re turn of between $30no t6 $3750 per acre The value of the raw land Is fixed at between $250 to $5 an acre

Kittitas project Washington W38U

acres of Irrigable land Including 48-402 acres of agricultural n a t u r e 21-925 of pas ture and 20071 of waste land It is recommended that farm units should not he less than laquoS0 acres on the best grade soil nnd about 1150 acres on the poorer grades in order to y M d an income for a family The bet ter land shoulrf re turn a gross anshynual income of from $10 to $55 an acre after the development

Uwyhee project lt ireyon 5SS59 acres of first-class land well adapted to produce satisfactory yield of crops while there is raquo15140 acres of second class lund that cannot produce more than about 75 per cent of the yield of the first-class land A good farm with a variety of [gtrod4rts ought to produce as much as $00 an acre annual ly

Salt Lake basin project U t a h 110000 acres will be directly beneshyfited and there a re excellent marke t ing and t ranspor t ing facilities Mixed crops should yield from $50 to $80 per acre u year The lands to be Irrigatshyed a re already colonized and settled on small farms

Spanish Springs project N e v a d a Including 39H50 acres of high-grade land adap tab le to a wide variety of crops

Airplane vs the Battleship in Congress

REGAKDLRSS of the outcome of

the investigation now being made by the general board of the navy under Instructions by

the secre tary and at the instigation of the Pres ident a showdown light in the old airplane-bat t leship controvershysy looms when congress reopens in December

Whatever the findings of the hoard and it is admit ted on all sides that they must be predicated on the basis tha t the bat t leship is still the main reliance in sen power a i r en thus ias t s a re laying plans for a drive on conshygress to get full recognition of the increaslnc importance of aviation In the national defense with a sepa ra t e air force as their final objective

Hear tened by President Coolidges recent u t te rances In which he voiced his belief in the possibility of the airshyp lane superseding the surface fighting ship they propose to demand that an impart ia l tr ibunal hear their case and tha t the aerial fighting forces be placed In a position to be developed free from the obstruct ionis ts in the mil i tary services

On the other hand naval officers are gravely concerned over the recent developments realizing the popular appeal of the aviation propaganda with Its promise of cheap and effecshytive nat ional preparedness They fear that as Intimated by the Presi dent no provision will be made fo modernizinc the older bat t leships for proper maintenance of the fleet and for construction unless the controvershysy over the relative meri ts of aircraft nnd bat t leships Is finally and definiteshyly settled

T h e round-the-world flight by the army flyers spectacular and epochal ns it was did not in the opinion of the majority of exper ts war ran t the conclusions drawn in some quar te rs

The one outs tanding lesson of the achievement they say was that it demonst ra ted conclusively the dependshyence of aircraft on surface ships in long-distance work It is pointed out tha t while the flyers were covering their twenty-odd thousand miles apshyproximately 87000 miles of s teaming was done hy United S ta t e s naval vesshysels in helping to put the flight across

Flag With Only 40 Stars Causes Stir

GEN FRANK T HTNES direcshy

tor of the veterans bureau Ims begun an Investigation of the origin nnd history of the

flag with only 40 stars which was disshyplayed by Mrs Lillian R Sire before de legates of the New York Sta te Fedshyera t ion of Womens Clubs in New York

So far a s he has been aide to learn only one of the freak flags ever has appeared in the ve terans bureau service I t was shipped from Perry-rille Md along with five other flags FelaVnary 7 1922 and w a s received at Hospital No 49 Philadelphia Februshya r y 16 1raquo22 At tha t t ime Perryvll ie w a s a United S t a t e s public hea l th bull bull t r i c e depot

Cteseral H lnes deplored published Assertions the bureau had contracted l o r 800000 cheap shoddy flags for the coffins of dead ve te rans

8 O B M tUne ago according to the dishyrector compUUnt was made tha t t h e eofta of s soldier who died in Hosshypital NO 48 W t t covered with a flag SafUtt on ly 4 0 bull H e immediately

officer in chart whether the

regarding flags a M SOS osssptttef with and whether

- - bullbull bull bull - bull

ltrf the

the flag in question had been Inshyspected

The answer to both quest ions was in the affirmative The oflieer also stated according to the director tha t all o ther Macs in stock had been found to be regulat ion

A brother of Har ry H Pench the veteran whose coffin was covered with the improperly made flag hart reported the m a t t e r to the bureau It was the flag which covered Benchs coffin that Mrs Sire showed the deleshygates

T h e New York City Federa t ion of Women s Clubs has appointed a comshymittee consisting of Mrs Belle de Rivera honorary p re s iden t Mrs Lilshylian R Sire who brought the m a t t e r to public a t tent ion nnd who is presishydent of the Womens National Demoshycra t ic club nnd Mrs William Albert Lewis

Char les A Bench bro ther of Har ry H Bench a soldier who served his country 20 years and died in the Vetshyerans hospital at Phi ladelphia gave Mrs Sire a cheap 40-star flag which had been draped about the coffla when it reached the family home in Readshying Pa Mr Bench replaced it with a flag he taodght more suitable

SaginawmdashJ W Ferdney former m e m b e r of congress from the eighth distr ict baa taken in his annua l deer hunt ing t r ip in Luce county this year He is 71 yea r s old

Owosso mdash Mason Ri lenberry 72 yea r s old a farmer living near Banshycroft was found dead in his barn A physician said that he evidently had suffered a hear t a t tack while loading a wagon

SturgismdashCity Attorney Paul Wal t broke his arm in an a t t emp t to c rank his automobile A few mnu tes la te r his mother- in law Mrs El izabeth Cole t r ied to open a heavy ga te at her husshyband s farm and the ga te fell on tier f rac tur ing her hip

FlintmdashAfter going to a local newsshypaper office to announce that he would main ta in his record of voting for evshyery Pres iden t since Lincoln Theodore V Canright 94 years old fell from his porch while r e tu rn ing to his home and was seriously injured

OwossomdashJohn McAvoy 52 years old a p rominen t New Haven Townshyship lar jner waa found dead in the wa te r t ank on his farm It is beshylieved that he sat down on the edge of the tank to lest and suffered a s t roke falling irto the tank and drowning

Detroi t Majorities of nearly 10 to 1 were rolled up by the Republ ican s t a t e and county t ickets in Wayne county according to complete reshytu rns In pract ical ly every case the con tes t s were decided upon s t ra igh t par ty l ines with but sl ight fluctuashyt ions in the voe

Por t HuronmdashMiss Lau ra Copeland of Boston is in Port Huron to car ry on the work of the Rotary clubs cripshypled chi ldren s clinic She will carry out the recommendat ions of the recent clinic and be of service to local medishycal men also teaching pa ren t s proper mas sage methods in the care of cripshypled children

RomeomdashTwo I ta l ians demanding repr i sa l s for wounds one suffered tn a domest ic feud were killed here as they s tormed the home of Joseph Pill-eri to Identification of one of the men as Patsy Prris a former enemy of Pi l ler l to was t s t ab i l shed soon after the shooting Pillerito said he had never seen the third man before

Det ro i tmdashResumpt ion of activity at the Monnier road studio of the Deshytroit Motion P ic ture company within a few weeks has been announced folshylowing the annual meet ing of stockshyholders It was voted to assume a mor tgage of $150000 on the proper ty l iquidate ou ts tand ing obl igat ions and r e sume the production of pic tures

Grand RapidsmdashErect ion of a memorshyial to the Grand Rapids service men of the Civil Spanish-American and world wars now rests upon the city commission a s the result of the comshypletion of a general design by a civilshyian commit tee appointed by former Mayor Jul ius Tisch a year ago The project it is es t imated will cost $300000

Detroi tmdashForeign capital is pouring into Germany due to the excessively high rates of in teres t at which money-Is loaned and Jackie Coogan created as much a t ten t ion in Berlin as the Zeppelin ZR-3 These observat ions along with m a n o thers were brought back to Detroit fcy C Leidich who reshyturned a few days ago from his 73rd t r ip abroad in the past 30 years

Grand RapidsmdashThe Commercial Savings bank and the People s Savshyings bank has b ten merged with the Kent S ta te bank in the largest t ransshyact ion in Grand Rapids banking hisshytory The deal involved $6000000 asse t s Stockholders of the Comshymercial and People s banks gave thei r consent at special meet ings after the deal had won the sanct ion of the s ta te banking i epa r tmen t

Marsha l lmdashEvery precinct in Batt le Creek voted in favor or eas te rn standshyard t ime Marshall had been holding off apparen t ly to see what action Bat t le Creek would take A great many Marshall people work in Battle Creek and the result ing inconvenience of the two towns were using different t ime probably would be sufficient to influence Marshal l s decision it was believed This city it is believed will r emain on eas te rn s t anda rd t ime the year around

LAnsemdashMrs Cora Reynolds Andershyson of LAnse has been elected Repshyre sen ta t ive of t i e Iron dis t r ic t in the S ta t e House )f Represen ta t ives She ran on the Republican t icket wi thout Democrat ic opposition and will reshyplace Rep Pat r ick OBrien ve te ran Upper Pen insuK legislator wbo reshyt i red following the special session of 1923 Mrs Anderson is the first woman to become a member of the House and the second to become a m e m b e r of the legislature

KalamazoomdashRais ing of $150000 for the expansion of the Bronson Methoshydist Hospi ta l in the next three yea rs has been announced here The fund was obtained through subscr ip t ions of $100000 fulfilling the condi t ions imshyposed in t en ta t ive gifts of 125000 each by Mrs Dorothy Peck Clark of Kalamazoo and Mr and Mrs W M Earnart of Ann Arbor The larger proportion of the fund was obtained ia Methodist congregations throughout the state The proposed expansion would give the hospital almost double its capaci ty and equipment

HillsdalemdashO C Dickinson of this ci ty an employe of the New York Censhyt ra l ra i l road since 1882 local t icket agen t for the last 28 years has reshytired after i2 years In the company s employ

S turg ismdashAust in McDonald awaitshying t ranspor ta t ion to J a c k s o n prison for a t e r m of oae to 15 y e a r s for carshyry ing concealed weapons dug a hole th rough the brick walls of the county jail a t Centervil le and escaped

Berk leymdashFrank Wilcox 40 yea r s old w a s c rushed to dea th benea th his house here when a gus t of wind blew it from jacks on which it was s tanding Wilcox who was laying a foundation had jus t crawled under the bouse when it fell

MonroemdashEdward Kitchin Jr 9 y e a r s old shot and killed himself while playing with his fa ther s reshyvolver The bullet en te red the boys left eye and caused ins tan t death The Ki tchins live on a farm six miles west of Monroe

Detroi tmdashMichigan Democracy lost her sole represen ta t ive in Congress in the Republican landsl ide tha t swept the s ta te Rober t H Clancy of Deshytroit r epresen t ing the F i r s t District was badly defeat t d by his Republican opponent John B Sosnowski

Lans ingmdashFores t fires which are preva len t in the nor the rn pa r t of the s t a t e a re general ly under control and confined to s lashings and cut-over land according to repor ts received by John Baird s ta te conserva t ion comshymiss ioner from deputy fire wardens

E s c a n a b a - Irving Micheau 15 years old of Brampton had his r ight hand mut i l a ted and shot in his neck and r ight ear the result of the accidenta l d ischarge of his shotgun Micheau picking the gun up n o r r the ground placed his hand over the end of the ba r r e l

Detroi tmdashAlbert Majewski Ham-t ramck was ar res ted by the police of tha t city on a charge of mans laugh te r following the death of a 10-year-old boy who is s a i l to have fallen from the running board of Majewski s autoshymobile when the la t ter s t a r t ed the mashychine in an effort to shake the boy off

AlbionmdashThe principal fea ture of the Albion election was the naming of a woman for a municipal office for the first t ime in the his tory of the city Mrs Kate Bromeling who has carr ied on a real es ta te and insurance business since the dea th of her husshyband four yea r j ago was named just ice of the peace

LansingmdashMajor i t ies which a re beshylieved to have finally crushed in Michigan any a t tempt to impose an income tax upen the public and furshyther a t t e m p t s o abolish parochial schools were rolled up in the s ta te election The chool a m e n d m e n t was bea ten 2 to 1 while the income tax proposal was beaten near ly 5 to 1

DetroitmdashConvicted solely on his finshyger-prints Onnie Howard 27 was sen tenced to se rve one to five yea r s in Jackson prison for burglary Lieutenshyant Charles Carmody head of the poshylice identification bureau produced at the t r ial pr ints found at the scene of the cr ime and pointed out s t r ik ing l ikenesses in them to the finger-prints of Howard

Grand Rapius mdashDorothy Plucker 2-year-old daughter of Mr and Mrs Clifshyford Plucker was seriously Injured when struck near her home by an aushytomobile in charge of Ted Rice of Howard City The shock of the accishydent revived a nervous trouble in Rice and he was taken to a hospi tal where physicians say he has little chance for recovery

LansingmdashMichigan has elected a 1925 Legis la ture that is solidly Re publican In 1923 the Democra t s had fivemembers i n t h e House and none in the Sena te Four of Lhose five ran for re-election and according to offishycial r e tu rns they have all been de feated The fifth Democrat Dr De-nias Dawe of Monroe did not run for renomna t ion and his place has also been taken by a Republican

Grand RapidsmdashJohn Ormand 52 years old was killed when he was s t ruck by a Fere A^aiquette passenger t rain at F rank l in s crossing Orraond was walking mine from work and is said to have^ t epped around the crossshying ga tes and walked direct ly into the path of the train A 3ister Rose Ormond was at the cross ing when the accident occurred but did not reshyalize the victim was he r b ro the r unshytil he was identified an hour la ter

De t ro i tmdashPurchase of 85 ac res and condemnat ion -jf 11 and one-half more to c o m p l e x the recrea t ion deshypa r tmen t s summer camp on Eular lake near Howell has been ordered by the Detroit common council Alshythough 40 acres of the first t r ac t is half a mile from the l ake it was s ta ted tha t the remain ing 45 ac res could not be bought for less than $20-000 the price to be paid for the whole 85 When the two proper t i es a re acshyquired the a m o will su r round the lake

Lans ingmdashPres iden t Calvin Coolidge carr ied Michigan by a major i ty of 600-000 votes over the combined tota ls of his two r ivals a sweep that has not even been approached in the s t a t e s political h is tory according to complete r e tu rns He polled near ly 80 per cent of the total vote compared with 72 per cent of the total vote given Hardshying In 1920 Davis received only about 13 per cent of the to ta l The LaFol-lette third party failed to attract more than 9 per cent of the Michigaa vote Oroesbeck and Couxens were more than W0000 ahead of their rivals

HOW THE STATES CAST VOTE FOR PRESIDENT

U gt

S t a t e f I O Q

o u a -J

12mdashAlabama 3mdashArizona 9 A r k a n s a s

13mdashCalifornia 6mdashColorado 7mdashConnect icut 3mdashDelaware 6- -F lor ida

14mdashGeorgia 4mdashIdaho

29mdashIllinois 15mdashIndiana 13mdashIowa 10mdashKansas 13mdashKentucky 10mdashLouisiana

6mdashMaine 8mdashMaryland

18mdashMassachuse t t s 15mdashMichigan 12mdashMinnesota 10mdashMississippi 18mdashMissouri 4mdashMontana 8mdashNebraska 3mdashNevada 4mdashNew H a m p s h i r e

14mdashNew J e r s e y 3mdashNew Mexico

45mdashNew York 12mdashNorth Carol ina

5mdashNorth Dakota 24mdashOhio 10mdashOklahoma

5mdashOregon 38mdashPennsylvania

5mdashRhode Island 9mdashSouth Carolina 6mdashSouth Dakota

12mdashTennessee 20mdashTexas

4mdashUtah 4mdashVermont

12mdashVirginia 7mdashWashington

8mdashWest Virginia 13mdashWisconsin

3mdashWyoming

12

9 13 6 7 3

4 29 15 13 10 13

6 S

18 15 12

18 4 8 o ltJ

4 14 3

45

5 24

5 38

6 14

10

10

12

10

4

4

7 8

12 20

12

Wouldnt Have Autoist Think He Was Curious

A motorcar apparent ly afflicted with dropsy or some such malady s topped in front of t h e res idence of Gap Johnson of Rumpus Ridge After examining the machine s upper shell the drfver seized cer ta in tools and reshyclining on his back scuffed himself under the car and began thumping on Its s tomach Mr Johnson who had

| been rest ing for some t ime by hanging

J onto his own fence with his elbows

I hooked over the top rail kept silent

j for a short season and then inqu i red

I dont reckon you re aiming to go

to Fiddle Creek a t t e r you get that

I t h e r e contrapt ion fixed

No replied the gent under the car

j Aw to Slippery Slap m e b b y T i No I H m To Sandy Mush t h e n

No Well dont get the idy t h a t I keer

j2 whur the hmdash1 youre going t o mdash Kansas City Star

631 Tota ls 382 136 13 Necessa ry to elect 266

HIGHLIGHTS FROM ELECTION RETURNS

Wash ing tonmdashWil l i am E Borah of j Idaho will be the Republ ican leader Of the s ena t e in the next congress i

St Paul MinnmdashMagnus Johnson Minnesota s widely known dir t farmshye r sena tor was defeated for re-elecshytion by Thomas D Schall Republican

New YorkmdashBy running near ly a million votes ahead of his t icket Alshyfred E Smi th Democra t defeated Colonel Roosevel t for the office of governor of t h e Empi re s ta te

Sena tor F r a n c i s E War ren Repubshyl ican 80 and father-in-law of General John J Pe r sh ing has been re-elected to the sena te He has a l ready served the re a quar te r of a century

Wil l iam Allen Whi te Independent for governor of Kansas who camshypaigned on but one ou t s t and ing issue opposit ion to the Ku Klux Klan was snowed under by a klan-indorsed canshydida te

Atlas TRACM MARK

The Atlas Speaker makes audible the impulses of the silent radio receivshying set The tones of Atlas Radio Reshyproduction whether of music or voice are clear true to the original and adjustshyable for volume

For literature send your name to the

manufacturer

Multiple Electric Products Co IDC

371 OffltUnStrlaquot Newark New Jersey

Guarantee A T L A S Products i

Two women were elected governors of s ta tes for the first t ime in his tory The new governors are Mrs Wil l iam

A Ferguson in Texas and Mrs Nellie G Ross in Wyoming Both a re Demshyocra t s

Des Moines IamdashComplete check of unofficial r e t u r n s in the senator ia l j contes t in Iowa showed tha t Sena tor

Smi th W Brookhar t had a major i ty of less than 1200 over his Democrat ic opponent Daniel F Steck j

| ChicagomdashThe first Negro ever j elected to a municipal judgeship roll-

ed into office on the Republican land- si Me Albert B George 51 a lawyer j

defeated his Democra t ic opponent by i a majori ty of be tween 65000 and 70-

000 votes

New YorkmdashTabula t ion of the popu- lar vote for p res iden t of the United I S t a t e s ind ica tes tha t P res iden t Cool- I idge has a c lear lead of more than 7500000 over John Davis The tabu- | la t ion shows tha t the LaFol le t te- ] W h e e l e r t icke t polled near ly 4500000 gt votes J

Lexington KymdashVirgil M Chap- man Lexington and Pa r i s Democrat e lected wi thou t opposition represent - j a t ive from th i s the seventh H e n r y Clays old dis t r ic t to congress will ]

be t he younges t member of e i the r i house of the new congress H e was born March 15 1895 J

Wash ing tonmdashUnless official tabula-lat ion of votes upsets the resu l t s he re is the complexion of the new Congress S e n a t e Republ icans 54 Democra t s 40 Farmer-Labor 1 v cancy 1 (Connec t icu t ) House Reshypublicans 246 Democrats 184 Fanner-Labor 3 Socialists 2 At adshyjournment of CongreM In June there ware In the Senate 51 Republicans 48 Democrats and 2 Fanner-Labor itea and in the House 226 Republishycan 207 Democrat 1 Socialist 1 Fannor-Labortta aad 1 Independent

Pertnantnt roods are a good

inlaquolaquotmlaquont ^ X ^ l f k V f mdashnot an txfxnu

America Must Have More Paved Highways

Almost every section of the United States is conshyfronted by a traffic probshylem

Month by month this problem is becoming more and more serious

Hundreds of cars pass a given point every hour on many of our state and county roads Down-town city streets are jammed with traffic

Think toohow narrow many of our read are and how comshyparatively lew paved highways there are in proporticp to the bullreadily increasing number oicara

If the motor vehicle is to can-tinne giving the bullconomictarvkt of which it is capable we most have more Conotta highways and widen tboat near large canshyters of population

Every drJsen should discus highway needs of hiaconununitf with his local aotboridtm

Your highway officials will do their part if given your support

Wny postpone meeting this pressing need

An early start nteassaarlt relief

PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION

111 West Wi

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W N Ubdquo DITAOIT NO

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f r it^Jfa pound$pound$gt -1 J aJL-V gt^V A ltv^

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THE PINCKNEY DISPATCH

V

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MCKIE THE PRINTERS DEVIL By Chtrtea Sughroe

a

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WHATS THE USE By L F Van Zelm He Went Prepared AJHAT TELIX- IWAGNES T h e ftEST OP | TKE C U 5 T O M E laquo 9 A 2 e T H I N K I N G

^BOUT H I M

HE M U S T

BE A C H E A P

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S O M E T H I N G T H E M A T T E L ^ I T M

HICgt HAirs

- f H E N E X T T I M E T E L I

W E M T TOC A HAt2 C u T

BUT

JUltST SJAHT A

H M c t f T WW ^ u

D Events in the Lives of Little Men D Along the Concrete DO

HOME WANTED FOR A BABY MCLL ENOUGHS fco W C H j

MM TlRtO OF LW1N6 W

TUKTLft ^ H e l T W 0 0 6 H T

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By frac34 PERCYt CROSBY

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ncem Uvingrtoo Comity Public Health Service will

rflnfeft lht a i l a t l Cferina Seed Sale as usual this yew Watch spac each week The penny Christshymas Health Swrf aids in promoting the health of the children of Livingston County

- i j

44

THE PMCMNEY DISPATCH bull39c

1 mm) mumming MAKING 6O0D IN A SMALL TOWN

Reml- Stories About Reml Girls mdash

amppound

m

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By MRS HARLAND H ALLEN

DYEING FOR YOUR FRIENDS

SETTIN6 THUMfP ONTUKRHHWIS

F R r E C H E S T CLIN1C8 KCEP TUBERCULOSIS INFECTION

UNDER CONTROL

Baby Betty is just one of the many hundred children who each year arc brought to the Free Chest Clinics ei

^A I ff

flwrsday November 20th Sale Begins at 10 oclock Sharp

FREE LUNCH AT NOON

HORSES Black mare 15 yrs old wt 1000 Black mare 14 wt 1000 lbs CATTLE

Halfblood Brown Swiss cow 9 giving milk bred Oct 5

Durham Cow 7 giving milk Three quarter Brown Swiss cow

amp giving milk Durham Heifer 2 due Jan 30 Durham-Heifer 2 fat 2 Durham calves 2 Durham Calves 9 months old 1 Durham Calf 4 months old HOGS

i oland China Sow one year old 5 Spring Shoats HAY AND GRAIN ETC Quantity of Hay Stack of Rye Straw Corn Stalks 600 bu Sorted Yellow Dent Corn CO Fence Potts 70 f t Black Wahrat Lumber FARM TOOLS Land Roller YcouW 2 Horse Cultivator 1 Horse Cultivator |L F Michel Fanning Mill

600 lb Scales Feed Cooker Truck Wagon Osborne Mower 60 Tooth Drag Favorite Grain Drill Bean Poller Hay Rake Tank Header Grindstone Corn Sheller Corn Planter Crosscut Saw Grain Cradle Log Chain Platform Spring Buggy Road Cart Spring Buggy Grain Bags 21 Potato Crates Hay Knife Hay Rope Harpoon Fork Set Work Harness 2 Single Harnesses 2 Ladders Drmp Boards Barrel Chum Water Separator 10 Gal Milk Can Coal Stove And Many Other Articles Too

Numerous to Mention

Terms of Sale All sums of $10 and under cash over that amount one years time will be given on good bankable notes at 6 per cent

Lambert PERCY ELLIS Auctioned

Pmckney 14 Fowlerville 7

Continwed from ftrat page

Then Captain Hourbonrwiis called Ms men around him and scathingly deshylivered his opinion of the team whose mediocre playing was giving their opshyponents an easy vctory He exhorted fhetn to yet in the jrame and show Iowlerville the real simon-pure Pinck-ney brand of football After this ) enrt-to-heart tongue lashing came a t omplete reversal of form for the conshytesting elevens Pinckney secured the lgtal and the lMnrkney fighting spirit domineered the battle until the whistle thrieked the finish with two touchshydowns nnd goals to the credit of the rnti-muendnirnt warriors nnd i final wore of 11 to 7

The score does not tell the real story laquogtf the game ns all the breaks of luck verc in favor of the visitors At one Itntc iVickncy h-nl t-ikM iilt Iill and Mriroming the stubborn resistance 1 as steadily ga ltbull until only a few i bullbull( separated (he pigskin from goal bull he opposition growing weaker and vcsker when the whistle signalled the 1 nd of that quarter stopped proceed-bulllraquogt gave Fowlerville a very much de-ftred chance to rent and recuperate and plated the bull in safer territory for then The Fowlerville boys wrrr accomshypanied by a large number of enthosi lStic supporters who thronged the sde-

bull bullbullIfet and cheered their favorites ltereU|rhout the entire jrame Kven j bullvhen their team frJsjr weary and dis- j

^ ffceartened under Hnckneys repeated t-l -JlSlaUgftts the Fowlerville supporters vS^raquosielaquond skirted were untiring in their

w -ltrifofts for encouragement This loy-^ tIty was worthy of better results but vftet that first disastrous touchdown bull f

Vv traquolaquo nnckney team was transformed ^bullbullbulltfioinbend of mHd football players

bull lnttf a flatting writhing unleashed rjrcjfciie of veritable fury bucking the vi skirting the ends ineaking

tkc seeratagjy invulnerable bullf basic wStfV laquoraquod siaew for rain j

iffifm|tMi amp victory Anally reward- Leoisjeir -aespersee saons ^JHKfc4ampampmMttradere nd with

ience be-

j to the last was outclassed after the ( firlt| touchdown At one time with the ball in their own possession--the bitjirr team was forced back back ajrain and a^ain for larjre losses until

conipelled to ineffectually resort to the i forward pass There is the lesson of loyalty at lest to be learned from football jrames played here this voir ler visiting teiii has been accompanied by enthusshyiastic contingents of its home town supporters who came to help with their

ipiesence while their players were I buttling in the arena Why not folshylow this example in loyalty and when liickrtey visits other towns for an afshyternoon contest lets show- our appreshyciation of a really fine football team

by ffoinjr alonjr and showing the ltiut-sifi world how proud wc are of the 1 DJ V Pitickney team

Friday Nov 1 linckney ]i|ays a reinrn jrame at Fowlerville Inless there is a complete reversal of form raquoin either team Pincknev should win this jrame Hut they will hae to work for it as Fowlerville players are ( -Ic-mincd to win

Wedding The wedding anniversaries are

First cotton seroml paper third lenther fourth rruit and flowers fifth wooden sixth sugar seventh woolen eighth India rubber ninth willow tenth tin eleventh steel twelfth silk and linen thirteenth Ince fourteenth Ivory fifteenth crysshytal twentieth chisa twenty-fifth silver thirtieth pearl fortieth ruby fiftieth golden seventy-fifth diashymond

n ^ R B Itinerant dyer-by-the-day brings Mohimmed to the mountainmdashthe

Mohammed of the paint pots to the mountain of almost Immovable davenshyports and armchairs

The woman toucher-up may renshyovate with her magic dyes houseshyhold fnrnlshinss that cannot be dipped She has and needs no ofshyfice she simply Soelaquo from house to house office to office or to dubs theshyaters hallsmdashwherever in fact there is touching up to be donemdashcarrying with her a simple but efficient dyeing Service

Theres a iure to the business of freshening and brightening by the strokes of a brush says a woman who Is known as interior redecorator of her small town The work reshyquires nothing but an eye for color ami a certain skill with the brush And it supplies earthly necessities as wii as esthetic satisfaction

The plan is simply this The special dye intended for the purpose is applied to sofa carpet wall coveringsmdashanyshything about the house hall or office that needs recoiwringmdashwith an ordishynary paint brush scrub brush or on larpe surfaces a special kind of tank spray which mary be had from the manufacturers of the dye This colorshying process is much simpler than dyo-inir by dipping It is almost as easy as palntinj Thefdyer can do the rugs rUht on the floorwall coverings right 01 the wall

The dyer may also get the job of dyeing things othter than the unremov-aMe ones then_she will not use her special dyes suitable only for heavy textiles rugs hanfttigs couch ami chair coverings For dyeing by lipshyping she will -use the ordinary dyes with which the average person Is best acquainted tine ones for coloring blouses handkerchiefs and other delishycate articles The interior redecorate does well to carry both kinltN of dye and to understand the methods of usshying both

The successful dyer-by-the-day Is sure to make good financial returns She will probably have practically no competition for the line is ns yet little known She should advertise In the local papers for her customers and spread the news of her project to her friends by personal communication

The dyer will of course never ex poriment on the possessions of tier customers Cntil she becomes export sip must read even-thing she can find on the technical details of dyeing proc esses and she must follow directions Implidtly

(SJ l lt4 WMlirr Nlaquowspaplaquor Union)

ALL FOR HEALTH HEALTH FOR ALL

THATS THI8 CRUSADERS WAR CRY AS SHE FIGHTS FOR

BETTER HEALTH

Betty Awaits The Doctors Verdict

the Michigan Tuberculosis Associashytion Her parents are wiBe They know that 65 per cent of all children in the United States between Ave and fifteen are infected with the germ of tuberculosis

It is but a step from tuberculosis infection to the disease itself Herein lies the wisdom and necessity of frequent chest examinations by comshypetent physicians

Tuberculosis Christmas Seals supshyport Free Chest Clinics all over Miebi

gan Such clinics j are a ctitch in I time against the most insidious of c o u r s e s t h e plague which in the last ten years killed 31196 men women and chilshy

dren of Michigan Christmas Seals fight tuberculosis

Buy them Give Health Ready-Made Critic

Man must serve his time to every trade Save censure critics all are reidy mademdashByron

Doubter Not Wanted I will listen to any ones convicshy

tions but pray keep your doubts to yourselfmdashGoethe

iHiiiiniimiHMnmniiHiiiHuimmniliiii

Santa Makes Merry llilliliillll(iiitiliiliiilililllillllllllllllillll

Mamp

Heres Mary Elisabeth all ready to wage war against dirty hands falte and teeth enemies of Better Health Shes a Modern Health Crusader of the Michigan Tuberculosis Association

ftwiiiMm M_II

Santa Claus sometimes jokes with f( Iks big and little nnd he nearly always has some comic toys for the children This yerr ho will leave them fvnny spoon dolls made of paper picnic spoons and dressed in crepe paper clothes A clown doil with dangling less a Chinaman and a Puritan have had their pictures taken so that any one can make them

mdasho-

LUDENS MFNTHOL CfiJCH SKCPS

fV il f f

mdash which fights disease of all kinds She sleeps at least ten hours erery nifht with her windows open she likes milk and she eats only those oods that healthy happy children should have

Healthy children cant succumb to tubercntoej Making frail children strong is one 0 the duties of the Christmas Tuberculosis Seals Buy Christmas Seals and help Mary Elisshyabeth and other Crusaders fight tushyberculosis which strikes where toast expected

State of Michiirtn the Probate Court for the County of Livingston

t i session of sfiid Court held at the Probate Office in the City of Hov-ell in said County on the 24th dny ot October A D 1924

Present Hon Willis L Lyons Judge of Probate

In the matter of the estate of Perry Blunt Deceased

A M Roche having filed in said court his petition praying for license to sell the interest of said estate in certnin real estate therein described

It is ordrred thnt the 24th day of November A D 1924 at l e n oclock In the forenoon at said probate office be and is hereby appointed for hearshying said petition nnd that all persons interested in said estate appear before said court at said time and place to show cause why a license to sell the interest of said estate in said real esshytate should qot be granted

It is further ordered that public noshytice thereof be given by publication of a copy of this order for three sue-cMwdve weeks previous to said day of hearing in the Pinckney Dispatch a newspaper printed nnd circulated in said county

WILLIS L LYONS Judge of Probate

A true copy Celestla ParshaU

Register of Prtbats

f l

s

are in styles that are very late

Most of them fur-trimmed

Beautiful shades of reds and browns aswell as grays and blacks Suedine cloths velours and Bolivia

The prices are most reasonable

$1676 $2475 $3975 $5275 We should like to show you any time

JJ

MEN who come to us from Pinckshyney always have demanded style and quality

OUR answer has always Y pound Smdash-and even morlt a moderate price

been

amp bull

Just Now t 1 laquo

we are showing a fine line of all wool suits at

$25 $30 $35 $40 We will be pleased to show you

Mmikg m-

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w5 7-THE PINCKNEY DISPATCH

m

HMITI STATE NEWS IN BRIEF

S

Coolidge Puts Up Presidents Cup

WASHINGTON mdash President Coolidge has taken a long Step toward arousing greatshye r interest in athlet ics in the

army and the navy and in the counshytry general ly by present ing to athshyletic representa t ives of the army and of t h e scout ing fUet a challenge cup for football between service teams of the two b rand ie s

Indicat ion a re that as a result of this one of the great annual athlet ic events of the future will center about the Coolidge cup or as it will be offishycially called the Pres ident s ( up

T h e Pres ident summoned athlet ic representa t ives of the army and the navy to the Whi te House He then formally turned over to them a cup to be contested for every year by two football teams chosen from officers and enlisted men of the two forces

T h e first contest for the cup was set for November Uigt at Griffith s tadium Each team will be composed of one officer and ten enlisted men

Pres ident Coolidge himself will bulltart the game and there is every inshydication that it will be a social and athletic event rivaling the contest between West Point and Annapolis

Maj Paul Baade infantry represhysen t ing the array from Fort Benning and Lieut Com Hamil ton V Bryan scouting fleet athlet ic officer together with Coxswain Claude A Ezell and

Staff Sergt Har ry O Troupe represhysent ing the enlisted men of the army nnd the fleet received the cup It ia of generous proport ions embossed Ua blue and gold and su rmounted by the American eagle

In connection with the presenta t ion the Pres ident made this s t a tement

As President of the United Sta tes of America in the interest of good clean Ileal thy recreat ion for the peoshyple of the ent i re country and to enshycourage and s t imula te athlet ics among the enlisted men of the servshyices I offer this cup to be known as the Presid nt s cup for contest beshytween footkil l teams of the army and navy from units or subdivisions of forces urn -r such te rms as the secshyre tary of war and the secretary of navy may de t e rmine provided howshyever tha t the teams shall be coin posed of enlisted men and officers in about the same proportion as a re offishycers and enlisted men in the services

I desire to mention the grea t beneshyfits to mind and body that result from part icipat ion in good clean whole some sport The people of the United S ta tes have a lways been devoted to manly contests and I know of no betshyter way to give to them a t rue examshyple of sport in its best form than to offer such a cup as this for a trophy to be contested for by the army and the navy

Six New Reclamation Projects Approved

SIX new Western reclamation projshyects embracing more than 400-000 acres have been approved as feasible from an engineering

economic agricul tural and land develshyopment s tandpoint by investigating commit tees whose reports are made public by the Interior depar tment

Studies of the projects were conshyducted by professors of agr icul tural colleges In s ta tes In which they a re located s t a te agricultural officials and bankers In their development it Is recommended tha t policies and methshyods proposed by the committee of speshycial advisors of reclamation be folshylowed T h e projects

VaJe project Oregon 28305 acres msifily sage brush with an est imated gross annual crop re turn after irrigashytion of $35 an acre Ninety per cent of the land will require subdivision and se t t lement and will provide farms for 2fi0 to 300 set t lers

Baker project Oregon Irr igable land es t imated at 26031 acres which Should yield a gross annual re turn of between $30no t6 $3750 per acre The value of the raw land Is fixed at between $250 to $5 an acre

Kittitas project Washington W38U

acres of Irrigable land Including 48-402 acres of agricultural n a t u r e 21-925 of pas ture and 20071 of waste land It is recommended that farm units should not he less than laquoS0 acres on the best grade soil nnd about 1150 acres on the poorer grades in order to y M d an income for a family The bet ter land shoulrf re turn a gross anshynual income of from $10 to $55 an acre after the development

Uwyhee project lt ireyon 5SS59 acres of first-class land well adapted to produce satisfactory yield of crops while there is raquo15140 acres of second class lund that cannot produce more than about 75 per cent of the yield of the first-class land A good farm with a variety of [gtrod4rts ought to produce as much as $00 an acre annual ly

Salt Lake basin project U t a h 110000 acres will be directly beneshyfited and there a re excellent marke t ing and t ranspor t ing facilities Mixed crops should yield from $50 to $80 per acre u year The lands to be Irrigatshyed a re already colonized and settled on small farms

Spanish Springs project N e v a d a Including 39H50 acres of high-grade land adap tab le to a wide variety of crops

Airplane vs the Battleship in Congress

REGAKDLRSS of the outcome of

the investigation now being made by the general board of the navy under Instructions by

the secre tary and at the instigation of the Pres ident a showdown light in the old airplane-bat t leship controvershysy looms when congress reopens in December

Whatever the findings of the hoard and it is admit ted on all sides that they must be predicated on the basis tha t the bat t leship is still the main reliance in sen power a i r en thus ias t s a re laying plans for a drive on conshygress to get full recognition of the increaslnc importance of aviation In the national defense with a sepa ra t e air force as their final objective

Hear tened by President Coolidges recent u t te rances In which he voiced his belief in the possibility of the airshyp lane superseding the surface fighting ship they propose to demand that an impart ia l tr ibunal hear their case and tha t the aerial fighting forces be placed In a position to be developed free from the obstruct ionis ts in the mil i tary services

On the other hand naval officers are gravely concerned over the recent developments realizing the popular appeal of the aviation propaganda with Its promise of cheap and effecshytive nat ional preparedness They fear that as Intimated by the Presi dent no provision will be made fo modernizinc the older bat t leships for proper maintenance of the fleet and for construction unless the controvershysy over the relative meri ts of aircraft nnd bat t leships Is finally and definiteshyly settled

T h e round-the-world flight by the army flyers spectacular and epochal ns it was did not in the opinion of the majority of exper ts war ran t the conclusions drawn in some quar te rs

The one outs tanding lesson of the achievement they say was that it demonst ra ted conclusively the dependshyence of aircraft on surface ships in long-distance work It is pointed out tha t while the flyers were covering their twenty-odd thousand miles apshyproximately 87000 miles of s teaming was done hy United S ta t e s naval vesshysels in helping to put the flight across

Flag With Only 40 Stars Causes Stir

GEN FRANK T HTNES direcshy

tor of the veterans bureau Ims begun an Investigation of the origin nnd history of the

flag with only 40 stars which was disshyplayed by Mrs Lillian R Sire before de legates of the New York Sta te Fedshyera t ion of Womens Clubs in New York

So far a s he has been aide to learn only one of the freak flags ever has appeared in the ve terans bureau service I t was shipped from Perry-rille Md along with five other flags FelaVnary 7 1922 and w a s received at Hospital No 49 Philadelphia Februshya r y 16 1raquo22 At tha t t ime Perryvll ie w a s a United S t a t e s public hea l th bull bull t r i c e depot

Cteseral H lnes deplored published Assertions the bureau had contracted l o r 800000 cheap shoddy flags for the coffins of dead ve te rans

8 O B M tUne ago according to the dishyrector compUUnt was made tha t t h e eofta of s soldier who died in Hosshypital NO 48 W t t covered with a flag SafUtt on ly 4 0 bull H e immediately

officer in chart whether the

regarding flags a M SOS osssptttef with and whether

- - bullbull bull bull - bull

ltrf the

the flag in question had been Inshyspected

The answer to both quest ions was in the affirmative The oflieer also stated according to the director tha t all o ther Macs in stock had been found to be regulat ion

A brother of Har ry H Pench the veteran whose coffin was covered with the improperly made flag hart reported the m a t t e r to the bureau It was the flag which covered Benchs coffin that Mrs Sire showed the deleshygates

T h e New York City Federa t ion of Women s Clubs has appointed a comshymittee consisting of Mrs Belle de Rivera honorary p re s iden t Mrs Lilshylian R Sire who brought the m a t t e r to public a t tent ion nnd who is presishydent of the Womens National Demoshycra t ic club nnd Mrs William Albert Lewis

Char les A Bench bro ther of Har ry H Bench a soldier who served his country 20 years and died in the Vetshyerans hospital at Phi ladelphia gave Mrs Sire a cheap 40-star flag which had been draped about the coffla when it reached the family home in Readshying Pa Mr Bench replaced it with a flag he taodght more suitable

SaginawmdashJ W Ferdney former m e m b e r of congress from the eighth distr ict baa taken in his annua l deer hunt ing t r ip in Luce county this year He is 71 yea r s old

Owosso mdash Mason Ri lenberry 72 yea r s old a farmer living near Banshycroft was found dead in his barn A physician said that he evidently had suffered a hear t a t tack while loading a wagon

SturgismdashCity Attorney Paul Wal t broke his arm in an a t t emp t to c rank his automobile A few mnu tes la te r his mother- in law Mrs El izabeth Cole t r ied to open a heavy ga te at her husshyband s farm and the ga te fell on tier f rac tur ing her hip

FlintmdashAfter going to a local newsshypaper office to announce that he would main ta in his record of voting for evshyery Pres iden t since Lincoln Theodore V Canright 94 years old fell from his porch while r e tu rn ing to his home and was seriously injured

OwossomdashJohn McAvoy 52 years old a p rominen t New Haven Townshyship lar jner waa found dead in the wa te r t ank on his farm It is beshylieved that he sat down on the edge of the tank to lest and suffered a s t roke falling irto the tank and drowning

Detroi t Majorities of nearly 10 to 1 were rolled up by the Republ ican s t a t e and county t ickets in Wayne county according to complete reshytu rns In pract ical ly every case the con tes t s were decided upon s t ra igh t par ty l ines with but sl ight fluctuashyt ions in the voe

Por t HuronmdashMiss Lau ra Copeland of Boston is in Port Huron to car ry on the work of the Rotary clubs cripshypled chi ldren s clinic She will carry out the recommendat ions of the recent clinic and be of service to local medishycal men also teaching pa ren t s proper mas sage methods in the care of cripshypled children

RomeomdashTwo I ta l ians demanding repr i sa l s for wounds one suffered tn a domest ic feud were killed here as they s tormed the home of Joseph Pill-eri to Identification of one of the men as Patsy Prris a former enemy of Pi l ler l to was t s t ab i l shed soon after the shooting Pillerito said he had never seen the third man before

Det ro i tmdashResumpt ion of activity at the Monnier road studio of the Deshytroit Motion P ic ture company within a few weeks has been announced folshylowing the annual meet ing of stockshyholders It was voted to assume a mor tgage of $150000 on the proper ty l iquidate ou ts tand ing obl igat ions and r e sume the production of pic tures

Grand RapidsmdashErect ion of a memorshyial to the Grand Rapids service men of the Civil Spanish-American and world wars now rests upon the city commission a s the result of the comshypletion of a general design by a civilshyian commit tee appointed by former Mayor Jul ius Tisch a year ago The project it is es t imated will cost $300000

Detroi tmdashForeign capital is pouring into Germany due to the excessively high rates of in teres t at which money-Is loaned and Jackie Coogan created as much a t ten t ion in Berlin as the Zeppelin ZR-3 These observat ions along with m a n o thers were brought back to Detroit fcy C Leidich who reshyturned a few days ago from his 73rd t r ip abroad in the past 30 years

Grand RapidsmdashThe Commercial Savings bank and the People s Savshyings bank has b ten merged with the Kent S ta te bank in the largest t ransshyact ion in Grand Rapids banking hisshytory The deal involved $6000000 asse t s Stockholders of the Comshymercial and People s banks gave thei r consent at special meet ings after the deal had won the sanct ion of the s ta te banking i epa r tmen t

Marsha l lmdashEvery precinct in Batt le Creek voted in favor or eas te rn standshyard t ime Marshall had been holding off apparen t ly to see what action Bat t le Creek would take A great many Marshall people work in Battle Creek and the result ing inconvenience of the two towns were using different t ime probably would be sufficient to influence Marshal l s decision it was believed This city it is believed will r emain on eas te rn s t anda rd t ime the year around

LAnsemdashMrs Cora Reynolds Andershyson of LAnse has been elected Repshyre sen ta t ive of t i e Iron dis t r ic t in the S ta t e House )f Represen ta t ives She ran on the Republican t icket wi thout Democrat ic opposition and will reshyplace Rep Pat r ick OBrien ve te ran Upper Pen insuK legislator wbo reshyt i red following the special session of 1923 Mrs Anderson is the first woman to become a member of the House and the second to become a m e m b e r of the legislature

KalamazoomdashRais ing of $150000 for the expansion of the Bronson Methoshydist Hospi ta l in the next three yea rs has been announced here The fund was obtained through subscr ip t ions of $100000 fulfilling the condi t ions imshyposed in t en ta t ive gifts of 125000 each by Mrs Dorothy Peck Clark of Kalamazoo and Mr and Mrs W M Earnart of Ann Arbor The larger proportion of the fund was obtained ia Methodist congregations throughout the state The proposed expansion would give the hospital almost double its capaci ty and equipment

HillsdalemdashO C Dickinson of this ci ty an employe of the New York Censhyt ra l ra i l road since 1882 local t icket agen t for the last 28 years has reshytired after i2 years In the company s employ

S turg ismdashAust in McDonald awaitshying t ranspor ta t ion to J a c k s o n prison for a t e r m of oae to 15 y e a r s for carshyry ing concealed weapons dug a hole th rough the brick walls of the county jail a t Centervil le and escaped

Berk leymdashFrank Wilcox 40 yea r s old w a s c rushed to dea th benea th his house here when a gus t of wind blew it from jacks on which it was s tanding Wilcox who was laying a foundation had jus t crawled under the bouse when it fell

MonroemdashEdward Kitchin Jr 9 y e a r s old shot and killed himself while playing with his fa ther s reshyvolver The bullet en te red the boys left eye and caused ins tan t death The Ki tchins live on a farm six miles west of Monroe

Detroi tmdashMichigan Democracy lost her sole represen ta t ive in Congress in the Republican landsl ide tha t swept the s ta te Rober t H Clancy of Deshytroit r epresen t ing the F i r s t District was badly defeat t d by his Republican opponent John B Sosnowski

Lans ingmdashFores t fires which are preva len t in the nor the rn pa r t of the s t a t e a re general ly under control and confined to s lashings and cut-over land according to repor ts received by John Baird s ta te conserva t ion comshymiss ioner from deputy fire wardens

E s c a n a b a - Irving Micheau 15 years old of Brampton had his r ight hand mut i l a ted and shot in his neck and r ight ear the result of the accidenta l d ischarge of his shotgun Micheau picking the gun up n o r r the ground placed his hand over the end of the ba r r e l

Detroi tmdashAlbert Majewski Ham-t ramck was ar res ted by the police of tha t city on a charge of mans laugh te r following the death of a 10-year-old boy who is s a i l to have fallen from the running board of Majewski s autoshymobile when the la t ter s t a r t ed the mashychine in an effort to shake the boy off

AlbionmdashThe principal fea ture of the Albion election was the naming of a woman for a municipal office for the first t ime in the his tory of the city Mrs Kate Bromeling who has carr ied on a real es ta te and insurance business since the dea th of her husshyband four yea r j ago was named just ice of the peace

LansingmdashMajor i t ies which a re beshylieved to have finally crushed in Michigan any a t tempt to impose an income tax upen the public and furshyther a t t e m p t s o abolish parochial schools were rolled up in the s ta te election The chool a m e n d m e n t was bea ten 2 to 1 while the income tax proposal was beaten near ly 5 to 1

DetroitmdashConvicted solely on his finshyger-prints Onnie Howard 27 was sen tenced to se rve one to five yea r s in Jackson prison for burglary Lieutenshyant Charles Carmody head of the poshylice identification bureau produced at the t r ial pr ints found at the scene of the cr ime and pointed out s t r ik ing l ikenesses in them to the finger-prints of Howard

Grand Rapius mdashDorothy Plucker 2-year-old daughter of Mr and Mrs Clifshyford Plucker was seriously Injured when struck near her home by an aushytomobile in charge of Ted Rice of Howard City The shock of the accishydent revived a nervous trouble in Rice and he was taken to a hospi tal where physicians say he has little chance for recovery

LansingmdashMichigan has elected a 1925 Legis la ture that is solidly Re publican In 1923 the Democra t s had fivemembers i n t h e House and none in the Sena te Four of Lhose five ran for re-election and according to offishycial r e tu rns they have all been de feated The fifth Democrat Dr De-nias Dawe of Monroe did not run for renomna t ion and his place has also been taken by a Republican

Grand RapidsmdashJohn Ormand 52 years old was killed when he was s t ruck by a Fere A^aiquette passenger t rain at F rank l in s crossing Orraond was walking mine from work and is said to have^ t epped around the crossshying ga tes and walked direct ly into the path of the train A 3ister Rose Ormond was at the cross ing when the accident occurred but did not reshyalize the victim was he r b ro the r unshytil he was identified an hour la ter

De t ro i tmdashPurchase of 85 ac res and condemnat ion -jf 11 and one-half more to c o m p l e x the recrea t ion deshypa r tmen t s summer camp on Eular lake near Howell has been ordered by the Detroit common council Alshythough 40 acres of the first t r ac t is half a mile from the l ake it was s ta ted tha t the remain ing 45 ac res could not be bought for less than $20-000 the price to be paid for the whole 85 When the two proper t i es a re acshyquired the a m o will su r round the lake

Lans ingmdashPres iden t Calvin Coolidge carr ied Michigan by a major i ty of 600-000 votes over the combined tota ls of his two r ivals a sweep that has not even been approached in the s t a t e s political h is tory according to complete r e tu rns He polled near ly 80 per cent of the total vote compared with 72 per cent of the total vote given Hardshying In 1920 Davis received only about 13 per cent of the to ta l The LaFol-lette third party failed to attract more than 9 per cent of the Michigaa vote Oroesbeck and Couxens were more than W0000 ahead of their rivals

HOW THE STATES CAST VOTE FOR PRESIDENT

U gt

S t a t e f I O Q

o u a -J

12mdashAlabama 3mdashArizona 9 A r k a n s a s

13mdashCalifornia 6mdashColorado 7mdashConnect icut 3mdashDelaware 6- -F lor ida

14mdashGeorgia 4mdashIdaho

29mdashIllinois 15mdashIndiana 13mdashIowa 10mdashKansas 13mdashKentucky 10mdashLouisiana

6mdashMaine 8mdashMaryland

18mdashMassachuse t t s 15mdashMichigan 12mdashMinnesota 10mdashMississippi 18mdashMissouri 4mdashMontana 8mdashNebraska 3mdashNevada 4mdashNew H a m p s h i r e

14mdashNew J e r s e y 3mdashNew Mexico

45mdashNew York 12mdashNorth Carol ina

5mdashNorth Dakota 24mdashOhio 10mdashOklahoma

5mdashOregon 38mdashPennsylvania

5mdashRhode Island 9mdashSouth Carolina 6mdashSouth Dakota

12mdashTennessee 20mdashTexas

4mdashUtah 4mdashVermont

12mdashVirginia 7mdashWashington

8mdashWest Virginia 13mdashWisconsin

3mdashWyoming

12

9 13 6 7 3

4 29 15 13 10 13

6 S

18 15 12

18 4 8 o ltJ

4 14 3

45

5 24

5 38

6 14

10

10

12

10

4

4

7 8

12 20

12

Wouldnt Have Autoist Think He Was Curious

A motorcar apparent ly afflicted with dropsy or some such malady s topped in front of t h e res idence of Gap Johnson of Rumpus Ridge After examining the machine s upper shell the drfver seized cer ta in tools and reshyclining on his back scuffed himself under the car and began thumping on Its s tomach Mr Johnson who had

| been rest ing for some t ime by hanging

J onto his own fence with his elbows

I hooked over the top rail kept silent

j for a short season and then inqu i red

I dont reckon you re aiming to go

to Fiddle Creek a t t e r you get that

I t h e r e contrapt ion fixed

No replied the gent under the car

j Aw to Slippery Slap m e b b y T i No I H m To Sandy Mush t h e n

No Well dont get the idy t h a t I keer

j2 whur the hmdash1 youre going t o mdash Kansas City Star

631 Tota ls 382 136 13 Necessa ry to elect 266

HIGHLIGHTS FROM ELECTION RETURNS

Wash ing tonmdashWil l i am E Borah of j Idaho will be the Republ ican leader Of the s ena t e in the next congress i

St Paul MinnmdashMagnus Johnson Minnesota s widely known dir t farmshye r sena tor was defeated for re-elecshytion by Thomas D Schall Republican

New YorkmdashBy running near ly a million votes ahead of his t icket Alshyfred E Smi th Democra t defeated Colonel Roosevel t for the office of governor of t h e Empi re s ta te

Sena tor F r a n c i s E War ren Repubshyl ican 80 and father-in-law of General John J Pe r sh ing has been re-elected to the sena te He has a l ready served the re a quar te r of a century

Wil l iam Allen Whi te Independent for governor of Kansas who camshypaigned on but one ou t s t and ing issue opposit ion to the Ku Klux Klan was snowed under by a klan-indorsed canshydida te

Atlas TRACM MARK

The Atlas Speaker makes audible the impulses of the silent radio receivshying set The tones of Atlas Radio Reshyproduction whether of music or voice are clear true to the original and adjustshyable for volume

For literature send your name to the

manufacturer

Multiple Electric Products Co IDC

371 OffltUnStrlaquot Newark New Jersey

Guarantee A T L A S Products i

Two women were elected governors of s ta tes for the first t ime in his tory The new governors are Mrs Wil l iam

A Ferguson in Texas and Mrs Nellie G Ross in Wyoming Both a re Demshyocra t s

Des Moines IamdashComplete check of unofficial r e t u r n s in the senator ia l j contes t in Iowa showed tha t Sena tor

Smi th W Brookhar t had a major i ty of less than 1200 over his Democrat ic opponent Daniel F Steck j

| ChicagomdashThe first Negro ever j elected to a municipal judgeship roll-

ed into office on the Republican land- si Me Albert B George 51 a lawyer j

defeated his Democra t ic opponent by i a majori ty of be tween 65000 and 70-

000 votes

New YorkmdashTabula t ion of the popu- lar vote for p res iden t of the United I S t a t e s ind ica tes tha t P res iden t Cool- I idge has a c lear lead of more than 7500000 over John Davis The tabu- | la t ion shows tha t the LaFol le t te- ] W h e e l e r t icke t polled near ly 4500000 gt votes J

Lexington KymdashVirgil M Chap- man Lexington and Pa r i s Democrat e lected wi thou t opposition represent - j a t ive from th i s the seventh H e n r y Clays old dis t r ic t to congress will ]

be t he younges t member of e i the r i house of the new congress H e was born March 15 1895 J

Wash ing tonmdashUnless official tabula-lat ion of votes upsets the resu l t s he re is the complexion of the new Congress S e n a t e Republ icans 54 Democra t s 40 Farmer-Labor 1 v cancy 1 (Connec t icu t ) House Reshypublicans 246 Democrats 184 Fanner-Labor 3 Socialists 2 At adshyjournment of CongreM In June there ware In the Senate 51 Republicans 48 Democrats and 2 Fanner-Labor itea and in the House 226 Republishycan 207 Democrat 1 Socialist 1 Fannor-Labortta aad 1 Independent

Pertnantnt roods are a good

inlaquolaquotmlaquont ^ X ^ l f k V f mdashnot an txfxnu

America Must Have More Paved Highways

Almost every section of the United States is conshyfronted by a traffic probshylem

Month by month this problem is becoming more and more serious

Hundreds of cars pass a given point every hour on many of our state and county roads Down-town city streets are jammed with traffic

Think toohow narrow many of our read are and how comshyparatively lew paved highways there are in proporticp to the bullreadily increasing number oicara

If the motor vehicle is to can-tinne giving the bullconomictarvkt of which it is capable we most have more Conotta highways and widen tboat near large canshyters of population

Every drJsen should discus highway needs of hiaconununitf with his local aotboridtm

Your highway officials will do their part if given your support

Wny postpone meeting this pressing need

An early start nteassaarlt relief

PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION

111 West Wi

r

wr

Urntf

W N Ubdquo DITAOIT NO

lt

f r it^Jfa pound$pound$gt -1 J aJL-V gt^V A ltv^

bull -to

THE PINCKNEY DISPATCH

V

^

MCKIE THE PRINTERS DEVIL By Chtrtea Sughroe

a

fiOOD AAORUIUQ

eosroMERsv

LATUJGl TWASS GcOOO

Ufc^eu no -COOAM ^

TVV STORM AampOUT TU trade O

GOWi t D RASVi WO KAO A SOUS CM tW

U^DSOAE UAOVUWO VAS JEST AftftWSO

Y NpoundVTVBRAV t laquo E U WET Mfc

^ U C SOO A VJOV4 rts OW THE

ampOSS MOO WOW TVV FPK

Trouble Brewing

9 C V A pound S 3AW3ER 9MOP AUD ltoAMS VUAUf A UAtft

CUT JOamp OAU ^ LEAVE gtAM

WHATS THE USE By L F Van Zelm He Went Prepared AJHAT TELIX- IWAGNES T h e ftEST OP | TKE C U 5 T O M E laquo 9 A 2 e T H I N K I N G

^BOUT H I M

HE M U S T

BE A C H E A P

lt5kATpound mdash JUST GETS

S O M E T H I N G T H E M A T T E L ^ I T M

HICgt HAirs

- f H E N E X T T I M E T E L I

W E M T TOC A HAt2 C u T

BUT

JUltST SJAHT A

H M c t f T WW ^ u

D Events in the Lives of Little Men D Along the Concrete DO

HOME WANTED FOR A BABY MCLL ENOUGHS fco W C H j

MM TlRtO OF LW1N6 W

TUKTLft ^ H e l T W 0 0 6 H T

^ ^ ^

gtNH1V0U POOR 8006 RLONC aoe OF A K PORCUPINE LIKE VCU gt A ^ISTUL WOULD Feet- UKEI RM EIDERDOWN PUFF OH TVC FACE OP A

PRKKIM PpoundARraquo

^ 1 ^ IF poundVER A MAH (SOT STUNC I fcN THAT MERftN urrue IT

OH Nes vco MA pound To TAK6 A CWANCe ON lt5eTTeuro sroNeuro wtfen yoo GampA^ ft CWHK Of H0M61

LIKE r o e J I LA LA LA iO- ( j

2

1 OW KATampI LOOK^ VteRe Hes C6T us Tieo TbseNeR VNITW THAT

OH sw OH SA^i IM A C A T -

F=0RCraquowe M pound

AU ^ MV FAOCT KRTfel IM 4

A WNAJ

The

Clancy Kids This Way Out

By frac34 PERCYt CROSBY

m

r (bullbullI

bull5

i

t-M

is^i^ Wrt^i^^j^^ ijr^

sV^WJA-W laquoPi

W^T mdashX~_bdquo mdashps^^m bull bull bull bull -bullJ11 bull - ^ bull fiu--j JUJ gt j j f w p i ^ p p p i

bullbullKV

ncem Uvingrtoo Comity Public Health Service will

rflnfeft lht a i l a t l Cferina Seed Sale as usual this yew Watch spac each week The penny Christshymas Health Swrf aids in promoting the health of the children of Livingston County

- i j

44

THE PMCMNEY DISPATCH bull39c

1 mm) mumming MAKING 6O0D IN A SMALL TOWN

Reml- Stories About Reml Girls mdash

amppound

m

t^r

By MRS HARLAND H ALLEN

DYEING FOR YOUR FRIENDS

SETTIN6 THUMfP ONTUKRHHWIS

F R r E C H E S T CLIN1C8 KCEP TUBERCULOSIS INFECTION

UNDER CONTROL

Baby Betty is just one of the many hundred children who each year arc brought to the Free Chest Clinics ei

^A I ff

flwrsday November 20th Sale Begins at 10 oclock Sharp

FREE LUNCH AT NOON

HORSES Black mare 15 yrs old wt 1000 Black mare 14 wt 1000 lbs CATTLE

Halfblood Brown Swiss cow 9 giving milk bred Oct 5

Durham Cow 7 giving milk Three quarter Brown Swiss cow

amp giving milk Durham Heifer 2 due Jan 30 Durham-Heifer 2 fat 2 Durham calves 2 Durham Calves 9 months old 1 Durham Calf 4 months old HOGS

i oland China Sow one year old 5 Spring Shoats HAY AND GRAIN ETC Quantity of Hay Stack of Rye Straw Corn Stalks 600 bu Sorted Yellow Dent Corn CO Fence Potts 70 f t Black Wahrat Lumber FARM TOOLS Land Roller YcouW 2 Horse Cultivator 1 Horse Cultivator |L F Michel Fanning Mill

600 lb Scales Feed Cooker Truck Wagon Osborne Mower 60 Tooth Drag Favorite Grain Drill Bean Poller Hay Rake Tank Header Grindstone Corn Sheller Corn Planter Crosscut Saw Grain Cradle Log Chain Platform Spring Buggy Road Cart Spring Buggy Grain Bags 21 Potato Crates Hay Knife Hay Rope Harpoon Fork Set Work Harness 2 Single Harnesses 2 Ladders Drmp Boards Barrel Chum Water Separator 10 Gal Milk Can Coal Stove And Many Other Articles Too

Numerous to Mention

Terms of Sale All sums of $10 and under cash over that amount one years time will be given on good bankable notes at 6 per cent

Lambert PERCY ELLIS Auctioned

Pmckney 14 Fowlerville 7

Continwed from ftrat page

Then Captain Hourbonrwiis called Ms men around him and scathingly deshylivered his opinion of the team whose mediocre playing was giving their opshyponents an easy vctory He exhorted fhetn to yet in the jrame and show Iowlerville the real simon-pure Pinck-ney brand of football After this ) enrt-to-heart tongue lashing came a t omplete reversal of form for the conshytesting elevens Pinckney secured the lgtal and the lMnrkney fighting spirit domineered the battle until the whistle thrieked the finish with two touchshydowns nnd goals to the credit of the rnti-muendnirnt warriors nnd i final wore of 11 to 7

The score does not tell the real story laquogtf the game ns all the breaks of luck verc in favor of the visitors At one Itntc iVickncy h-nl t-ikM iilt Iill and Mriroming the stubborn resistance 1 as steadily ga ltbull until only a few i bullbull( separated (he pigskin from goal bull he opposition growing weaker and vcsker when the whistle signalled the 1 nd of that quarter stopped proceed-bulllraquogt gave Fowlerville a very much de-ftred chance to rent and recuperate and plated the bull in safer territory for then The Fowlerville boys wrrr accomshypanied by a large number of enthosi lStic supporters who thronged the sde-

bull bullbullIfet and cheered their favorites ltereU|rhout the entire jrame Kven j bullvhen their team frJsjr weary and dis- j

^ ffceartened under Hnckneys repeated t-l -JlSlaUgftts the Fowlerville supporters vS^raquosielaquond skirted were untiring in their

w -ltrifofts for encouragement This loy-^ tIty was worthy of better results but vftet that first disastrous touchdown bull f

Vv traquolaquo nnckney team was transformed ^bullbullbulltfioinbend of mHd football players

bull lnttf a flatting writhing unleashed rjrcjfciie of veritable fury bucking the vi skirting the ends ineaking

tkc seeratagjy invulnerable bullf basic wStfV laquoraquod siaew for rain j

iffifm|tMi amp victory Anally reward- Leoisjeir -aespersee saons ^JHKfc4ampampmMttradere nd with

ience be-

j to the last was outclassed after the ( firlt| touchdown At one time with the ball in their own possession--the bitjirr team was forced back back ajrain and a^ain for larjre losses until

conipelled to ineffectually resort to the i forward pass There is the lesson of loyalty at lest to be learned from football jrames played here this voir ler visiting teiii has been accompanied by enthusshyiastic contingents of its home town supporters who came to help with their

ipiesence while their players were I buttling in the arena Why not folshylow this example in loyalty and when liickrtey visits other towns for an afshyternoon contest lets show- our appreshyciation of a really fine football team

by ffoinjr alonjr and showing the ltiut-sifi world how proud wc are of the 1 DJ V Pitickney team

Friday Nov 1 linckney ]i|ays a reinrn jrame at Fowlerville Inless there is a complete reversal of form raquoin either team Pincknev should win this jrame Hut they will hae to work for it as Fowlerville players are ( -Ic-mincd to win

Wedding The wedding anniversaries are

First cotton seroml paper third lenther fourth rruit and flowers fifth wooden sixth sugar seventh woolen eighth India rubber ninth willow tenth tin eleventh steel twelfth silk and linen thirteenth Ince fourteenth Ivory fifteenth crysshytal twentieth chisa twenty-fifth silver thirtieth pearl fortieth ruby fiftieth golden seventy-fifth diashymond

n ^ R B Itinerant dyer-by-the-day brings Mohimmed to the mountainmdashthe

Mohammed of the paint pots to the mountain of almost Immovable davenshyports and armchairs

The woman toucher-up may renshyovate with her magic dyes houseshyhold fnrnlshinss that cannot be dipped She has and needs no ofshyfice she simply Soelaquo from house to house office to office or to dubs theshyaters hallsmdashwherever in fact there is touching up to be donemdashcarrying with her a simple but efficient dyeing Service

Theres a iure to the business of freshening and brightening by the strokes of a brush says a woman who Is known as interior redecorator of her small town The work reshyquires nothing but an eye for color ami a certain skill with the brush And it supplies earthly necessities as wii as esthetic satisfaction

The plan is simply this The special dye intended for the purpose is applied to sofa carpet wall coveringsmdashanyshything about the house hall or office that needs recoiwringmdashwith an ordishynary paint brush scrub brush or on larpe surfaces a special kind of tank spray which mary be had from the manufacturers of the dye This colorshying process is much simpler than dyo-inir by dipping It is almost as easy as palntinj Thefdyer can do the rugs rUht on the floorwall coverings right 01 the wall

The dyer may also get the job of dyeing things othter than the unremov-aMe ones then_she will not use her special dyes suitable only for heavy textiles rugs hanfttigs couch ami chair coverings For dyeing by lipshyping she will -use the ordinary dyes with which the average person Is best acquainted tine ones for coloring blouses handkerchiefs and other delishycate articles The interior redecorate does well to carry both kinltN of dye and to understand the methods of usshying both

The successful dyer-by-the-day Is sure to make good financial returns She will probably have practically no competition for the line is ns yet little known She should advertise In the local papers for her customers and spread the news of her project to her friends by personal communication

The dyer will of course never ex poriment on the possessions of tier customers Cntil she becomes export sip must read even-thing she can find on the technical details of dyeing proc esses and she must follow directions Implidtly

(SJ l lt4 WMlirr Nlaquowspaplaquor Union)

ALL FOR HEALTH HEALTH FOR ALL

THATS THI8 CRUSADERS WAR CRY AS SHE FIGHTS FOR

BETTER HEALTH

Betty Awaits The Doctors Verdict

the Michigan Tuberculosis Associashytion Her parents are wiBe They know that 65 per cent of all children in the United States between Ave and fifteen are infected with the germ of tuberculosis

It is but a step from tuberculosis infection to the disease itself Herein lies the wisdom and necessity of frequent chest examinations by comshypetent physicians

Tuberculosis Christmas Seals supshyport Free Chest Clinics all over Miebi

gan Such clinics j are a ctitch in I time against the most insidious of c o u r s e s t h e plague which in the last ten years killed 31196 men women and chilshy

dren of Michigan Christmas Seals fight tuberculosis

Buy them Give Health Ready-Made Critic

Man must serve his time to every trade Save censure critics all are reidy mademdashByron

Doubter Not Wanted I will listen to any ones convicshy

tions but pray keep your doubts to yourselfmdashGoethe

iHiiiiniimiHMnmniiHiiiHuimmniliiii

Santa Makes Merry llilliliillll(iiitiliiliiilililllillllllllllllillll

Mamp

Heres Mary Elisabeth all ready to wage war against dirty hands falte and teeth enemies of Better Health Shes a Modern Health Crusader of the Michigan Tuberculosis Association

ftwiiiMm M_II

Santa Claus sometimes jokes with f( Iks big and little nnd he nearly always has some comic toys for the children This yerr ho will leave them fvnny spoon dolls made of paper picnic spoons and dressed in crepe paper clothes A clown doil with dangling less a Chinaman and a Puritan have had their pictures taken so that any one can make them

mdasho-

LUDENS MFNTHOL CfiJCH SKCPS

fV il f f

mdash which fights disease of all kinds She sleeps at least ten hours erery nifht with her windows open she likes milk and she eats only those oods that healthy happy children should have

Healthy children cant succumb to tubercntoej Making frail children strong is one 0 the duties of the Christmas Tuberculosis Seals Buy Christmas Seals and help Mary Elisshyabeth and other Crusaders fight tushyberculosis which strikes where toast expected

State of Michiirtn the Probate Court for the County of Livingston

t i session of sfiid Court held at the Probate Office in the City of Hov-ell in said County on the 24th dny ot October A D 1924

Present Hon Willis L Lyons Judge of Probate

In the matter of the estate of Perry Blunt Deceased

A M Roche having filed in said court his petition praying for license to sell the interest of said estate in certnin real estate therein described

It is ordrred thnt the 24th day of November A D 1924 at l e n oclock In the forenoon at said probate office be and is hereby appointed for hearshying said petition nnd that all persons interested in said estate appear before said court at said time and place to show cause why a license to sell the interest of said estate in said real esshytate should qot be granted

It is further ordered that public noshytice thereof be given by publication of a copy of this order for three sue-cMwdve weeks previous to said day of hearing in the Pinckney Dispatch a newspaper printed nnd circulated in said county

WILLIS L LYONS Judge of Probate

A true copy Celestla ParshaU

Register of Prtbats

f l

s

are in styles that are very late

Most of them fur-trimmed

Beautiful shades of reds and browns aswell as grays and blacks Suedine cloths velours and Bolivia

The prices are most reasonable

$1676 $2475 $3975 $5275 We should like to show you any time

JJ

MEN who come to us from Pinckshyney always have demanded style and quality

OUR answer has always Y pound Smdash-and even morlt a moderate price

been

amp bull

Just Now t 1 laquo

we are showing a fine line of all wool suits at

$25 $30 $35 $40 We will be pleased to show you

Mmikg m-

Page 7: PINCKNEY DISPATCHpinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1924-11-12.pdf · mi in.iii«i(i.jAHf .^fi| :C WW VV1 PINCKNEY DISPATCH ^¾ f IL,," ••'« ^ a. i Vol. 41 Pinckney. Liyingston

THE PINCKNEY DISPATCH

V

^

MCKIE THE PRINTERS DEVIL By Chtrtea Sughroe

a

fiOOD AAORUIUQ

eosroMERsv

LATUJGl TWASS GcOOO

Ufc^eu no -COOAM ^

TVV STORM AampOUT TU trade O

GOWi t D RASVi WO KAO A SOUS CM tW

U^DSOAE UAOVUWO VAS JEST AftftWSO

Y NpoundVTVBRAV t laquo E U WET Mfc

^ U C SOO A VJOV4 rts OW THE

ampOSS MOO WOW TVV FPK

Trouble Brewing

9 C V A pound S 3AW3ER 9MOP AUD ltoAMS VUAUf A UAtft

CUT JOamp OAU ^ LEAVE gtAM

WHATS THE USE By L F Van Zelm He Went Prepared AJHAT TELIX- IWAGNES T h e ftEST OP | TKE C U 5 T O M E laquo 9 A 2 e T H I N K I N G

^BOUT H I M

HE M U S T

BE A C H E A P

lt5kATpound mdash JUST GETS

S O M E T H I N G T H E M A T T E L ^ I T M

HICgt HAirs

- f H E N E X T T I M E T E L I

W E M T TOC A HAt2 C u T

BUT

JUltST SJAHT A

H M c t f T WW ^ u

D Events in the Lives of Little Men D Along the Concrete DO

HOME WANTED FOR A BABY MCLL ENOUGHS fco W C H j

MM TlRtO OF LW1N6 W

TUKTLft ^ H e l T W 0 0 6 H T

^ ^ ^

gtNH1V0U POOR 8006 RLONC aoe OF A K PORCUPINE LIKE VCU gt A ^ISTUL WOULD Feet- UKEI RM EIDERDOWN PUFF OH TVC FACE OP A

PRKKIM PpoundARraquo

^ 1 ^ IF poundVER A MAH (SOT STUNC I fcN THAT MERftN urrue IT

OH Nes vco MA pound To TAK6 A CWANCe ON lt5eTTeuro sroNeuro wtfen yoo GampA^ ft CWHK Of H0M61

LIKE r o e J I LA LA LA iO- ( j

2

1 OW KATampI LOOK^ VteRe Hes C6T us Tieo TbseNeR VNITW THAT

OH sw OH SA^i IM A C A T -

F=0RCraquowe M pound

AU ^ MV FAOCT KRTfel IM 4

A WNAJ

The

Clancy Kids This Way Out

By frac34 PERCYt CROSBY

m

r (bullbullI

bull5

i

t-M

is^i^ Wrt^i^^j^^ ijr^

sV^WJA-W laquoPi

W^T mdashX~_bdquo mdashps^^m bull bull bull bull -bullJ11 bull - ^ bull fiu--j JUJ gt j j f w p i ^ p p p i

bullbullKV

ncem Uvingrtoo Comity Public Health Service will

rflnfeft lht a i l a t l Cferina Seed Sale as usual this yew Watch spac each week The penny Christshymas Health Swrf aids in promoting the health of the children of Livingston County

- i j

44

THE PMCMNEY DISPATCH bull39c

1 mm) mumming MAKING 6O0D IN A SMALL TOWN

Reml- Stories About Reml Girls mdash

amppound

m

t^r

By MRS HARLAND H ALLEN

DYEING FOR YOUR FRIENDS

SETTIN6 THUMfP ONTUKRHHWIS

F R r E C H E S T CLIN1C8 KCEP TUBERCULOSIS INFECTION

UNDER CONTROL

Baby Betty is just one of the many hundred children who each year arc brought to the Free Chest Clinics ei

^A I ff

flwrsday November 20th Sale Begins at 10 oclock Sharp

FREE LUNCH AT NOON

HORSES Black mare 15 yrs old wt 1000 Black mare 14 wt 1000 lbs CATTLE

Halfblood Brown Swiss cow 9 giving milk bred Oct 5

Durham Cow 7 giving milk Three quarter Brown Swiss cow

amp giving milk Durham Heifer 2 due Jan 30 Durham-Heifer 2 fat 2 Durham calves 2 Durham Calves 9 months old 1 Durham Calf 4 months old HOGS

i oland China Sow one year old 5 Spring Shoats HAY AND GRAIN ETC Quantity of Hay Stack of Rye Straw Corn Stalks 600 bu Sorted Yellow Dent Corn CO Fence Potts 70 f t Black Wahrat Lumber FARM TOOLS Land Roller YcouW 2 Horse Cultivator 1 Horse Cultivator |L F Michel Fanning Mill

600 lb Scales Feed Cooker Truck Wagon Osborne Mower 60 Tooth Drag Favorite Grain Drill Bean Poller Hay Rake Tank Header Grindstone Corn Sheller Corn Planter Crosscut Saw Grain Cradle Log Chain Platform Spring Buggy Road Cart Spring Buggy Grain Bags 21 Potato Crates Hay Knife Hay Rope Harpoon Fork Set Work Harness 2 Single Harnesses 2 Ladders Drmp Boards Barrel Chum Water Separator 10 Gal Milk Can Coal Stove And Many Other Articles Too

Numerous to Mention

Terms of Sale All sums of $10 and under cash over that amount one years time will be given on good bankable notes at 6 per cent

Lambert PERCY ELLIS Auctioned

Pmckney 14 Fowlerville 7

Continwed from ftrat page

Then Captain Hourbonrwiis called Ms men around him and scathingly deshylivered his opinion of the team whose mediocre playing was giving their opshyponents an easy vctory He exhorted fhetn to yet in the jrame and show Iowlerville the real simon-pure Pinck-ney brand of football After this ) enrt-to-heart tongue lashing came a t omplete reversal of form for the conshytesting elevens Pinckney secured the lgtal and the lMnrkney fighting spirit domineered the battle until the whistle thrieked the finish with two touchshydowns nnd goals to the credit of the rnti-muendnirnt warriors nnd i final wore of 11 to 7

The score does not tell the real story laquogtf the game ns all the breaks of luck verc in favor of the visitors At one Itntc iVickncy h-nl t-ikM iilt Iill and Mriroming the stubborn resistance 1 as steadily ga ltbull until only a few i bullbull( separated (he pigskin from goal bull he opposition growing weaker and vcsker when the whistle signalled the 1 nd of that quarter stopped proceed-bulllraquogt gave Fowlerville a very much de-ftred chance to rent and recuperate and plated the bull in safer territory for then The Fowlerville boys wrrr accomshypanied by a large number of enthosi lStic supporters who thronged the sde-

bull bullbullIfet and cheered their favorites ltereU|rhout the entire jrame Kven j bullvhen their team frJsjr weary and dis- j

^ ffceartened under Hnckneys repeated t-l -JlSlaUgftts the Fowlerville supporters vS^raquosielaquond skirted were untiring in their

w -ltrifofts for encouragement This loy-^ tIty was worthy of better results but vftet that first disastrous touchdown bull f

Vv traquolaquo nnckney team was transformed ^bullbullbulltfioinbend of mHd football players

bull lnttf a flatting writhing unleashed rjrcjfciie of veritable fury bucking the vi skirting the ends ineaking

tkc seeratagjy invulnerable bullf basic wStfV laquoraquod siaew for rain j

iffifm|tMi amp victory Anally reward- Leoisjeir -aespersee saons ^JHKfc4ampampmMttradere nd with

ience be-

j to the last was outclassed after the ( firlt| touchdown At one time with the ball in their own possession--the bitjirr team was forced back back ajrain and a^ain for larjre losses until

conipelled to ineffectually resort to the i forward pass There is the lesson of loyalty at lest to be learned from football jrames played here this voir ler visiting teiii has been accompanied by enthusshyiastic contingents of its home town supporters who came to help with their

ipiesence while their players were I buttling in the arena Why not folshylow this example in loyalty and when liickrtey visits other towns for an afshyternoon contest lets show- our appreshyciation of a really fine football team

by ffoinjr alonjr and showing the ltiut-sifi world how proud wc are of the 1 DJ V Pitickney team

Friday Nov 1 linckney ]i|ays a reinrn jrame at Fowlerville Inless there is a complete reversal of form raquoin either team Pincknev should win this jrame Hut they will hae to work for it as Fowlerville players are ( -Ic-mincd to win

Wedding The wedding anniversaries are

First cotton seroml paper third lenther fourth rruit and flowers fifth wooden sixth sugar seventh woolen eighth India rubber ninth willow tenth tin eleventh steel twelfth silk and linen thirteenth Ince fourteenth Ivory fifteenth crysshytal twentieth chisa twenty-fifth silver thirtieth pearl fortieth ruby fiftieth golden seventy-fifth diashymond

n ^ R B Itinerant dyer-by-the-day brings Mohimmed to the mountainmdashthe

Mohammed of the paint pots to the mountain of almost Immovable davenshyports and armchairs

The woman toucher-up may renshyovate with her magic dyes houseshyhold fnrnlshinss that cannot be dipped She has and needs no ofshyfice she simply Soelaquo from house to house office to office or to dubs theshyaters hallsmdashwherever in fact there is touching up to be donemdashcarrying with her a simple but efficient dyeing Service

Theres a iure to the business of freshening and brightening by the strokes of a brush says a woman who Is known as interior redecorator of her small town The work reshyquires nothing but an eye for color ami a certain skill with the brush And it supplies earthly necessities as wii as esthetic satisfaction

The plan is simply this The special dye intended for the purpose is applied to sofa carpet wall coveringsmdashanyshything about the house hall or office that needs recoiwringmdashwith an ordishynary paint brush scrub brush or on larpe surfaces a special kind of tank spray which mary be had from the manufacturers of the dye This colorshying process is much simpler than dyo-inir by dipping It is almost as easy as palntinj Thefdyer can do the rugs rUht on the floorwall coverings right 01 the wall

The dyer may also get the job of dyeing things othter than the unremov-aMe ones then_she will not use her special dyes suitable only for heavy textiles rugs hanfttigs couch ami chair coverings For dyeing by lipshyping she will -use the ordinary dyes with which the average person Is best acquainted tine ones for coloring blouses handkerchiefs and other delishycate articles The interior redecorate does well to carry both kinltN of dye and to understand the methods of usshying both

The successful dyer-by-the-day Is sure to make good financial returns She will probably have practically no competition for the line is ns yet little known She should advertise In the local papers for her customers and spread the news of her project to her friends by personal communication

The dyer will of course never ex poriment on the possessions of tier customers Cntil she becomes export sip must read even-thing she can find on the technical details of dyeing proc esses and she must follow directions Implidtly

(SJ l lt4 WMlirr Nlaquowspaplaquor Union)

ALL FOR HEALTH HEALTH FOR ALL

THATS THI8 CRUSADERS WAR CRY AS SHE FIGHTS FOR

BETTER HEALTH

Betty Awaits The Doctors Verdict

the Michigan Tuberculosis Associashytion Her parents are wiBe They know that 65 per cent of all children in the United States between Ave and fifteen are infected with the germ of tuberculosis

It is but a step from tuberculosis infection to the disease itself Herein lies the wisdom and necessity of frequent chest examinations by comshypetent physicians

Tuberculosis Christmas Seals supshyport Free Chest Clinics all over Miebi

gan Such clinics j are a ctitch in I time against the most insidious of c o u r s e s t h e plague which in the last ten years killed 31196 men women and chilshy

dren of Michigan Christmas Seals fight tuberculosis

Buy them Give Health Ready-Made Critic

Man must serve his time to every trade Save censure critics all are reidy mademdashByron

Doubter Not Wanted I will listen to any ones convicshy

tions but pray keep your doubts to yourselfmdashGoethe

iHiiiiniimiHMnmniiHiiiHuimmniliiii

Santa Makes Merry llilliliillll(iiitiliiliiilililllillllllllllllillll

Mamp

Heres Mary Elisabeth all ready to wage war against dirty hands falte and teeth enemies of Better Health Shes a Modern Health Crusader of the Michigan Tuberculosis Association

ftwiiiMm M_II

Santa Claus sometimes jokes with f( Iks big and little nnd he nearly always has some comic toys for the children This yerr ho will leave them fvnny spoon dolls made of paper picnic spoons and dressed in crepe paper clothes A clown doil with dangling less a Chinaman and a Puritan have had their pictures taken so that any one can make them

mdasho-

LUDENS MFNTHOL CfiJCH SKCPS

fV il f f

mdash which fights disease of all kinds She sleeps at least ten hours erery nifht with her windows open she likes milk and she eats only those oods that healthy happy children should have

Healthy children cant succumb to tubercntoej Making frail children strong is one 0 the duties of the Christmas Tuberculosis Seals Buy Christmas Seals and help Mary Elisshyabeth and other Crusaders fight tushyberculosis which strikes where toast expected

State of Michiirtn the Probate Court for the County of Livingston

t i session of sfiid Court held at the Probate Office in the City of Hov-ell in said County on the 24th dny ot October A D 1924

Present Hon Willis L Lyons Judge of Probate

In the matter of the estate of Perry Blunt Deceased

A M Roche having filed in said court his petition praying for license to sell the interest of said estate in certnin real estate therein described

It is ordrred thnt the 24th day of November A D 1924 at l e n oclock In the forenoon at said probate office be and is hereby appointed for hearshying said petition nnd that all persons interested in said estate appear before said court at said time and place to show cause why a license to sell the interest of said estate in said real esshytate should qot be granted

It is further ordered that public noshytice thereof be given by publication of a copy of this order for three sue-cMwdve weeks previous to said day of hearing in the Pinckney Dispatch a newspaper printed nnd circulated in said county

WILLIS L LYONS Judge of Probate

A true copy Celestla ParshaU

Register of Prtbats

f l

s

are in styles that are very late

Most of them fur-trimmed

Beautiful shades of reds and browns aswell as grays and blacks Suedine cloths velours and Bolivia

The prices are most reasonable

$1676 $2475 $3975 $5275 We should like to show you any time

JJ

MEN who come to us from Pinckshyney always have demanded style and quality

OUR answer has always Y pound Smdash-and even morlt a moderate price

been

amp bull

Just Now t 1 laquo

we are showing a fine line of all wool suits at

$25 $30 $35 $40 We will be pleased to show you

Mmikg m-

Page 8: PINCKNEY DISPATCHpinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1924-11-12.pdf · mi in.iii«i(i.jAHf .^fi| :C WW VV1 PINCKNEY DISPATCH ^¾ f IL,," ••'« ^ a. i Vol. 41 Pinckney. Liyingston

W^T mdashX~_bdquo mdashps^^m bull bull bull bull -bullJ11 bull - ^ bull fiu--j JUJ gt j j f w p i ^ p p p i

bullbullKV

ncem Uvingrtoo Comity Public Health Service will

rflnfeft lht a i l a t l Cferina Seed Sale as usual this yew Watch spac each week The penny Christshymas Health Swrf aids in promoting the health of the children of Livingston County

- i j

44

THE PMCMNEY DISPATCH bull39c

1 mm) mumming MAKING 6O0D IN A SMALL TOWN

Reml- Stories About Reml Girls mdash

amppound

m

t^r

By MRS HARLAND H ALLEN

DYEING FOR YOUR FRIENDS

SETTIN6 THUMfP ONTUKRHHWIS

F R r E C H E S T CLIN1C8 KCEP TUBERCULOSIS INFECTION

UNDER CONTROL

Baby Betty is just one of the many hundred children who each year arc brought to the Free Chest Clinics ei

^A I ff

flwrsday November 20th Sale Begins at 10 oclock Sharp

FREE LUNCH AT NOON

HORSES Black mare 15 yrs old wt 1000 Black mare 14 wt 1000 lbs CATTLE

Halfblood Brown Swiss cow 9 giving milk bred Oct 5

Durham Cow 7 giving milk Three quarter Brown Swiss cow

amp giving milk Durham Heifer 2 due Jan 30 Durham-Heifer 2 fat 2 Durham calves 2 Durham Calves 9 months old 1 Durham Calf 4 months old HOGS

i oland China Sow one year old 5 Spring Shoats HAY AND GRAIN ETC Quantity of Hay Stack of Rye Straw Corn Stalks 600 bu Sorted Yellow Dent Corn CO Fence Potts 70 f t Black Wahrat Lumber FARM TOOLS Land Roller YcouW 2 Horse Cultivator 1 Horse Cultivator |L F Michel Fanning Mill

600 lb Scales Feed Cooker Truck Wagon Osborne Mower 60 Tooth Drag Favorite Grain Drill Bean Poller Hay Rake Tank Header Grindstone Corn Sheller Corn Planter Crosscut Saw Grain Cradle Log Chain Platform Spring Buggy Road Cart Spring Buggy Grain Bags 21 Potato Crates Hay Knife Hay Rope Harpoon Fork Set Work Harness 2 Single Harnesses 2 Ladders Drmp Boards Barrel Chum Water Separator 10 Gal Milk Can Coal Stove And Many Other Articles Too

Numerous to Mention

Terms of Sale All sums of $10 and under cash over that amount one years time will be given on good bankable notes at 6 per cent

Lambert PERCY ELLIS Auctioned

Pmckney 14 Fowlerville 7

Continwed from ftrat page

Then Captain Hourbonrwiis called Ms men around him and scathingly deshylivered his opinion of the team whose mediocre playing was giving their opshyponents an easy vctory He exhorted fhetn to yet in the jrame and show Iowlerville the real simon-pure Pinck-ney brand of football After this ) enrt-to-heart tongue lashing came a t omplete reversal of form for the conshytesting elevens Pinckney secured the lgtal and the lMnrkney fighting spirit domineered the battle until the whistle thrieked the finish with two touchshydowns nnd goals to the credit of the rnti-muendnirnt warriors nnd i final wore of 11 to 7

The score does not tell the real story laquogtf the game ns all the breaks of luck verc in favor of the visitors At one Itntc iVickncy h-nl t-ikM iilt Iill and Mriroming the stubborn resistance 1 as steadily ga ltbull until only a few i bullbull( separated (he pigskin from goal bull he opposition growing weaker and vcsker when the whistle signalled the 1 nd of that quarter stopped proceed-bulllraquogt gave Fowlerville a very much de-ftred chance to rent and recuperate and plated the bull in safer territory for then The Fowlerville boys wrrr accomshypanied by a large number of enthosi lStic supporters who thronged the sde-

bull bullbullIfet and cheered their favorites ltereU|rhout the entire jrame Kven j bullvhen their team frJsjr weary and dis- j

^ ffceartened under Hnckneys repeated t-l -JlSlaUgftts the Fowlerville supporters vS^raquosielaquond skirted were untiring in their

w -ltrifofts for encouragement This loy-^ tIty was worthy of better results but vftet that first disastrous touchdown bull f

Vv traquolaquo nnckney team was transformed ^bullbullbulltfioinbend of mHd football players

bull lnttf a flatting writhing unleashed rjrcjfciie of veritable fury bucking the vi skirting the ends ineaking

tkc seeratagjy invulnerable bullf basic wStfV laquoraquod siaew for rain j

iffifm|tMi amp victory Anally reward- Leoisjeir -aespersee saons ^JHKfc4ampampmMttradere nd with

ience be-

j to the last was outclassed after the ( firlt| touchdown At one time with the ball in their own possession--the bitjirr team was forced back back ajrain and a^ain for larjre losses until

conipelled to ineffectually resort to the i forward pass There is the lesson of loyalty at lest to be learned from football jrames played here this voir ler visiting teiii has been accompanied by enthusshyiastic contingents of its home town supporters who came to help with their

ipiesence while their players were I buttling in the arena Why not folshylow this example in loyalty and when liickrtey visits other towns for an afshyternoon contest lets show- our appreshyciation of a really fine football team

by ffoinjr alonjr and showing the ltiut-sifi world how proud wc are of the 1 DJ V Pitickney team

Friday Nov 1 linckney ]i|ays a reinrn jrame at Fowlerville Inless there is a complete reversal of form raquoin either team Pincknev should win this jrame Hut they will hae to work for it as Fowlerville players are ( -Ic-mincd to win

Wedding The wedding anniversaries are

First cotton seroml paper third lenther fourth rruit and flowers fifth wooden sixth sugar seventh woolen eighth India rubber ninth willow tenth tin eleventh steel twelfth silk and linen thirteenth Ince fourteenth Ivory fifteenth crysshytal twentieth chisa twenty-fifth silver thirtieth pearl fortieth ruby fiftieth golden seventy-fifth diashymond

n ^ R B Itinerant dyer-by-the-day brings Mohimmed to the mountainmdashthe

Mohammed of the paint pots to the mountain of almost Immovable davenshyports and armchairs

The woman toucher-up may renshyovate with her magic dyes houseshyhold fnrnlshinss that cannot be dipped She has and needs no ofshyfice she simply Soelaquo from house to house office to office or to dubs theshyaters hallsmdashwherever in fact there is touching up to be donemdashcarrying with her a simple but efficient dyeing Service

Theres a iure to the business of freshening and brightening by the strokes of a brush says a woman who Is known as interior redecorator of her small town The work reshyquires nothing but an eye for color ami a certain skill with the brush And it supplies earthly necessities as wii as esthetic satisfaction

The plan is simply this The special dye intended for the purpose is applied to sofa carpet wall coveringsmdashanyshything about the house hall or office that needs recoiwringmdashwith an ordishynary paint brush scrub brush or on larpe surfaces a special kind of tank spray which mary be had from the manufacturers of the dye This colorshying process is much simpler than dyo-inir by dipping It is almost as easy as palntinj Thefdyer can do the rugs rUht on the floorwall coverings right 01 the wall

The dyer may also get the job of dyeing things othter than the unremov-aMe ones then_she will not use her special dyes suitable only for heavy textiles rugs hanfttigs couch ami chair coverings For dyeing by lipshyping she will -use the ordinary dyes with which the average person Is best acquainted tine ones for coloring blouses handkerchiefs and other delishycate articles The interior redecorate does well to carry both kinltN of dye and to understand the methods of usshying both

The successful dyer-by-the-day Is sure to make good financial returns She will probably have practically no competition for the line is ns yet little known She should advertise In the local papers for her customers and spread the news of her project to her friends by personal communication

The dyer will of course never ex poriment on the possessions of tier customers Cntil she becomes export sip must read even-thing she can find on the technical details of dyeing proc esses and she must follow directions Implidtly

(SJ l lt4 WMlirr Nlaquowspaplaquor Union)

ALL FOR HEALTH HEALTH FOR ALL

THATS THI8 CRUSADERS WAR CRY AS SHE FIGHTS FOR

BETTER HEALTH

Betty Awaits The Doctors Verdict

the Michigan Tuberculosis Associashytion Her parents are wiBe They know that 65 per cent of all children in the United States between Ave and fifteen are infected with the germ of tuberculosis

It is but a step from tuberculosis infection to the disease itself Herein lies the wisdom and necessity of frequent chest examinations by comshypetent physicians

Tuberculosis Christmas Seals supshyport Free Chest Clinics all over Miebi

gan Such clinics j are a ctitch in I time against the most insidious of c o u r s e s t h e plague which in the last ten years killed 31196 men women and chilshy

dren of Michigan Christmas Seals fight tuberculosis

Buy them Give Health Ready-Made Critic

Man must serve his time to every trade Save censure critics all are reidy mademdashByron

Doubter Not Wanted I will listen to any ones convicshy

tions but pray keep your doubts to yourselfmdashGoethe

iHiiiiniimiHMnmniiHiiiHuimmniliiii

Santa Makes Merry llilliliillll(iiitiliiliiilililllillllllllllllillll

Mamp

Heres Mary Elisabeth all ready to wage war against dirty hands falte and teeth enemies of Better Health Shes a Modern Health Crusader of the Michigan Tuberculosis Association

ftwiiiMm M_II

Santa Claus sometimes jokes with f( Iks big and little nnd he nearly always has some comic toys for the children This yerr ho will leave them fvnny spoon dolls made of paper picnic spoons and dressed in crepe paper clothes A clown doil with dangling less a Chinaman and a Puritan have had their pictures taken so that any one can make them

mdasho-

LUDENS MFNTHOL CfiJCH SKCPS

fV il f f

mdash which fights disease of all kinds She sleeps at least ten hours erery nifht with her windows open she likes milk and she eats only those oods that healthy happy children should have

Healthy children cant succumb to tubercntoej Making frail children strong is one 0 the duties of the Christmas Tuberculosis Seals Buy Christmas Seals and help Mary Elisshyabeth and other Crusaders fight tushyberculosis which strikes where toast expected

State of Michiirtn the Probate Court for the County of Livingston

t i session of sfiid Court held at the Probate Office in the City of Hov-ell in said County on the 24th dny ot October A D 1924

Present Hon Willis L Lyons Judge of Probate

In the matter of the estate of Perry Blunt Deceased

A M Roche having filed in said court his petition praying for license to sell the interest of said estate in certnin real estate therein described

It is ordrred thnt the 24th day of November A D 1924 at l e n oclock In the forenoon at said probate office be and is hereby appointed for hearshying said petition nnd that all persons interested in said estate appear before said court at said time and place to show cause why a license to sell the interest of said estate in said real esshytate should qot be granted

It is further ordered that public noshytice thereof be given by publication of a copy of this order for three sue-cMwdve weeks previous to said day of hearing in the Pinckney Dispatch a newspaper printed nnd circulated in said county

WILLIS L LYONS Judge of Probate

A true copy Celestla ParshaU

Register of Prtbats

f l

s

are in styles that are very late

Most of them fur-trimmed

Beautiful shades of reds and browns aswell as grays and blacks Suedine cloths velours and Bolivia

The prices are most reasonable

$1676 $2475 $3975 $5275 We should like to show you any time

JJ

MEN who come to us from Pinckshyney always have demanded style and quality

OUR answer has always Y pound Smdash-and even morlt a moderate price

been

amp bull

Just Now t 1 laquo

we are showing a fine line of all wool suits at

$25 $30 $35 $40 We will be pleased to show you

Mmikg m-