The South Lyon Herald to do In case of a,, attack? Doctor: “It Isn’t necessary, You’ll do...

1
!Cias~y & Adam., Attorneys At Law, 416 PontIac Dank Bldg., Pontiac. STATE OF MICHIGAN, The Probate Court for the County of Oakland. At a session of said Court, held at the Probate Office in the City of Pon- tine, In said county, ~op~ the 18th lay of’JUniA. fl. 1040. Present, Ron, Arthur Ii, Moore, Judge of Probate. - In the Matter of the Estat, of ORR KATHRyN, Deceased. C, Bryan Kinney, ‘administrator de bonis non with will annexed of said es- tate, having filed in said court a pett- •tion praying that the time for the presentation of claims against said es- tate be limited and, that a time and place be appointed to receive, examine sad adjust all claims and demands against said deceased by and before Bald court, It is Ordered, that two months from this date be allowed for creditors to present claims against said estate. It is Further Ordered, that the 0th day of September l940’at nine o’clock in the forenoon, at said probate office, be and is hereby appointed for the cx- aminatloa and adjustment of all claims agaInst saId deceased. AltTIWlt K MOORE, a true copy. Judge of Probate, Mausice B. Finnegan Deputy Probate Register. 26-28e Guest In Hotel, “Manager, please send me up a full length mirror,” MaItre d’Hotel, “Why there Is a half length mirror In every room.” Guest, “That’s just tl,e trouble. Twice already, I’ve gone down to the dining room without my trousers.” . Sailor, “Can I have a room with a shower?” Innkeeper, “Wal, young feller, I can give you a room that leaks, but I’ll be derned If I kin guarantee rain.” C C Recruit, ‘Doctor, I am particularly liable to seasickness, Can you tell me what to do In case of a,, attack? Doctor: “It Isn’t necessary, You’ll do It,” ‘Streamlined’ tsglnir To conform with the color scheme of one streamlined train, the engS. fleer and his assistant are dressed In white Instead of In the usual blue overalls, ThE SOUTH LYON HERALD. Battle d New Oricue Two weeks after the war of 1812 ended the battle of New Orleans was fought. CommunIcatIons wet. so bad that word did not reach either army In time. SOUTH LYON. MICH. THURS., JUNE 27, 1940 Mr. and Mi.. Clarence Musolf. who reside on the old Foote farm on Spen- cer road, had as guests at dinner Sun- days Mr. and Mrs. ,J.’ B. Brayton and famIly of Howefli Mr. and Mn. Au. gust Musoif of Stockbrldge; Mr. and Mn. Harold Muaolf and Mr. and Mrs. Donald Whybrew and family of Greg- ory. The occasion was the host’s birthday, Malay .Trsvd txperfitans Last year motor travel espendi- turn afl%Otfl%ted to $5,000,000,000- Of this amount It Is estimated that $1,000,000,000 was spent for gaso- line, oil repairs and garaging; $1,000,000,000 for sleeping accommo- dations. $i.~0,0C0,00Ofor camping supplies, souvenirs and IncIdental purchases; $1,060,000,000 for meals. $400,000,000 for golf, theaters and other amusements, and 1300,000,000 for pop, hot dogs and other refresh- ments along the way. -w For Sale and Want COLUMN MIXED HAY ‘For Sale 3105 EIght-Mile Rd., .~ . H. Ryan, phone 10122. ltpd Gn.n 06 Pkwz TO LET alfalfa Hooper, ON SHARES, 14 hay, ready to cut. phone lUll. acres of It. S. Ite FOR IIBNT—4 room furnIshed ‘apart- ment at 705 B. Lake St. Frlvatren- trance. 2fpd Volt SALE—Cornplete line of Inseeti- tides for every orchard, field and garden need. Wlxom Co-Opt. MODERN, furnIshed apartment, B. J, Pollock, 118 Wells, Phone 101W. Itp VOlt SALE—48 acres of clover and ‘timothy hay, Ray Duncan, phone 20F18. 25.2Cc FOR SALE—Oak buffet and dining room table. It. J. Pollock, phone 101W. 2512CC FoR SALE—’About 20 acres alfalfa - hay on the ground, for’ensh or share. Mrs Eobt, Warden, phone 03F22. 2Cc FOR SALE—Good cook stove, burns wood or coal, In good conditIon, Mrs. WIlliam Butcher, 318 Godfrey St. . Itpd WANTBDII’—Oo.od, acan, Used Furnl- tore for CASH or EXCHANGE, PRIVATE SALES ANYTIME at 851 PENNIMAN AVE., PLYM- 017tH, MIch. Terms, Cash! I asa open for Small or Large SAbES, HARRY C. ROBINSON, AucUonee, Phones 200 or .7, Plymouth Ex- change. , . tJuly lp roü SALE—lO good building. lots.in South Lyon, $100 end,. Also sIx- room house, Russell Calldns, South Lyon, . 20-tic I~OU SALE,—Iee-hoxj.100-lb.-capacity: Will se!l for $1.00, Mrs. C. 0. Unce, 430 B, Center, east’ of Brangnrs, or Inquire at Shoe Repair Shop. Ite DANCING SCHOOL—Dafldng taught by appointment by the DancIng Bal- leys, formerly on the stage and cx. hiblting for the leading ballrooms of the country, Teachers of fancy, ball- room and tap dancing, It will be worth your while to give us an 1st- tervlew, Located at 182 Randolph St, 5 Northville, Phone 864. Satf FOR SAI 1 E—Onrland cook stove for wood and conl~ brass bed, complete; three’quarter Iron bed, complete, and Iron bcd with springs. John Mason, phone 21FI2, ltc FOIl SAI,E—ilrolters, 2 lbs. andup, also field of hay. Clement Smith, - l)honet!lli~Vest S-Mile road , 2CC I,AWNMOWERS. SHARPENED and ADJUSTED, Free delivery service, Phone South Lyon 151F21, ‘I’, E, Kelly, New Hudson, 2otfe SPECIAL SUMMER & FALL PItIC- “ES”ON’LIMESTONErAftcrJufle l,t our prices Will be $285 per ton delivered; $1 per acre for spreading. ‘1’. A. Fletchcr, New Hudson, 8840 East Grand River, Phone South Lyon 16F22, 2ltfe WANTED TO RENT LIo’use In South Lyon or vicinity. It. J. VincI, phone South, Lyon 29F12. 26 p \VANTED—Mnn to work by day, hay- ing. Call Northvllle 7140F6. 20pd2ttfe WE PAY sian ewt. for RAGS. Deal- cr5 in PAPER, RAGS, LEAD and IRON. N’orthville Waste Material Co., 455 K Cady, Northville, Phone Northvlllc 156W, tfc WANTET)—5 to 20 acres with build- ings. Have .~00 cash as payment, Ray linker, 129 West St., Northyille, phone 222. ltp FOR SALE—lat quality Rhode Island Re,l llahv (‘hicks, I day to 2 weeks old, ERNEST 11AM, 34118 OAK’ LAND ltOAl), FARMINGTON. lSt2lpd DAIlY ChICKS—BLOOD TESTED. Our 22 years of caref,ii breeding In- Mires you of High Grade Chick,. Prices $3,.~O to $8.85 hundred. flur’klIngs, S 15.00. Custom hatching $2.50 hundred eggs. I3rooders, sup’ plies, save mnney, OAKLAND 11111, l’nt,ltry Farm, Orchard I,akc Road, Fnrmington, Phone 589-R-2. lOtf Las e~~t Fealty to colonies. cities and towns, es well as Icyalty and patriotIsm to government. was de- mended 01 the colonial citizenry ~$ years ago, and there were thtae let led for disparaging remarks against them. The WPA historical recerda riney found that a resident of Bet- tea was ftsed 10 shillIngs In 1661 be- cause be said that “three monsters were born ha Boston.” The tech. ales! charge was tying, . Necp ‘BlaekeeV VialS. Tb. dark nights and shortage ci Imported forelga furs in London have set the cat thieves to work, and cats have been disappearIng en a wholesale scale. Animal welfare authorities believe organized gangs are responsible, for the pelts of Persian cats or others can be dyed and used In the manufacture of cheap coats. welsh Alphabet inehacter For mere than 40 years 83-year- old Moses Jones has been teaching school children the Welsh alphabet In a Cardiff, Wales, Sunday schooL Ho has received presents for his work, yet he can neither read nor write. . flaKe Is IbSe Ia StirS The sable Is ,~sms11 mammal be- longing to the weasel family. It is native to sabeS and Is closely it- lated to the North American pIne marten. The animal is usually not e,n a fret and a half In length, Its ma, which covers nan IS fed and S Ia a luafreiss dark brown. with grayish-yellow spots on the sides of the neck. Babies are somewhat dli- dealt to capture and are caught In true qapeelally deals to prevent injury to their valuable far. Large Was~lskn Et Ralph Boys of LaCezter~ Wet, tIled one of the largest elks ever seen In the district, The animal, which had seven-point antlers, weighed 60 ~ drneed and mist have weighed 1,000 pounds alive. Three horns were required to pack the animal four miles I. camp. - IbM tansoen~ TrIp The first automobile to. cross the United StaIn—b 1001—took 01 days fovthethp. Wgast Aidflen Peat Tort Bragg, N. C., Is said to be ~the Ingest artllien reservation in the world. Itenc of Interest Frow Other Commimifies News that Will. . taIwan Yea—clipped Prom Oar WesMy Eschsune BIRMINGHAM—SatIsfying a bug- held ambition, the Rev. W. Glen Ear- . rig, pastor of the First PresbyterIan church, rode In the engine cab of a stream-lined train as he sped to his native Texas on Tuesday. Somehow, he secured a pass from the Rock IsI- and railroad t 0 ride the engine from ‘Kansas City to Topeka. PLYMOUTH—The story of the “biggest” fish caught on the opening . of the fishing season for the present year comes from LouIs Knnke of Ann Arbor road, who landed a northern pike, weighing nearby nine pounds. The fish measured 33 Inches In length. He landed the pike while castIng for bass isi Patterson laker about six miles south of Howell. MILFORD—Milford and Highland e Methodist churches are among those . affected by changes in pastorates as . directed by the Conference at PontIac Inst week. Rev. H. B, Duttweiler, pas- for here for three years, is transferred to Warren Avenue church In the city . of Saginaw. Coming to assume the charge here will be Rev, Ben Holcomb late of Brlghtmoor. : CHARLOTTF,—WIth a view of beautifying station grounds, land’ Benped flower garde,,, have made their appearance this spring at many sta- tiorss on the Wand Trunk.Canadlan National Railways, In some Instances, flower gardens have replaced unsight. ly areas around transfer yards and switch shanties. ~ Employees are taking a great interest In beautifying sur— roundineg and in addition to working the plots in spare moments from do- tIes, many frequently work in railway garden plots far into the evening. . . Farm Women’s Week July 21-25 Qffers Interesting Program Plans for Fnnsi Women’~Week, lu- Iv 21 to.28, are beIng rapIdly complet’ ed Mrs. Lola 1’. Dudgeon, County Home Extension Agent, urges home- . n,akers Interested Ip attendIng, to send in reservations at once, to the county extension office, Box 173, Pon~ .e- thoc. The program promises to be un- usually interesting. Outstanding speakers, an opportun- lty to particIpate In any of the 17 special study classes, recreation pro- grams, devotlonnls, a stunt night and a banquet are all scheduled during the week. Fridny, July 26,will see many . of the women Joined by their husbands coming to the campus to take In the annsinl Farmers’ Day Infonnntionnl program out On the farm and on the cisrispuis, Speakers for the ~ programs lncl,s,Ie Dr. H. Y. McCluskv of the school of education of the University of MIchigan. Ills subject Is “Youth of Asqerlcn,” Another is Dr. \V, B. Fee of the MIchIgan State College history dcpssrttsuent stnff and his subject, “W’orid Affairs”; Mary Sweeney of Merrlll—P,,lrs,er school In Detroit, !‘Comi,e Around the World with Me”; and l)r. Alonzo l3dker, Battle Creek, fIel,l secretai’y of time Race Betterment I”oundation, “What’s RIght With itm- crlca’’, Mr, Wnrren Brown, Marshall, Is to lend devutionnls each morning. Mrs. S. E. Bellows, East Lansing, I, to give a talk on nntlques Tuesday nftcr- noon. Sul,jects scheduled for ,iinrni ng classes Include hIstory, lanclscnping, literature, nature study, news writing, political science, pnrllnsnentnry law, recreation, speech, singing, floriculture clothing, house furnishIngs, family life, vegetable gnrdcning, qunllty foods and poultry, Sunday, July 21, is reserved for registration, wIth an evenIng vesper service, Stunt night is scheduled for Monday, a tour of the cRillIsims on Tuesday, summer school -*:~~_ - __ play for W’ednesdav and a banquet ‘l’iiursclny evening. . OPENS NEW LAW OFFICE Attorney Roy II~Lockwood of Dc’ troll, well known here, is announcIng his wIthdrawal frost, the finn of Atkinson, Donnelly & I.yon, 1703 Ford Building, nod the openIng of his office fur the general practice of l”~” at I 7119 Ford E;illdinw, Detroit, July 1 st, 1 9-10. IN APPRECIATION I wish t 0 expres 5 my sincere gratl- ti:de to tIle l’reshyterlan Ladies’ ,-~id, Dorms class, F,xtcnsiun group, Mer- fl Makers, neighbors and friends who 5~~ k I ml I ~ re u,en,l,eresl ‘IIe w ~ t Ii f n~i I owl fl,,,scrs. lunkeil good.q ,cnrds (l,lrtls- tIn; sho~ver) letters, personal cilia, so ,IIqO~, kInd ,,Iessages, nod the little he:] tol’lt’ ,, ~g,il,,, I thank ~ all Mrs. lllrlin rd ‘I’, ‘Irish Those isav4ng news For publication in the Haraid are urge~lto get it to this office at least by Wednesday noon. We cannot insurs publication of any copy received Inter titan that, unless it is of an important nshire 5 We pick up DRY CLEANING Pc LAUNDRY at noon. RACE’S SHOE REPAIR SHOP. tfc Margaret Allen and Paris White Marry b Ohio Saturday MIss Margaret Allen, youngest In the family of Mr. and Mrs. Claris Al- len, and Paris White, son of Floyd White of Arkansas, were married at Napoleon, Ohio, Saturday morning, June 29th, at 0s00 o’clock, by Dallas Young, Justice of the Peace. Their attendants were Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Jones of Northville. The bride wore a frock of pale blue satin; her bridesmaid wore a rose color dress, - - - They are lIving at the J. 3, Smith apartment, East. Lake street. The groom is employed by the Michigan Seamless Tube Company, 0 Helpful Notes From the Fann by Robart F. McCrory Feeding Càws On Pastures Experiments on pasturing dairy eat- tIe carried on by the Bureau of Dairy- ing of the I,J..S. D. A. show that large cows may grase ns much as 150 pounds of good pasture a slay and thus secure enough feed to make near- ly two pound, ~f butterfat. These In- vestigations also show that much less grass is consumed when the pasture is not young and abundant. Under such circumstances it is necessary to fees! extra roughage In order to main- tam prodsiëtion, - At this season of the year a great many- farmers will find It desirable to feed cows Borne hay. To keep cattle producing satisfactorily- it Is necessary to give them all the roughage they will eat, If the pasture does not supply their needs, it should be supplemented. The amount of grain to feed will depend largely On the pr6ductlon of the individual cows and the quality of the -pasture, Cows in medium or low production require little or no grain On good pasture. Cows in heavy’pro- duetion do require some grnln,- al’ though less when on good pasture than when fed entirely in the barn. -When pastures are abundant and gm’een, little, If any, high protein feed need be added to the concentrate mix- tore. When the pasture Is dry and browis, increase the high protein feed In the concentrate mixture. Home grown grains snny be used In the proportion in which they are avail- able, At the present time farm stand wheat can be used to advantage. Be sure to keep a box containing equal parts of salt and steamed bone- meal where the stock may have free access to It at nil times, - CLEAN DARNS Clean barns nrc good Insurance against the spread of disease, Of coslrse~everydalrrfittm ~ F shbiildb~ directed t 0 keepIng all Infections out of his herd for it I, not possible with a diseased herd to get It on a profit— able basis. Diseases are carried Into time barn in so many ways that the use of disinfectant, froum ti,sie to time in time driveways, gutters and even the feed manger Is not out of place. It is the practIce of m,mny good dairy form- cr5 and Indeed a very wise one, to usc Iliac, a nilisl dIsinfectant In the drive’ ‘visys and walks after the barn has been cleaned, If this Is mimhxeel witlm a little ground limestone, It helps to pre— sent the cows from slipping seilen they conic in fr,mm a sutidtly ~‘~srd. Mrs. ~,;;~; Mother In Critical Condition Mrs. Alex. 51mw ret,mrned fromis Eliwoo d CI ty, l’s:. , i%tonday nI gIlt, a tee spendIng two weeks there to he near her ,s,other, Mrs. D. 5, Conner, who i’ In a critIcal condItion in Eli- wood City hospItal. Mrs. Shaw will re- turn there agaIn ofter beIng at honme foe two weeks,. \trs. Conner hpt been 11fl1Wii55$tnfl~vtrwcuksfllswnfte fell and broke a leg below the Imip. Al- though tile hreak has healed beyond all expectations her conditIon other- wIse is very critical, W•C.T.U. At Spring Farm Next Week The ~V. C. T. U. wIll meet at the Spring f,,rn,, Dixhoro road, next week Th’srs:lny, wIth Mrs. CIa renc’c So,itl, as hostess, Coopcra tlve di nner at I nIl. Mrs. Elizai,,,ti, ErwIn of Detroit wIll i,i- gllcst Sb5c;l <er. LOCAL NEWS Mrs. I i:’leo hlras.s, Nra- York City, nod ?,Iiss Nellie l,lllicbrn, \Vhlhij,,,ist,,n, blr,Ilse ttlC’.IS If II,,’ Ile,’,s:ans act ueek, rtIlIrilrlh I., Ihele respecti~’e hi,su,rs LISt l’’rb,l;iv. ltnl,hle ,bn:lrs, Coo of Mr. noel 3lrs, Albert Lllll~S, i~i slhlihhIlg ,lsv;IV 1 l’s,rl— nilrbIt hit (‘blhr;Ig.’, }s,’iIl~ -i,,,’to t}’n sighIt~~ If Iii,’ ribs’ Ii~ hli~.11101, \Irs. .1 i, ek 1< r,L k z.~ky. Mr. sn:l \Ir~, Fred llou’er~, I 2’~bile ronil, rnt,’rbai:i-,b Mr antI Mrs. (‘?~sr- CIl~’e Mire ,n,l fl,sIs.’rt leo of br,- I’orte, I,,s], 1.1cr Sn nlbrlv, \ir, ~foorr is II n:’hshle’~’ ,lf ~irs lln~cera. Crop Iusiwaiice Date Moved Up ApplicatIons must he made and premiums paid for Federal “ail risk” crop Insurance op wInter wheat two weeks earlier In Oakland County this year than last, Walter It. Cook, Chairman of the Oakland County AAA CommIttee, reported last week. ApplIcation mast he made and the premIum paid for mnsuraoce on the 1041 crop before the crop is seeded or by August 81, whichever is earlIest, he - said. Last year lisa deadline in Michigan was September 15, Aside from this earlier closing date and a few minor adminIstrative changes, the 1041 program is the snme as the 1930 program. Appilen- tions will be taken it the- Oakland County AAA office and the County AAA committee will handle local administration of the program, According to won] received from Leroy K. Smith, manager of the Feel- cml Crop lnaurspce Corporation, a revision Is being nia,le in the yields farmer, may Insure in 19-Il, This re— vision Is the result of hringing the effect of actual recorded yields Into the yield and rate .ctructure, The yield and premium rate are deter- mined for each lndis’Isl,,nl farm on the basis of Its yield and loss experi— ence over a period of years, A brief summary of the main points of the 1041 insisrance program at, given by Mr. Cook, f,’llows: I Any farmer eoniiiiybng with the provisions of the cr0 1 ) insurance program may inasire “P to 75 per cent of the avernç,e yield of his acreage. The insurance is stated in terms of bushels, - - 2, Applications will lIr made for In- suirance on ~the f,,bl wheat acreage allotment unless it l.a certaIn less than the allotment wilt he seeded, in - which ease the insurance will cover the actual acrellge to i,e seeded. No insurnnre wihl be writ- ten On acreage plantesl in excess of the 1041 AAA acreage allotments, 8. The premium rAte Is computed separately for earl, farm and is based on the risk involved in grow- ing wheat on that Particular farm, averaged with the 11155 experience of the. county In wb,icl, the farnm Is located. Premiums are stated in terms ofhushels. ‘I’lley may l,e pn!d with a warehouse receipt for wheat in storage, in the east, eqimiv- alent, or by means of an advance against payments to he earned un- der the AAA program. 4. A crop Insss,nnee contract may be used as coibateral security for a current loan. - 5. In ease a grower’s crop fails to produce the insured amount, through no faimli or neglect on his part, he may claim an indemnity whIch in bushels Is suffIcIent to hring his prodmsetlön up to the in- sured amount. Mr. Cook said that 12 Oakland County farmers, linder the I 939 cro~, insurance progranl, receIved inclemnI- ties totaling 0-15 bushels. 2;OOOTConr~kts’=~ - In M. S. C. Tests - Hundreds of test strains of corn on the %liciuigs,o St,,te College forum ml Elist I.anslog ~rihi ‘‘get the sack” first literally mmci then figuratively this 5,ln,,,,ee as resencci, alen olItIlIn an— other year’s res,l it a in finding the best corn vu rletles sulteil to sections of Michigan, - The II tee,, I Salk I ng is IndIcated in a~, ,,nlee for 38,11 paper hugs need’ ccl liv A. Ii.. \r,rst,,n, corn seeding spc,’iohist, ‘l’lit’s,, hIllIer sacks still ‘c ‘I semi i o Ca I’ IIII t he appa re n t ly ,lesi r— aIsle lilants to l’llntrsml fcrtihilali,,r, and 11,11, to k’l,,,u~’ the breeding re— lireseated ium t bc seed crop this cons— lag fail, Eight tisollsnn,] paper eli;ss for ‘olllo lunch i,,,llnr,l sacks ilsefl,l In smile of ti,, plau:l.a give an indi,’ali,,n of sonic of t se dclall tIme experimen— II, tI us, I n ~‘,,l ve~ ‘I’wo tii‘suss a n 1 iili~ ts of a hos, t ar plants each, of Ii eM and popcorn var~ ietles are Incls,,k’il. ‘lime test work is designed to ,lrIerr~,i ne charn rterlsties mf v,trIouss lines ,,t’ corn hrecding, ‘l’hose strnlns that appear ,leslraltbe ~ state for further tests to ,betern,lnc 3rkliis lsn— dcc various clisllahi,’ conditions, Corn borer ccci ~lan t corn, va rieties suitable foe “n ci liii S pa rts of I lie state and snltah,lr hybrids are being found, Over a period of years, in work “rigini,llc’ .ctrIrh,’,l il~’ .7, 14, Dun— can, retired a yes r a gn, the corn slot I ests ii ii ye i , n cliv i’ veil sum c’i, fa vi, riI es as Donra n’s ‘sri I ii” Dent, M , .~, C. and 1’,,bar Dent. a~ nell as such by— hsrimls as Mhchig.-u, I 21$, 21 ,~ a nil 71 A now to rissiiiii,’rrial produichion. IN APPRECIATiON - I a ii zen ti’ fi Fl sir a II ca rsls, flow’- ers anti ,,th,er ~rli’I’with whIch I was so generinish~’ rimii’i,,bereml while In St it’s:’ bill’s ‘‘‘“I’jud. Believe i’s:’, It SillS i~i;srrririb~il ‘lore thai, 1:15CC si’’srcbs ‘ii, ‘N ]:r:’~~. ,7,iii:i fl;ski,ni:s ,, Jr. I’ grsll}s ~t’ f ,ifl,~ fm,,, fl,.,lfi,rih, - Plyl,:.,iIhi, b),’tr,.iI, 1\’nlh,’cb I_nh-i’ S,iiihhs i.y’’,i, I,, tr!l~ Illl,,lh,rr 01’ hurt’, - tt’n,b,’ri’cl br’’ in I I,,l!I:I,l% ,, r Ihit~.\b.:}:eb i~I:Ilr;iri fir ji .tLr]:rl.,’ hihrhhuh:ir’ hr.: I::’ Sr,tiirih.: ~ llill;_~~ ‘I’hi,’ t ~ ‘ii p ‘l.a_s ph ca.. isith ‘‘.~‘‘ri t Ii, ,:,r,i.ishrisi,i,t, Jll::b lii,irli Irl,~: PS iii, ‘Ii,,’ h,irth:ila~’ pike n-i, h,..kprh I,~ \hrs, \\‘:lrrsii his’ suit ii’ I’:~-:,,,::,tIi. Business Outlook For Summer Roger Beheon Says It Is Annasnents Vrnae Peace Manchester, N. H., July 3. BusIness actIvity in the next two months should constantly Improve as a whole,—al— though some lines and localities will stiffer due to European condItIons. Statistics show that business is pick- Ing up every day, unemployment Is declining, and there is a much better spirIt among all business men. With newspapers full of uncertainties re- garding wars, national conventions, and other depressing items, It Is a re- lief to focus one’s attention on the good news coming from the domestic front, - The outlook for the- next few weeks is tied up with the defense program and the European war, The best an- thorities say, “the war will last three to -five months Or three to five years but they ref,ise to say which.” Huge British o r d er 5 (which ineli,de the former French or- den) plus America’s own armament program shouid, however, keep the heavy industries rolling in high speed for some time to conme, On the other. hand, if the European war ceases he— fore the American defense program can get well mmdcc way, there may he II temiiporary set-hack.-Y er, hefore time end of the year, hui,iness should he far helter in this country than it is now, - ‘BUSINESS -FIGURES RiSING C,mrrent statIstics show that activity is already nmoving along at a high 1ev- el. Freight esrlosdings have. reached new peak for ID-SO and are second highest- for any siu,ilnr week sInce 1930. Railroad earnings are the best in yea rs. t’et. prIces of’ railroad seeimri- ties have dri fted back to their I 932 low.q, - - Tçxtile miii. have stepped-imp sci,eml’ miles since the German armies destroy- ed ninny of the big nsill centers in Northern France and Belglimnm. Gray goods sales have been trenmendous in un: past few weeks, Rising retail males will help to work off inventories, which are said to be heavy. Automobile s.se,nbly lines have turned out nearly as many ears ~ a~ in any half yea? since 1929. The loss of tue export markets for atmtomohiles In the Low Countries and France Is more than made up by new busIness in other directions, ProductIon of cites in re- cent weeks has - been running above retail sales to stock Imp so timat plants Can make their model changes. Hepee, a decline in automobile production will now take place. ~ - STEELINDUSTRY ACTIVE Steel operations have snsa,hed theit w’,,s’ forward t 0 the highest level for this particular period since 1929, ~The end of tl,e war ismight imit the steel in- ilm,stry harder than Immost others, bust not necessarily, Inventories In coim— mm: users’ isam~ds are suit] to be even higher ‘than In Ioal. Our o’va arinms~ ,,,cnt ~mrogrluumm ss’tsttld tlikiuiWthislitek later on, lint there w,ul,l be a lc’t-cluwn i’ef.mre this happened. - - Armament induitriss are just he- ginning to feel the effects of time de’ fense programis. 1:10w niuicim they ni ii ,mc],I to the hmmsiness total in time next couple of amontl,s Is nncertnio just It.,~5’. I mm v est m,rs, bus si ness m,m e n , a nil wm,rke Cs S ii isu l1, lmosvever, k cep I is IIII nil flint thIs nation Is entering ui~m,smm time higgt’st arim,imnient ~srimgrii,i, ever mn— mlerti,ken liv iloy nimti,,n at ‘ny timmie. Timerefmsre, svlmi,t Is niss~’ on time hmm,mWs I.: m,m,’re s,mmmm~siImmg_ It is expeciemi iisist ‘I dlii,,,, u]imlli,rs will he slme,mt tm, In— crease nresemmt siiii,.~’imrmis, mm,tm,miti,m,m, mmliii ,rsrims,l ~i,i~mscit~- msmerely to take CII Ce o f the ii ii ge 0 r,lers w mi vim wII I he hime ed Retail trails Is relimi, rica si~’ go,,d. It is. running Ill her cent m~r immure Ili,ims’c I, year ago. ilest i-,mmm,parlsm~ns s’iiis I 939 levels are i’ommsing frmn,m the ioilimstrlal areas of this’ ~Ilclmllc’wesi, io,,rest frmsm,m tlue Sm,u,tim mod l’at’iflc Coast, Rising i’,syrssils r,meimn tlmmmt these galmms shoimid c,,ntl,sime, RECORD TOURIST SEASON Tourist business, Dime to time war in Rum rope and the i,esi tancy of cruising C’en to time West I ndies, Somm tI, .-\ nieri- - Ca , i~l,mska~an:l oIlier places. all .tcnmr~ 1st mmmonev will lie left in this e’’m,ntry pnil Cana da this yen r, TIme grea icr ef— forts ,vlmls’h tile railrm,aml and i,,ms lines a re making in developIng travel nod time ,‘ontin ml a I Ion of the two world fairs im,miirmmtr that timis Smmnmmm:er svlhl see tIme Ia rgest vilea thin season on re— Politic., The genera I I mupression is that tile iilatfmuh,m mmn,l nommmlne,’s of the ltepmiislirams Party are a very emsn— i,trmirtis’e mmli,’,’, It snrs’l~’ shmsm:imi m,,rike i.’. I). II . ‘‘count ten” hmrfmsre lie mu os fur im tImir,i tirimi ,.-\irm’ aml~’ the msmarket arts as if W’IIIklc soil Mt’Xar~’ mane a r,’al cliii ‘sri’. Security and commodity prices ire sl,’r:,iv Irs stronger. imm frut, tim,’~’ hiss ye me (‘imi,’~’ -rr’,i msmi,’—t birch .mf ti,,’l r i:r,’,ik, bli: hil,’nml ~:;iyIlIm.lmts 1Cm’ ui’m,:’r— 5115, m’riruimmvs sir’s ir,’:,i:.m,,l.m:r—. Secur,— ties are actually cheaper today in ,-e- istion to earnings than at any time 1 n the past twenty years, Ii:,’ ui—u s’sS u:itt,,,,l< fir tlii’ $:riii’ I’lm’r_ thim’rm’i’,irm., I., ii .‘‘‘r I ‘I’: ‘em’ miii’’ Ii:’ ‘,-I.},rimk, hisms si’:i’ r, st-sill ‘Lb ‘i’ ir,,ii -in ;iIri’~iiI~ iiir~i Ii’’-i’ I ‘‘I’ is’tj’i 1’’ . I h:’mii’r, ii,’Ij ‘‘i—i— lu-il I,: i—is::’—— :i. Si’sliii’:’ ~I’,’iiirb I ~‘i—ti’ ii ‘tm.,’ I’l-’ri i I’’-:,~ I-s’t .hiib~’ null .~ii:rii—.I. If II i,’::’s’,’.,, iris:: :,‘~ , ‘lisp rsrtiiImIimril pr’: Yr Ii: Si :11 I.,. 1(1 Ii H’’’ ilrr,’IsI I ,‘‘i- I ‘.1 ictj’.lIi, Wiiiii~i (Turn to BAliSON—Page 4) Christmas Cactus Blooms July 4t¼ Snake Tries to Swallow Chick A ChrIstmas cactus owned by Mm. George Joslin, XIne-Mile road, is a beautiful sight this July Fourth, be. ing covered with a,any lovely bloon,s. OrdinarIly these cacti bloons at Christ- nina time, and this plant hmts never be- fore had two hioámlng seasons In a single year. The plant measures ahout two feet in diameter. Its blooms mire It rich shade of fusbla pInk. S C 5 Mrs. E. D. Mack of the Hunter farum heard a dimturbanee among her chickens Tuesday afternoon and went to investigate the cause of all the cackling. To her surprise she saw a airge snake that had caught a young chicken (5 weeks old) and was at- tempting to swallow It, The snake was promptly disposed of, but the cx- perieaee had cost the life of the chick- en, Mrs. Mimek says she isn’t much amithorlty on Identifying snake,, but she believes the reptile was a commmsn streaked snake. Its head, with the chicken still in its mouth, was preserv- ad awhile for proof to ,mnbelievers, 0— - N. Jones President Of Stone Reunion Time Stone -school reunion held at the school five miles east of South Lyon on the ‘I’en Mile road, Snt,mrduy, June 29 was attended by aho’mt -1(5 for— “Cr pupils mind teaclmers nnd their fammm— iiies, . ‘the crowd assembled in the school -roonm for a bountifui dinner which wi’s followed by a progran,, .Ail smmng “America’’ led by I-larry Isogartof Pontiac, wlti, Shirley Schoc- sow of l’lymmiouith as pianist. J, .1, Mc- Whortem’ offered prayer. -‘File secretary - Miss Margaret Carpenter of North,- vilie rea,l her report, and a letter from,, a former nmupil, David Brooks of Seattle, Wasl,ington, The Memorial gave the names of six’ wimo im,md passed on- durIng the year. They were, Wilson Lane, Mills Black’ wood, Edward Kennedy, Mrs. charles Cole, whose maiden nm,n,e was Sarah Cork, Fred Dodge of Detroit, and Stu- art Greer of Pontiac. - The group decided to meet next year at the schmsul grounds on the last Saturday in June. Mrs. \‘eena Gage McClure of River- side, Call fornia, mu forimier pupil, gaye ,, short tmmlk imbout C,ilifornlmt weatimer, Harry Bogart gmive a brief slimmmnmary of his trip to the west coast last Sep— ti’umi,er, and advised all who eosmld to see smsme of time bem,utles of otmr coun— try, David Wilson of Ann Arbor gave - lw,, request reeltatioas whiclm ali ea— joycd. - Officers were - elected as foli,,ns’sm President, Newton Jones; VIce Fees,, Harry Bogart; Sec —‘I’ reas,, Mrs. Jas. Clnpj~, Pontiac. After a song, “My Bmsnnle”, time crowd adjummrned to the scim’o,,i ymurd for sonic arousing contests at_wi,icl,_Byron Greer -an,l dam,gimtcr J%mlene of Ilartlan,l, Mr. Bogart and Dmtwsun Mm,solf -were prize Winnero. Mrs. EariGrubb, 62, Invalid For 9 Years Died At Her Home N rs, Earl (Jr,mhh i’assesl an’msy at ib,,mit ilman ~lmmm,:l,m~’ night, .ltiiy 1st, ot her hi,mm,me On l’t’er r,,mul. She rims a’s imit’aliii ,,,,il hmmii nmmt w,slked fist nine yt’i,riI, i”,sr t lie isast. two weeks her health, mail not beem, mus good ‘us usu,ml tmit her iit’mmuise t’am,me as 5 surprise to imer f:m,,,jI~- and friends. She was sIt— iIu,g mm sir cimi,le ,tnti ~\1r_ Grmsbh was I iy iso r s-I ,Ic svii c m, the emid smiclele imly Cl IImII’. the funeral was held at her . Imer lute liisume this \Vednest]ay after— flmmm,~m it 2mImi) :,‘cioek, Re”, Elisi \S’i,ms— bvrlu- pastor 0 f time First l’remhyterlmsn chmimrc’Is iii charge, Intermneot in South Lymso cemimetery, Mary EiIzaI,cti, r,nppin, one of four children ,if ,\Ia cvi n and Olive 1-Imull b.Iip~mimm, was born near Kent, 01mb, I’t’i,rsm,mry U, 1878, timsi is,,d reached tile m,ge sf (i’2 years. She ,,tten,ied school at _Xcnt I msJ’er y outh, graduating (rim,,, tIme highs school there, I-let -fatlmer died v.’imt’n SIft. WOt II years old, On Su’teusher 7, 1898 she mmsarrled i:arl (Jrmzbb of that vicinity, and excep— ting two years in Delaware county, New York, they lived In Olilms ,mntil I 1211 when they mold omit and cause to Stmmi t Ii i ,ynn, bsmyi ug the It, .1. Itead fi,rmmm ‘~mm l’eer road where timcy have .5 Ims m’s’ rt’si i]e:l, - - ‘Ihmey n-crc time flarents of tIm ree dm1 I- ‘lT”mm, srI,,, survive wIth tht’lr father. ‘l’Iw’r’ are ~ G,sr,loo Cmrmmimis tsf l’msntlrim,’, ~l vs. ~‘,‘i ,:nmi,,, I i,milsm,l ,mf .-tmtms .-trb,sr, rimiji I .ii,~ (;rmjhh, at i:msmmie, \irs. (ri,ilm s,mtrereil is .clrnke if h’Irl~’.~is ii, .~priI, 10311, anti jlim,st!mi’r in ~imbmt(iiIller, I P~ll, width, lift her an in:-:diii ,,,,il inusemi tier to shir:mil l,s’r ri’iIi:Iiliiliir >‘t’ar.S I:: ~t s:’h:m’t’l chaIr ,m:tl ii, Ili,r lii’il. ‘I’ll,! :1 ii’m: is:’ml i’I:Iiri’Ii ‘it’ , ‘‘‘5’ Cs, thu still I Ii it iii., jilt’s un Iii:sl,;i,ici inil eI:iIilr,’n, ~l r’ (~ri:Iil,is —,iir:i:,’,l Isp two Isrisli,— ‘‘C’ is::1 ‘‘sit’ s:slm—r, lt,ii 1 slm I..-iislsimi, Ibsir— irs I :sl’I’i,m imsil ~ huh:’ i’iirtt’h,~’, ill ,,~‘ i5IILLI, :1,111 ‘‘‘sir gr:mm,il—s,,ns, —~ p :.i.~hr it,’m,n’it.k‘p ~ flirmingisami, spent II:,. : I’,,’kpmol mere iviiIt his sister, ~lrs, F ~1-itlit’ llaiIt’~’ ‘s_c.’ Advice From an Expert .1 - _____ I 4- ii key H. ~ AI~a., ad C_ ,, iien Feed 114, DetroIt STATE OF MICHtGAN, Is. the Pro- bate Court fop the County of Oak- land. At a session of saId Court, held at the Probate OffIce In tl~e City of Pen- Use, In saId County, on the 12th day of June A. IX 1040. Present, Hodorsble Arthur E. Moore Judge of Probate, - In the Matter at the Eaakef SW- the t Dawn, Deees.i - Victor C, Gersch, Administrator of said estate having filed In said Court hIs First and FInal Account and pet!- tloa praying for the examination and allowance thereof; determination , of the heirs of said deceased, assignment of the residue of said estate; and the discharge of said Administrator; - It I. Ordered, that the 18th day of July A. fl 1040 at nine o’clock in the forenoon, at saId Probate Office, be and Is hereby appointed for hearing said petition; It Ia Further Ordered, that public notIce thereof be given by publication of a copy of this order, for three aue- eesslve weeks previous to saId day of hearing, hi the South Lyon Herald, 5 newspaper prInted and circulated in ask! County, AI4THUR.E. MOORE, (A true Copy,) Judge of Probate. Florence Doty, Probate Register. RoyHL25-Sle lana I ~:-..-‘ ~ t~ ~ ‘FM. Nat anaouncemënt sounds an r~; etjieen mete not only for our ecoad- l~. -~ : ~ bet for ear security, Naturaliy, lIt stir expert time are frightened. Hence fr. - - the Ins job-seeker should not count 0 : - èlt foteign trade opportunitIes. ~. -::: ~ cpmnut~mzs SELECTIVE ~I ~- ~ - ~ ~ this Is a pretty dismal out- ~3 - _: leak, hut balanced against the uneer- ~:- lain picture of America’s economy as I a whale are definlte-opportunbtles In . --- selected Industries. Here are t few, : ~. fl~kaks Most chemical corn- I panies an prosperous and have a tre- - nimdous future. Great developments , -, am’s taking place in the plastic industry , : particularly. The future offers uallm- ‘-_- S~ ited opportunities—war or peace, las’ - clan or Democracy, New Deal or Old b-- DaL ii -S. AvIations ‘The industry Is Amer- ,- ~ lea’. youngest, America’s most hope- -.- fat. The day is not too distant when It -~ will be as &5C5D to ride the airways as ~ railways and the highways. Those - interested In commercial piloting -- gould enter through the sir corps- But the industry needs more than p1- , &sts,—it needs young men to grow up with it irs its vital administrative work. S. Bc3IdI~s One of the greatest eontrlbntioas of the New Deal to the - - Amerlcsn scene Is its attempts to put -- homes in the reach of small income : brackets, It has solved the problem of financing and it Is now attempting to - solve the problem of high costs. Dn- : $te the uncertainties that war always - brings to home buildIng, I beli~vethat - buIldIng, its products, and trades of- -- icr real opportunities. - 4. Merehandlsiags America still needs better salesmen. This includes - stores, mail order, advertising, and - personal nthng. Whatever goods are - made, or whoever makes them, they -- mint be sold, irrespectIve of the value ; of the dollar or the character of the .‘ government. - 85 Defense, The army, -navy, nir force, coast defense need able young -- men to make defense their career. - The past 25 years clearly show that - r disarmament Is a snare and a delusion, —that this country must not be cammght unawares as were France and Great ~ Britain in 1089, - - MUST MAKE OPPORTUNITIES - I am attending a Convention of Fire Chiefs men who never consid- er themselves and have no fear of - danger. I èannbt help thinking but . That they have the key to real success. It is true that today there are new conditions to combAt, that competition IA very severe, and that 1040 gradu- ates cannot depend on government aid, relief, or artificIal crutches of any - kind, Those, however, who make’ alp their minds to work harder and longer , hopn, to follow the New Testament’s -, command, —‘to give full measmire, pressed dawn and running over”— - those gradasatas will-snake opportual’ tin for -theasseivce whIch may lead to F men in the end than. they ever hoped. F - In short, the future of the ‘1020 - graduate depended upon what was ~ , about him; but the future of the 1040 graduate depends upon what Is In him. Opporwnlti&—Yeai—But the oppor’ tualtia of today are Ia the devoiop, neat—not of II,. cbaracbr of tIse land bat of th. character of Usa mani Tim SOUTH“~‘ L~o ~ N HERALD Volume 60 . SOUTH LYON, OAKLAND COUNTY, MIC HICAN, WEDNESDAY. JULY 3, 1940 - Number 21 - dflfl Eat Trees’ The Adirondacks, mountaInous die- tSt of northern New York, takes Its nasno from the Mohawk word “raflf~55t~5” meaning isff 4 y eat trees,” says the Colutbia Universi- ty Press. in— ‘5. ~ - , - 9M. jj j~~~j-’.j L ~ Ho.40LAJ.TewacoVeJev . TRAcTOR OIL, ~Hon, bulk . ~ LA S~UC WALT’S $E*Y2CE - 24-HOUR WRECKER SERVICE AAA Puce. lOWDay—tfigU 70,1 MASON WORK - mARxist NEW CONSTRUCTION AND REPAIR WORK Cement ~Iock~. Washed Sand.. & Gravel C. L. ALLEN TelspkanoSoistk Lyon 199 - WALT, SCHROLN, Proprietor 1. - - VON ECONOMY, 16~ a pupIl at Brasnofi -and Don review the book the- - Maekonsio High School, Do- on skIlled drIving whIch ivory boy trolt, Is one of tho enthusiastic receives free on joIning the League. Michigan boys who has joIned the “Don’t over-control . . . . skilled Ford Good Drlvors League and on- drivers are graceful drivers,” says tend the League’s $30,000 priso the book and Captain- Brasnell contest for champIonshIp hIgh- poInts out that this has long beoa school age drIvers. Out to win one a basic rule of safety In flying, of tho 49 freo trips to tho New Membership In the Loaguo Is open York World’s Fair and a chance to all boys between the ages of 14 for a university scholarship, Don end 18. Thero are no duos or fees seeks export advice from Captain and applIcation blanks may ho se- Walter BrancH of American Air- cured at any Ford dealers or by lines, Inc. While Stewardess Get’ wrIting directly to the Ford Good trudo Ackerman looks on, Captain Drfters League at Dearborn, BERT Ii~ ROBERTS DENTIST OFFICE HOURS, 9a.m.tel 2 mOO lp.u~.*oOm0O Wednesdays—U a, m. Ia lVsOO Open Tees, and Thai-s. Nights 7sOOtoOmQO Phone 156W South Lyon -DEAD or - CASH! ALIVE!!! ForDeadendDlsablod HORSES $1’ - CATtLE $1 Farm Animals Collected Fi.~~ , I... Promptly—Sunday SeMce. - HiGHESt PRICES PAID FOR PHONE COLLECT TO HORSES and COWS Detroit . Vinewood 1-9400 Phone Collect Ann Arbor— 2-2244 -DARtING & COMPANY CENTRAL DEAD STOCK ~ to MILLENBACH BROTHERS CO. COMPANY The orIginal Company to pay for Detroit RENDERING CO. -~ ~ad stock. a- RayH,Iiurreii PIuIM.Buxrel A. S. WJRRELL 8. SONS —An;st;ç Msmodals— K, M. ~karleswertb, Mgi. Phone 31 BRIGhTON, MIsS, Mse-reli J. Reawlak ~ South Lyon Representative - ALL AMERICAN irirott - 4ply• ~ I U~ k J LIFETIME GUARANTEE 8Y 000DifAR ——a .4— Sn F 5 A~ LAMOREAUX M.D. OFFICE HOURSm 10-to II a. m. 2 to B p. n and 75 0 p. m. Sunday by Appolntanat Only Telophone 48 501,7TH LYON, MICH. -6OOz14-~--$636- *t ~A6-At . For a quick cooling off of emotion. al ardor, that the United States should go to war, consider the MIch- igan national guard. Six thousand ~sons of Michigan, who form half of the 32nd DIvision, are handicapped today by lack of the fohiowlag modern equipment: No new anti-tank guns. No anti-aircraft guns. - No anti-aIrcraft searchlights, No Gnrant automatic rifles. No mechanization of cavalry. Only 12 observation planes. In the light of 1040 Hitler-style warfare, mechanized to the msth de- gree, the deficiency of the above ma- terial Is serious. War has become a hnttbe of machines on land and In aIr; its temmipo has been speeded tre— mendously until the 16’milq infantry advance of a World war day has hcen multiplied tenfold by motorized transportation. C 5 ‘5 - Better - Trained And yet In spite of the appnlling shortage of vitai arms, the -Michigan National Guard is ‘‘five thousand times” , better equipped and better trained than it was in 1917. The statement coiaes from Col, John S. Bersey, the adjutnnt general of Michigan, whose full-time busin- ens is national. defense. - It offers an insight into the rela— tive mmnprepnredness of the Gm,ard In loll us compared with 1940 ~when the German blitzkrieg, unorthodox in Its methods, -changed - rules of the mssliltnry manmmaI, For exanmple, Michigan is one of 11 states authorIzed to maintain an aircraft arnu. The- 107th ObservatIon Sllmmadron Is based nt the Wayne county airport, Detroit, Its total equipment today is twelve planes. It was only in the past two months that timy unit received nine new observa- tlon planes, each of which carry a pilot a maacimine-gunner and an observer, At a tinue when Germany’s output of airplanes Is estimated to be’ 100 a day, the dozen airplnne~ at Detroit wommld not begin to meet military needs for 30 seconds. (Time federal govern,m~ent maintains a large corps north of Detroit at Selfridge Field.) Then there Is the new nutomuatic rifle of which the Unite,1 States has about 78,0(50 to date, None of these ha, been distributed to Michigan gumirdsm,men who rely upon the old Springfiuld rifle, firing five -times autoimmatically from,i cartridge clips. S 5 C Horse Cavalry - Time World ‘War style of horse cnv- .alrv.still -prevails,-’ ~ -‘I’he 106th Cavalry depends on lior— aes which mire fine - for polo games and whIch are still reliable for umllitnry muse after the tanks, airplanes and trucks s,miash tlmrommgh enemy -lines. ‘l’his is In cimntrast s~’Itim ,neclmanix— ed cavalry umnits in otlmer states. ‘lime cimvaIry nlso lmi,s two rIders for every lmorsc, - ‘l’Ime 182nd Field Artillery, a mao- tm,rlzed umnit, Immeks sonic I ractors and trucks ( Mieisigmmn’s guard is to get ‘12 trsmcks tlmis s’e,mr,) -~ Fro,mm coast to coast Michigan is Is mi ,, s; n - as the fo remmi imst In ml mst rial stmmte tviisssc ted, n ,slmsgicmm I - a dv,m flee has been the marvel imf engineers from n,mtlons of the sv,mrid, This limels ,sf ar,mls Is mmiso contrast to ihe st,mtu’s imbility to mmmanmmfat’timre them. Congress immus ,, mist ammthorlzed a four billion dimllimr expenditure for rirniammments of all kinds, ‘l’he regular armmmy is to lIe almost dosmlmied In size from,, 228,0011 to -1Ot1,IlIIP. l)tmri ng the last year the Miebmigamm gmmard was ammthmsrized to recrumi t 1 ,Oflfl macn, and todmiy the state force it mm,ore than 0,1)00 strqng. 4 5 5 Military Viewpoint If llitlcr over,vimeI,mis time English isles, milit,,ry observers ii re canvinc— ed - that this country will be forced to emimbark upon a military traioi ng p rograOs tha t ‘a’,,umlsl mu mu k e t iic 31 I clii— iran force of 6,000 oici~ husk like pyg- nies, lnstenml of Cm,Oflfl soldiers, time state ‘5’ om:ld proha si y im a ye 00,0011, ,,t natinna I gima rd strength of timree nmiliimsn i,mi’mm Is l,eing rccomsm— mm, en led by e is nert s, likewise, Michigan’s rim rrcnt effort to dIg ii ti $50,nEsfl or so to provide tommie addi ti,snal a rmnorl es for cx— nmilng guard ummilts still seem,, hike m:miitehln g fur Penn es, ‘uh,e explosion O”s’rscas lmiis tr:,nsfi,r,,sed ‘mile mm— emsI~si,s\’uisent ps’oii]Ctm, Into a isreisarcil— ‘mess isrolsiemi, ‘myt’rnighmt, ( Uoyermsor l.Iiren I), i)iek’insmsn res’eni ly impeded I,, isrr.s.smre if adi-Is,,rs smiml rrmbm:este,l tin’ ~~niit’mI Sti:trs immss-erms,mmrm,t 1,5 ami— lli,srize in ililti—airersift sunit for lit’— troll. l’lmi’ rust if mustier 0 nmillIi yr ar!mss fimirly striggerimsg is time lmi,,,lna— thus. ll:mm’Ii if )lli’i:lgrsmm’s ness— oIlIer— S sill,,:, iI;tn.’.s, fur exrmniiil,’: rust tiumIm’ S,mui ni,nuil r~l~ui,IIiiIIt’;it’I:. It likes aisouut ~iuI,uuiii1,ui,1ii I,, equii 1 s mr im:ti—:mirm’r:ft regimii,-mst ! ‘I’h:it ,‘,mlls fur mu mit if blue m’imIlss in the fnrmii sf I,:— irt-.-I.srul fe,lerjml I,uses, Turn to MIRROR-—Lsst Page hiated eI!ctrIcaIIy. far your fumliy wtihotttajtfntli,rL/ 1 -’ An overege family of 4 parson. uses a veritable ,j Niagara of hal water , , . ever 15,000 gallons a yearl This doe, not Include the cold water used to mix with the hot water. imogine the time and labor spent in heating all this water . . , . An automatIc ELECTRiC water heater does J the Job quickly and eosily, wIthout attentIon -— while you slap. In the mornIng your hot water is stored•up and waItIng, ready for lm- (I mediate use. ~~ ~ No other method of water heating is so convenIent, so clean, so depend- ~ able and trouble-free. It It one of the fIn’s! ssvahI qesre 47h19 $4.95 , - tome iii ~nd no theta SMITH’S SHELL S~RVIC~ FORD E. SMITH JOHN GALLIGAN Plumber Plumbing Eayetroug Wag South Ly~ ‘New Tax Under Defense Bill Went Into Effect July 1. Folks WiN Pay An LaIrs Pamy Or Extra Polar Osi Various Articles Income tax payers will bear the heaviest increase under the new $4r 692,500,000 defense tax bill signed last week by President Roosevelt, .-tfter them will come the millions of Anmerican, who will pay an extra penny or extra dollar on such things as cigarets, playing cards, theatre ad— mission, automobiles, radios, toilet preparations, liquor and beer. - Part of the income tax changes are pernmanent, Such changes Include a it— dmmctlom, fronm $2,500 to $2,004) In the exemptIon for heads of families and from $1,000 to $aoo for single per- sons, Permanent also were changes in the ssmrtax rates On Incomes from $4.— 000 to $100,000, An extra one per cent S%’a.s added permanently also to corpo— ration rates. - On top of all other iiscome taxes was - ad,Ied for five years a “sm,per thx” of ~D per cent, Under this tax, a taxpayer will figure out what he owes the got’- ernment, and then add a flat bO per cent, Thus. if he figures his bill is $100 he will pay $1 10. Because miliionnaires are subject to Smirtaxes up to 75 per cent phi’s nor— ,,m,mI ineomm,e t,mxes of fosmr per cent, C’sngress wrote in an escape clause for the,a saying that the “sumper-tax’ must not an,oiint to more than 10 per cent of the inconmc left after paying the regusiar lnco,,me taxes. This means that if yo,m pay a federal income tax of 5000,000 and have$i0O,000 left. your smlpertmnx will he only ~an additional *5(5.000, instead of $611,000. The tax boosts were effective July I mm all eomnmndities, such as ltq,mor and elgarets, nnd will im,st for five years. ‘lime income tax ~ cimanges are retroac— live t 0 19-10 income, and will he pay- - ahle March 15, 19-Il. Minor increases also were inside in Inheritance and gift taxes, effective on deaths. or gifts oc- cimrring after the President’s signatmmre, Here are the conuamodity Increases, Old New Rate Rate Distilled spirits, per 100 - proof gallon $2.26 $3.00 Brandy, per 100 -proof gallon . $2.00 $2.78 Beer, per harrel $&ao $0.00 ~Vine, per gnilon 5-20c 0-SOc Aam mmse,ms ent asimmu issions, - tax Ic per Inc or frae— tion If prIce Is 05cr ____ 40c 20c Cigarets (reg. size), per package of 2’) Sc 6k Playing cards, per pack —_——lOc lie Automn,mhile, on èahe prlce_3% 8+ ‘I’m-ncks, on sale price 2% 2+ Umsisline, per gnlloa Ic lie Oil, per gallon 4c 44% Siife deposit boxes, rental - - —price..,,L.. io% . . ii - llefrigcr,ttors, on sale price—$~7sf’’ ‘lire,, per pound 2’%c 2’/,c Inner tmmhCs, per pound __4c 43% Ci,humret adnmissions, per . eimt’lm Inc or fraction of price _ lie 2c St,mek s,mles, Per $100 valime__Se 8-Ce ll,mnd sales, per $100 value.lc Sc Fl reimrmmis, ‘in sale priee———.J0% II Ammtii pm rts, accessories, on slmie isrice .2% 23 p Clara Henning Will. Model Frock At The State Fair Miss Clara- l-Iennlng, who took part ii, time Style Revue at the 4—H Club Week at lansing last week, was honor— - cci isy being plmiced in the “Upper i2”, mileumoing that she was chosen one of Ii! girls fr,smo this section of the state “iuo will style gnrn,ents at the State Fair In l)etroit, Last Thursday after— noon the girls modeled a display of dresses—sports, afternoon and even— ing-wear—for the ml’. L, Fludson Corn— puny. Miss 1-lenniog was one of two delegates from ~Vashtenaw county. Me, and Mrs. George Henning were at ~F.amtLiunsing last Thursday night - -- attending the Style Revmme of the 4-H (‘Immh, Week, In which their dammghter Clara took part. ~0 Local St. Jos.’s Tag Day Adds $38.15 to Coffers ThIrty-eight dollars and fifteen cents was git’emi ht- Smssmth Lyon folk Satur— ili ~‘ mm time ‘Fag Day drive for St. .IO5Chili’.s 3leri’y Hospital, Pontiac. This I’ iImnmlimt ts’sus $10.05 more than was giv— - S n Inst year Mrs. F. E. Weinhurger, u’ nm immi ml charge_of ~ the drive here, is \‘i-ry grrm tefmil In all the women and in ri’s is’lmmm assisted in the drive, and to ,bI ts’lmim contributed to the worthy t’JiiiSe, Mrs. Welnhurger’s assIstants t”ere : Mrs. F. M. Glenan, Mrs. Russell Crulkins, Mrs. Wilhmmr Tahip, Mrs’ A)— tirrt \\:‘Inissmrgm’y, Mrs. Iim,m”arsl Musolf Mrs. Nettie Kennedy anml Miss Dorothy 1<rihmmslmaeh, (Uris who .siiiil tags u-erem .1;, ne Fi,rii, Phyllis Di, rh ngton, Helen Sl,uli,msmgh, flelte It, \Vlnslseriy, .Ieslcly ilracihm’y, Yuirmii a less n ions’s, JoAna Itramiles’, (‘I’” riotte ‘F.-sylor, Barbara I Iass’les’, 1,4511 Mi:solf, I rene Rend. Loi ~ “anAtta, \‘ehmm:a Joyce Griswal Mssrs’ I .msmm I Inwhey, Ge.-srgIana La— Ilrançh, Is’raiiec, and Marjorie Mosten. StALL Griswold OS1tOPATHIC Physidan and Surgeon GENERAL PRACTICE ait AND COUNTRY CALLS OFFICE HOURS: I. to 12 a, m.—1i30 to B p as. Enaiagss 7,00 to 9,00 Me .me. ~ Wedneday p.m. Telephone 170 ~ N. Lafafttt. South Lyon serruces mat etecirucumy orungs To 70UT nousenomo —osud it Ia NOT expensivel Ask ol,oW auto- matic slectric water heating at any Detroit Edison office today. - THE DETROIT EDISON COMPANY EYES Glasses Fitted REASONABLE PRICES Dr. F. P. Lamoreaux Phone 48 for appointment OPTOMETRIST Auto Loan and ftc-Financing 1934 to 1940 MODELS LOW RATES ‘EASY PAYMENTS NO INSURANCE REQUIRED “PROTECT-U-PLAN” You may miss payment. for four months without boeing your car, when sick or unemployed, BRING TITLE It i. S~f. te Deal Wth this Frlsndly Company. BUCKNER FINANCE CO. 2nd floor . First National Bldg. Cm, N. S..aiaaw & W. Huron St.. PONTIAC . MICHIGAN Phone - 6129 Office Hommn, 0 to 5 daIly, includiag Saturday, newt cloesul Wednesday aft.r 1,00 P. M- South Lyon , 01 jolne,] t lie l)l.::’i sIc Oldm: it this- age ,‘f Is rrt,miuit’mi m:iemuil,m’rsl:i 1 ,

Transcript of The South Lyon Herald to do In case of a,, attack? Doctor: “It Isn’t necessary, You’ll do...

!Cias~y& Adam., Attorneys At Law,416 PontIac Dank Bldg., Pontiac.

STATE OF MICHIGAN, The ProbateCourt for theCounty of Oakland.At a sessionof said Court, held at

the ProbateOffice in the City of Pon-tine, In said county,~op~the 18th layof’JUniA. fl. 1040.

Present, Ron, Arthur Ii, Moore,Judgeof Probate. -

In the Matter of the Estat, of ORRKATHRyN, Deceased.

C, Bryan Kinney, ‘administrator debonis non with will annexed of said es-tate, having filed in said court a pett-•tion praying that the time for thepresentationof claims againstsaid es-tate be limited and,that a time andplacebe appointedto receive, examinesad adjust all claims and demandsagainstsaid deceasedby and beforeBald court,

It is Ordered,that two monthsfromthis date be allowed for creditors topresentclaims againstsaidestate.

It is Further Ordered, that the 0thday of Septemberl940’at nine o’clockin the forenoon,at said probateoffice,be and is herebyappointedfor the cx-aminatloaand adjustmentof all claimsagaInst saId deceased.

AltTIWlt K MOORE,a true copy. Judgeof Probate,MausiceB. FinneganDeputy ProbateRegister. 26-28e

Guest In Hotel, “Manager, pleasesendme up a full length mirror,”

MaItre d’Hotel, “Why there Is ahalf length mirror In every room.”

Guest, “That’s just tl,e trouble.Twice already, I’ve gone down to thedining room without my trousers.”

• • .Sailor, “Can I have a room with ashower?”

Innkeeper,“Wal, young feller, I cangive you a room that leaks,but I’ll bedernedIf I kin guaranteerain.”

• C CRecruit, ‘Doctor, I am particularly

liable to seasickness,Can you tell mewhat to do In caseof a,, attack?

Doctor: “It Isn’t necessary, You’lldo It,”

‘Streamlined’ tsglnirTo conform with the color scheme

of onestreamlinedtrain, the engS.fleer and his assistantare dressedIn white Insteadof In theusualblueoveralls,

ThE SOUTH LYON HERALD.

Battle d New OricueTwo weeksafter the war of 1812

ended the battle of New Orleanswasfought. CommunIcatIonswet.so bad that word did not reacheither army In time.

SOUTH LYON. MICH. THURS., JUNE 27, 1940

Mr. and Mi.. ClarenceMusolf. whoreside on theold Foote farm on Spen-cer road, had as guestsat dinnerSun-days Mr. and Mrs. ,J.’ B. Brayton andfamIly of Howefli Mr. and Mn. Au.gust Musoif of Stockbrldge;Mr. andMn. Harold Muaolf and Mr. and Mrs.Donald Whybrew and family of Greg-ory. The occasion was the host’sbirthday,

Malay.Trsvd txperfitansLast year motor travel espendi-

turn afl%Otfl%ted to $5,000,000,000-Ofthis amount It Is estimated that$1,000,000,000was spent for gaso-line, oil repairs and garaging;$1,000,000,000for sleepingaccommo-dations. $i.~0,0C0,00Ofor campingsupplies, souvenirs and IncIdentalpurchases;$1,060,000,000for meals.$400,000,000for golf, theaters andother amusements,and 1300,000,000for pop, hot dogs and other refresh-mentsalongthe way.

-w

For Saleand

WantCOLUMN

MIXED HAY ‘For Sale3105 EIght-Mile Rd.,

.~

. H. Ryan,phone 10122.ltpd

Gn.n06 Pkwz

TO LETalfalfaHooper,

ON SHARES, 14hay, ready to cut.phone lUll.

acres ofIt. S.

Ite

FOR IIBNT—4 room furnIshed‘apart-ment at 705 B. Lake St. Frlvatren-trance. 2fpd

Volt SALE—Cornpleteline of Inseeti-tides for every orchard, field andgarden need. Wlxom Co-Opt.

MODERN, furnIshedapartment,B. J,Pollock, 118 Wells, Phone 101W.

Itp

VOlt SALE—48 acres of clover and‘timothy hay, Ray Duncan, phone20F18. 25.2Cc

FOR SALE—Oak buffet and diningroom table. It. J. Pollock, phone101W. 2512CC

FoR SALE—’About 20 acres alfalfa- hayon theground,for’enshor share.

Mrs Eobt, Warden, phone 03F22.2Cc

FOR SALE—Good cook stove, burnswood or coal, In good conditIon,Mrs. WIlliam Butcher, 318 GodfreySt. . Itpd

WANTBDII’—Oo.od, acan,Used Furnl-tore for CASH or EXCHANGE,PRIVATE SALES ANYTIME at851 PENNIMAN AVE., PLYM-017tH, MIch. Terms, Cash! I asaopen for Small or Large SAbES,HARRY C. ROBINSON,AucUonee,Phones 200 or .7, Plymouth Ex-change. , . tJuly lp

roü SALE—lO good building. lots.inSouth Lyon, $100 end,. Also sIx-room house, Russell Calldns, SouthLyon, • . 20-tic

I~OUSALE,—Iee-hoxj.100-lb.-capacity:Will se!l for $1.00, Mrs. C. 0. Unce,430 B, Center,east’of Brangnrs, orInquire at ShoeRepair Shop. Ite

DANCING SCHOOL—Dafldngtaughtby appointment by the DancIng Bal-leys, formerly on the stage and cx.hiblting for the leading ballroomsofthe country, Teachersof fancy,ball-room and tap dancing, It will beworth your while to give us an 1st-tervlew, Located at 182 RandolphSt,

5Northville, Phone 864.

Satf

FOR SAI1

E—Onrlandcook stove forwood and conl~brassbed, complete;three’quarter Iron bed, complete,and Iron bcd with springs. JohnMason,phone 21FI2, ltc

FOIl SAI,E—ilrolters, 2 lbs. andup,also field of hay. Clement Smith,

- l)honet!lli~VestS-Mile road , 2CCI,AWNMOWERS. SHARPENED and

ADJUSTED, Free delivery service,Phone South Lyon 151F21, ‘I’, E,Kelly, New Hudson, 2otfe

SPECIAL SUMMER & FALL PItIC-“ES”ON’LIMESTONErAftcrJufle

l,t our prices Will be $285 per tondelivered;$1 per acre for spreading.‘1’. A. Fletchcr, New Hudson, 8840East Grand River, Phone SouthLyon 16F22, 2ltfe

WANTED TO RENT — LIo’use InSouthLyon or vicinity. It. J. VincI,phoneSouth, Lyon 29F12.

26p

\VANTED—Mnn to work by day, hay-ing. Call Northvllle 7140F6.

20pd2ttfe

WE PAY sian ewt. for RAGS. Deal-cr5 in PAPER, RAGS, LEAD andIRON. N’orthville Waste MaterialCo., 455 K Cady, Northville, PhoneNorthvlllc 156W, tfc

WANTET)—5 to 20 acres with build-ings. Have .~00cash as payment,Ray linker, 129 WestSt., Northyille,phone 222. ltp

FOR SALE—lat quality Rhode IslandRe,l llahv (‘hicks, I day to 2 weeksold, ERNEST 11AM, 34118 OAK’LAND ltOAl), FARMINGTON.

lSt2lpd

DAIlY ChICKS—BLOOD TESTED.Our 22 years of caref,ii breedingIn-Mires you of High Grade Chick,.Prices $3,.~O to $8.85 hundred.flur’klIngs, S 15.00. Custom hatching$2.50 hundred eggs. I3rooders,sup’plies, save mnney, OAKLAND 11111,l’nt,ltry Farm, Orchard I,akc Road,Fnrmington, Phone 589-R-2. lOtf

Las e~~tFealty to colonies. cities and

towns, es well as Icyalty andpatriotIsm to government.was de-mended01 thecolonialcitizenry~$yearsago, andtherewere thtaeletled for disparagingremarksagainstthem. The WPA historical recerdariney found that a residentof Bet-teawas ftsed10 shillIngs In 1661 be-causebe said that “threemonsterswere born ha Boston.” • The tech.ales!chargewastying,

. Necp ‘BlaekeeV VialS.Tb. dark nights and shortageci

Imported forelga furs in Londonhave set the cat thieves to work,andcatshavebeendisappearIngena wholesalescale. Animal welfareauthoritiesbelieve organizedgangsare responsible, for the pelts ofPersiancatsor others canbe dyedand used In the manufactureofcheapcoats.

welshAlphabetinehacterFor mere than 40 years 83-year-

old MosesJoneshasbeen teachingschool children the Welsh alphabetIn a Cardiff, Wales, SundayschooLHo has received presentsfor hiswork, yet he can neither read norwrite. • . •

flaKe Is IbSe Ia StirSThesableIs ,~sms11mammalbe-

longing to the weaselfamily. It isnative to sabeSand Is closely it-lated to the North American pInemarten. Theanimal is usuallynote,na fret anda half In length, Itsma, which coversnanIS fedandS Iaa luafreissdark brown.withgrayish-yellowspotson the sidesoftheneck. Babiesaresomewhatdli-dealt to captureand are caughtIntrue qapeelallydeals to preventinjury to their valuable far.

Large Was~lskn EtRalph Boys of LaCezter~Wet,

tIled one of the largestelks everseen In the district, The animal,which had seven-point antlers,weighed 60 ~ drneed andmist have weighed 1,000 poundsalive. Three horns were requiredto pack the animal four miles I.camp.- IbM tansoen~ TrIpThe first automobileto. crossthe

United StaIn—b1001—took 01 daysfovthethp.

Wgast Aidflen PeatTort Bragg, N. C., Is said to be

~the Ingest artllien reservationinthe world.

Itenc of InterestFrow OtherCommimifies

Newsthat Will.. taIwan Yea—clipped

Prom OarWesMy EschsuneBIRMINGHAM—SatIsfying a bug-

held ambition, the Rev. W. Glen Ear-. rig, pastor of the First PresbyterIanchurch, rode In the engine cab of astream-linedtrain as he sped to hisnative Texas on Tuesday. Somehow,he secureda passfrom the Rock IsI-and railroad t

0ride the engine from

‘KansasCity to Topeka.‘ PLYMOUTH—The story of the

“biggest” fish caughton the opening. of the fishing season for the present

year comesfrom LouIs Knnke of AnnArbor road, who landed a northernpike,weighing nearbynine pounds.Thefish measured33 InchesIn length. Helandedthe pike while castIng for bassisi Patterson laker about six milessouth of Howell.

MILFORD—Milford and Highland

e Methodist churches are among those. affected by changesin pastoratesas. directedby the Conferenceat PontIac

Inst week. Rev. H. B, Duttweiler, pas-for herefor threeyears,is transferredto Warren Avenue church In the city

. of Saginaw. Coming to assume thechargeherewill be Rev, Ben Holcomblate of Brlghtmoor.

: CHARLOTTF,—WIth a view ofbeautifying station grounds, land’Benpedflower garde,,,have madetheirappearancethis spring at many sta-tiorss on the Wand Trunk.CanadlanNational Railways, In some Instances,flower gardenshave replaced unsight.ly areas around transfer yards andswitch shanties.~Employeesare takinga great interest In beautifying sur—roundineg and in addition to workingthe plots in sparemoments from do-tIes, many frequentlywork in railwaygardenplots far into the evening.

. . Farm Women’s WeekJuly 21-25 QffersInteresting Program

Plansfor Fnnsi Women’~Week, lu-Iv 21 to.28, are beIngrapIdly complet’ed Mrs. Lola 1’. Dudgeon, CountyHome Extension Agent, urges home-

. n,akersInterested Ip attendIng, tosend in reservationsat •once, to thecountyextensionoffice, Box 173, Pon~

.e- • thoc. The programpromisesto be un-usually interesting.

Outstandingspeakers,an opportun-lty to particIpate In any of the 17special study classes, recreation pro-grams, devotlonnls, a stunt night anda banquetare all scheduledduringtheweek. Fridny, July 26,will see many

. of the women Joinedby their husbandscoming to the campusto take In theannsinl Farmers’ Day Infonnntionnlprogramout On the farm and on thecisrispuis,

Speakersfor the~ programslncl,s,Ie Dr. H. Y. McCluskv of theschool of education of the Universityof MIchigan. Ills subjectIs “Youth ofAsqerlcn,” Another is Dr. \V, B. Feeof the MIchIgan State Collegehistorydcpssrttsuentstnff and his subject,“W’orid Affairs”; Mary SweeneyofMerrlll—P,,lrs,er school In Detroit,!‘Comi,e Around the World with Me”;and l)r. Alonzo l3dker, Battle Creek,fIel,l secretai’y of time RaceBettermentI”oundation, “What’s RIght With itm-crlca’’, Mr, Wnrren Brown, Marshall,Is to lend devutionnls each morning.Mrs. S. E. Bellows, EastLansing,I, togive a talk on nntlquesTuesday nftcr-noon.

Sul,jects scheduled for ,iinrni ngclasses Include hIstory, lanclscnping,literature, naturestudy, news writing,political science, pnrllnsnentnry law,recreation,speech,singing, floricultureclothing, house furnishIngs, familylife, vegetable gnrdcning, qunlltyfoods and poultry, Sunday, July 21,is reserved for registration, wIth anevenIng vesperservice, Stunt night isscheduledfor Monday, a tour of thecRillIsims on Tuesday, summer school

-*:~~_ - _ _ play for W’ednesdavand a banquet‘l’iiursclny evening.

. OPENS NEW LAW OFFICEAttorney Roy II~Lockwood of Dc’

troll, well known here,is announcInghis wIthdrawal frost, the finn ofAtkinson, Donnelly & I.yon, 1703 FordBuilding, nod the openIngof his officefur the generalpracticeof l”~”at I 7119Ford E;illdinw, Detroit, July 1 st, 1 9-10.

IN APPRECIATIONI wish t

0expres

5my sinceregratl-

ti:de to tIle l’reshyterlan Ladies’ ,-~id,Dorms class, F,xtcnsiun group, Mer-fl Makers,neighborsand friends who5~~k I ml I ~ reu,en,l,eresl ‘II e w ~t Ii f n~iIowl fl,,,scrs.lunkeil good.q ,cnrds (l,lrtls-tIn; sho~ver)letters, personal cilia, so,IIqO~,kInd ,,Iessages,nod the little he:]tol’lt’ ,, ~g,il,,, I thank ~ all

Mrs. lllrlin rd ‘I’, ‘Irish

Those isav4ng news For publicationin the Haraid are urge~lto get it tothis office at leastby Wednesdaynoon.We cannot insurs publication of anycopy received Inter titan that, unless itis of an important nshire

5 We pick up DRY CLEANING PcLAUNDRY at noon. RACE’S SHOEREPAIR SHOP. tfc

MargaretAllen andParisWhite Marryb Ohio Saturday

MIss Margaret Allen, youngest Inthe family of Mr. and Mrs. Claris Al-len, and Paris White, son of FloydWhite of Arkansas, were married atNapoleon, Ohio, Saturday morning,June29th, at 0s00 o’clock, by DallasYoung, Justice of the Peace. Theirattendantswere Mr. andMrs. LeonardJones of Northville.

The bride wore a frock of pale bluesatin;her bridesmaidworea rosecolordress, - - -

They are lIving at the J. 3, Smithapartment,East. Lake street. Thegroom is employed by the MichiganSeamlessTube Company,

0

Helpful NotesFrom the Fann

by Robart F. McCrory

FeedingCàwsOn Pastures

Experimentson pasturingdairy eat-tIe carriedon by the Bureauof Dairy-ing of the I,J..S. D. A. show that largecows may grase ns much as 150pounds of good pasture a slay andthussecureenough feedto make near-ly two pound, ~f butterfat. These In-vestigationsalso show that much lessgrass is consumedwhen the pastureis not young and abundant. Undersuch circumstancesit is necessarytofees! extra roughageIn order to main-tam prodsiëtion, -

At this season of the year a greatmany-farmers will find It desirabletofeed cows Borne hay. To keep cattleproducingsatisfactorily-it Is necessaryto give them all the roughagetheywilleat, If the pasture does not supplytheir needs, it should be supplemented.

The amount of grain to feed willdepend largely On the pr6ductlon ofthe individual cows and the quality ofthe -pasture,Cows in medium or lowproduction require little or no grainOn good pasture.Cows in heavy’pro-duetion do require some grnln,- al’though lesswhen on good pasturethanwhen fed entirely in thebarn.

-When pastures are abundant andgm’een, little, If any, high protein feedneed be addedto theconcentratemix-tore. When the pasture Is dry andbrowis, increasethe high protein feedIn the concentratemixture.

Home grown grains snny be used Intheproportion in which they are avail-able, At the present time farm standwheatcan be usedto advantage.

Be sure to keep a box containingequal parts of salt and steamedbone-meal where the stock may have freeaccessto It at nil times,

- CLEAN DARNSClean barns nrc good Insurance

against the spreadof disease, Ofcoslrse~everydalrrfittm~F shbiildb~directed t

0keepIng all Infections out

of his herd for it I, not possible witha diseasedherd to get It on a profit—able basis. Diseasesare carried Intotime barn in so many ways that the useof disinfectant, froum ti,sie to time intime driveways, gutters and even thefeed mangerIs not out of place. It isthe practIceof m,mny good dairy form-cr5 and Indeeda very wise one, to uscIliac, a nilisl dIsinfectant In the drive’‘visys and walks after the barn hasbeen cleaned,If this Is mimhxeel witlm alittle ground limestone,It helpsto pre—sent the cows from slipping seilen theyconic in fr,mm a sutidtly ~‘~srd.

Mrs. ~,;;~; MotherIn Critical Condition

Mrs. Alex. 51mw ret,mrned fromisEliwood CI ty, l’s:. , i%tonday nIgIlt, atee spendIng two weeks there to henear her ,s,other,Mrs. D. 5, Conner,who i’ In a critIcal condItion in Eli-woodCity hospItal. Mrs. Shawwill re-turn there agaIn ofter beIng at honmefoe two weeks,. \trs. Connerhpt been11fl1Wii55$tnfl~vtrwcuksfllswnftefell and broke a leg below theImip. Al-though tile hreak has healed beyondall expectationsher conditIon other-wIse is very critical,

W•C.T.U. At SpringFarm Next Week

The ~V. C. T. U. wIll meet at theSpring f,,rn,, Dixhoro road, next weekTh’srs:lny, wIth Mrs. CIarenc’c So,itl, ashostess, Coopcratlve dinner at I nIl.Mrs. Elizai,,,ti, ErwIn of Detroit wIlli,i- gllcst Sb5c;l <er.

LOCAL NEWSMrs. I i:’leo hlras.s, Nra- York City,

nod ?,Iiss Nellie l,lllicbrn, \Vhlhij,,,ist,,n,blr,Ilse ttlC’.IS If II,,’ Ile,’,s:ans act ueek,rtIlIrilrlh I., Ihele respecti~’e hi,su,rsLISt l’’rb,l;iv.

ltnl,hle ,bn:lrs, Coo of Mr. noel 3lrs,Albert Lllll~S, i~i slhlihhIlg ,lsv;IV 1 l’s,rl—nilrbIt hit (‘blhr;Ig.’, }s,’iIl~ -i,,,’to t}’nsighIt~~If Iii,’ ribs’ Ii~ hli~ .11101, \Irs..1 i, ek 1<r,L k z.~ky.

Mr. sn:l \Ir~, Fred llou’er~,I 2’~bileronil, rnt,’rbai:i-,b Mr antI Mrs. (‘?~sr-CIl~’e Mire ,n,l fl,sIs.’rt leo of br,-I’orte, I,,s], 1.1cr Snnlbrlv, \ir, ~foorris II n:’hshle’~’,lf ~irs lln~cera.

Crop IusiwaiiceDate Moved Up

ApplicatIons must he made andpremiums paid for Federal“ail risk”crop Insuranceop wInter wheat twoweeks earlier In Oakland Countythis year than last, Walter It. Cook,Chairman of the Oakland CountyAAA CommIttee, reported last week.

ApplIcation mast he made and thepremIum paid for mnsuraoceon the1041 crop before the crop is seededor by August 81, whichever is earlIest,he - said. Last year lisa deadline inMichigan was September15,

Aside from this earlier closingdateand a few minor adminIstrativechanges, the 1041 program is thesnme as the 1930 program. Appilen-tions will be taken it the- OaklandCounty AAA office and the CountyAAA committee will handle localadministration of the program,

According to won] received fromLeroy K. Smith, managerof the Feel-cml Crop lnaurspce Corporation, arevision Is being nia,le in the yieldsfarmer, may Insure in 19-Il, This re—vision Is the result of hringing theeffect of actual recorded yields Intothe yield and rate .ctructure, Theyield and premium rate are deter-mined for each lndis’Isl,,nl farm onthe basis of Its yield and loss experi—ence over a periodof years,

A brief summary of the mainpoints of the 1041 insisranceprogramat, given by Mr. Cook, f,’llows:

I Any farmer eoniiiiybng with theprovisions of the cr0

1) insurance

program may inasire “P to 75 percent of the avernç,e yield of hisacreage.The insuranceis stated interms of bushels, - -

2, Applications will lIr made for In-suirance on~the f,,bl wheat acreageallotment unless it l.a certaIn lessthan the allotment wilt he seeded,in - which ease the insurance willcover the actual acrellge to i,eseeded.No insurnnre wihl be writ-ten On acreage planteslin excessofthe 1041 AAA acreageallotments,

8. The premium rAte Is computedseparately for earl, farm and isbased on ‘ the risk involved in grow-ing wheat on that Particular farm,averaged with the 11155 experienceof the. county In wb,icl, the farnm Islocated. Premiums are stated interms ofhushels. ‘I’lley may l,epn!d with a warehouse receipt forwheat in storage,in the east,eqimiv-alent, or by means of an advanceagainstpayments to he earnedun-der the AAA program.

4. A crop Insss,nneecontract may beused as coibateral security for acurrent loan. -

5. In ease a grower’s crop fails toproduce the insured amount,through no faimli or neglect on hispart, he may claim an indemnitywhIch in bushels Is suffIcIent ‘ tohring his prodmsetlön up to the in-sured amount.Mr. Cook said that 12 Oakland

County farmers, linder the I 939 cro~,insuranceprogranl, receIved inclemnI-ties totaling 0-15 bushels.

2;OOOTConr~kts’=~-

In M. S. C. Tests -

Hundreds of test strainsof corn onthe %liciuigs,o St,,te College forum mlElist I.anslog ~rihi ‘‘get the sack” firstliterally mmci then figuratively this5,ln,,,,ee as resencci, alen olItIlIn an—other year’s res,lit a in finding the bestcorn vu rletles sulteil to sections ofMichigan, -

The II tee,,I SalkI ng is IndIcated ina~,,,nlee for 38,11 paperhugs need’ccl liv A. Ii .. \r,rst,,n, corn seedingspc,’iohist, ‘l’lit’s,, hIllIer sacks still ‘c‘I semi i o CaI’ II I I t he apparent ly ,lesir—aIsle lilants to l’llntrsml fcrtihilali,,r,and 11,11, to k’l,,,u~’ the breeding re—lireseatedium t bc seed crop this cons—lag fail,

Eight tisollsnn,] paper eli;ss for‘olllo lunch i,,,llnr,l sacks ilsefl,l Insmile of ti,, plau:l.a give an indi,’ali,,nof sonic of t se dclall tIme experimen—II, tI us, I n~‘,,lve~

‘I’wo tii ‘suss a n 1 iili~ts of ahos,t arplants each, of Ii eM and popcorn var~ietles are Incls,,k’il. ‘lime test work isdesigned to ,lrIerr~,ine charnrterlstiesmf v,trIouss lines ,,t’ corn hrecding,‘l’hose strnlns that appear ,leslraltbe

~ state forfurther tests to ,betern,lnc 3rkliis lsn—dcc various clisllahi,’ conditions,

Corn borer ccci~lant corn, varietiessuitable foe “n ci liii S parts of I liestate and snltah,lr hybrids are beingfound, Over a period of years, inwork “rigini,llc’ .ctrIrh,’,l il~’.7, 14, Dun—can, retired a yesr a gn, the corn slotIests ii ii ye i , ncliv i’ veil sum c’i, fa vi, ri I esas Donra n’s ‘sri I ii” Dent, M , .~, C.and 1’,,bar Dent. a~nell as such by—hsrimls as Mhchig.-u, I 21$, 21 ,~ a nil71 A now to rissiiiii,’rrial produichion.

IN APPRECIATiON -

I a ii zen ti’ fi Fl sir aII carsls, flow’-ers anti ,,th,er ~rli’I’ with whIch I wasso generinish~’rimii’i,,bereml while InSt it’s:’ bill’s ‘‘‘“I’ jud. Believe i’s:’,It SillS i~i;srrririb~il‘lore thai, 1:15CCsi’’srcbs ‘ii, ‘N ]:r:’~~.

,7,iii:i fl;ski,ni:s,, Jr.

I’ grsll}s ~t’ f ,ifl,~ fm,,, fl,.,lfi,rih, -

Plyl,:.,iIhi, b),’tr,.iI, 1\’nlh,’cb I_nh-i’S,iiihhs i.y’’,i, I,, tr!l~ Illl,,lh,rr 01’ hurt’, -

tt’n,b,’ri’cl br’’ in I I,,l!I:I,l% ,, r Ihit~.\b.:}:ebi~I:Ilr;iri fir ji .tLr]:rl.,’ hihrhhuh:ir’ hr.:I::’ Sr,tiirih.: ~ llill;_~~ ‘I’hi,’ t ~ ‘ii p

‘l.a_s phca..isith ‘‘.~‘‘ri t Ii, ,:,r,i.ishrisi,i,t,Jll::b lii,irli ‘Irl,~: PS iii, ‘Ii,,’ h,irth:ila~’pike n-i, h,..kprh I,~ \hrs, \\‘:lrrsii his’suit ii’ I’:~-:,,,::,tIi.

BusinessOutlookFor Summer

Roger Beheon SaysIt Is AnnasnentsVrnae Peace

Manchester,N. H., July 3. BusInessactIvity in the nexttwo monthsshouldconstantlyImprove as a whole,—al—though some lines and localities willstiffer due to European condItIons.Statisticsshow that businessis pick-Ing up every day, unemployment Isdeclining, and there is a much betterspirIt among all business men. Withnewspapersfull of uncertainties re-garding wars, national conventions,and other depressingitems, It Is a re-lief to focus one’s attention on thegood news coming from the domesticfront, -

The outlook for the- next few weeksis tied up with the defenseprogramand the Europeanwar, The best an-thorities say, “the war will last threeto -five months Or three to fiveyears but they ref,ise to saywhich.” Huge British o r d e r 5(which ineli,de the former French or-den) plus America’s own armamentprogram shouid, however, keep theheavy industries rolling in high speedfor some time to conme, On the other.hand, if the Europeanwar ceaseshe—fore the American defense programcan get well mmdcc way, there may heII temiiporary set-hack.-Y er, hefore timeend of the year, hui,inessshouldhe farhelter in this country than it is now,

- ‘BUSINESS -FIGURES RiSINGC,mrrent statIstics show that activity

is already nmovingalong ata high 1ev-el. Freight esrlosdingshave.reachednew peak for ID-SO and are secondhighest- for any siu,ilnr week sInce1930. Railroadearningsare the best inyears. t’et. prIces of’ railroad seeimri-ties have dri fted back to their I 932low.q,- -

Tçxtile miii. have stepped-imp sci,eml’miles since the Germanarmiesdestroy-ed ninny of the big nsill centers inNorthern Franceand Belglimnm. Graygoods sales have been trenmendousinun: pastfew weeks,Rising retail maleswill helpto work off inventories,whichare said to be heavy.

Automobile s.se,nbly lines haveturned out nearly as many ears~a~inany half yea?since 1929. The loss oftue export marketsfor atmtomohilesInthe Low Countries and FranceIs morethan madeup by new busInessin otherdirections, ProductIon of cites in re-cent weeks has- been running aboveretail sales to stock Imp so timat plantsCan make their model changes.Hepee,a decline in automobileproduction willnow take place. ~ -

STEELINDUSTRY ACTIVESteel operations have snsa,hed theit

w’,,s’ forward t0

the highest level forthis particular period since 1929,~Theend of tl,e war ismight imit the steel in-ilm,stry harder than Immost others, bustnot necessarily, Inventories In coim—mm: users’ isam~dsare suit] to be evenhigher‘than In Ioal. Our o’va arinms~,,,cnt~mrogrluummss’tsttld tlikiuiWthisliteklater on, lint therew,ul,l bea lc’t-cluwni’ef.mre this happened.- -

Armament induitriss are just he-ginning to feel the effects of time de’fense programis. 1:10w niuicim they ni ii,mc],I to the hmmsiness total in time nextcouple of amontl,s Is nncertnio justIt.,~5’. I mm v estm,rs, bussiness m,men , anilwm,rkeCs Sii isul1, lmosvever,k cep I is III I nilflint thIs nation Is entering ui~m,smm timehiggt’st arim,imnient ~srimgrii,i,ever mn—mlerti,ken liv iloy nimti,,n at ‘ny timmie.Timerefmsre, svlmi,t Is niss~’on time hmm,mWsI.: m,m,’re s,mmmm~siImmg_ It is expeciemi iisist‘I dlii,,,, u]imlli,rs will he slme,mt tm, In—crease nresemmt siiii,.~’imrmis, mm,tm,miti,m,m,mmliii ,rsrims,l ~i,i~mscit~-msmerely to takeCII Ce of the ii ii ge 0r,lers w mi vim wII I hehimeed

Retail trails Is relimi, rica si~’ go,,d.It is. running Ill her cent m~r immureIli,ims’c I, year ago. ilest i-,mmm,parlsm~nss’iiis I 939 levels are i’ommsing frmn,m theioilimstrlal areas of this’ ~Ilclmllc’wesi,io,,rest frmsm,m tlue Sm,u,tim mod l’at’iflc

Coast, Rising i’,syrssils r,meimn tlmmmt thesegalmms shoimid c,,ntl,sime,

RECORD TOURIST SEASON

Tourist business, Dime to time war inRumrope and the i,esitancy o f cruisingC’en to time West I ndies,SommtI, .-\ nieri-

-Ca, i~l,mska~an:loIlier places.all .tcnmr~1st mmmonev will lie left in this e’’m,ntrypnil Canada this yenr, TIme greaicr ef—forts ,vlmls’h tile railrm,aml and i,,ms linesa re making in developIngtravel nodtime ,‘ontin ml a I Ion of the two worldfairs im,miirmmtr that timis Smmnmmm:er svlhlsee tIme Iargest vileathin seasonon re—

Politic., The generaI I mupression isthat tile iilatfmuh,m mmn,l nommmlne,’s of theltepmiislirams Party are a very emsn—i,trmirtis’e mmli,’,’, It snrs’l~’ shmsm:imi m,,rikei.’. I). II . ‘‘count ten” hmrfmsre lie mu osfur im tImir,i tirimi ,.-\irm’ aml~’ the msmarketarts as if W’IIIklc soil Mt’Xar~’ mane ar,’al cliii ‘sri’.

Security and commodity prices iresl,’r:,iv Irs stronger. imm frut, tim,’~’ hissyeme (‘imi,’~’-rr’,i msmi,’—t birch .mf ti,,’l ri:r,’,ik, bli: hil,’nml ~:;iyIlIm.lmts 1Cm’ ui’m,:’r—5115, m’riruimmvs sir’s ir,’:,i:.m,,l.m:r—. Secur,—ties are actually cheapertoday in ,-e-istion to earnings than at any time

1n

the past twenty years,Ii:,’ ui—u s’sS u:itt,,,,l< fir tlii’ $:riii’

I’lm’r_ thim’rm’i’,irm., I., ii .‘‘‘r I ‘I’: ‘em’ miii’’ Ii:’‘,-I.},rimk, hismssi’:i’ r, st-sill ‘Lb ‘i’ ir,,ii -in

;iIri’~iiI~ iiir~i Ii’’-i’ I ‘‘I’ is’tj’i 1’’ . I h:’mii’r,ii,’Ij ‘‘i—i— lu-il I,: i—is::’—— :i. Si’sliii’:’

~I’,’iiirb I ~‘i—ti’ ii ‘tm.,’ I’l-’ri i I’’-:,~ I-s’t.hiib~’null .~ii:rii—.I. If II i,’::’s’,’.,, iris:: :,‘~,

‘lisp rsrtiiImIimril pr’: Yr Ii: Si :11 I.,.1(1 Ii H’’’ ilrr,’IsI I ,‘‘i- I ‘.1 ictj’.lIi, Wiiiii~i

(Turn to BAliSON—Page 4)

ChristmasCactusBloomsJuly4t¼SnakeTries to Swallow Chick

A ChrIstmas cactus owned by Mm.George Joslin, XIne-Mile road, isa beautiful sight this July Fourth,be.ing covered with a,any lovely bloon,s.OrdinarIly thesecacti bloons atChrist-nina time, and this plant hmts neverbe-fore had two hioámlng seasonsIn asingle year. The plant measuresahouttwo feet in diameter.Its bloomsmire It rich shade of fusbla pInk.

S C 5

Mrs. E. D. Mack of the Hunterfarum heard a dimturbaneeamong herchickensTuesdayafternoon and wentto investigatethe cause of all thecackling. To her surprise she saw aairge snake that had caught a youngchicken (5 weeks old) and was at-tempting to swallow It, The snakewas promptly disposedof, but the cx-perieaeehad cost thelife of thechick-en, Mrs. Mimek says she isn’t muchamithorlty on Identifying snake,, butshe believesthe reptile was a commmsnstreaked snake. Its head, with thechicken still in its mouth, was preserv-ad awhile for proof to ,mnbelievers,

0— -

N. Jones PresidentOf Stone Reunion

Time Stone -school reunion held atthe school five miles east of SouthLyon on the ‘I’en Mile road, Snt,mrduy,June 29 was attendedby aho’mt -1(5 for—“Cr pupils mind teaclmersnnd their fammm—iiies, .

‘the crowd assembledin the school-roonm for a bountifui dinner which wi’sfollowed by a progran,,

.Ail smmng “America’’ led by I-larryIsogartofPontiac, wlti, Shirley Schoc-sow of l’lymmiouith as pianist. J, .1, Mc-

Whortem’ offered prayer.-‘File secretary- Miss Margaret Carpenter of North,-vilie rea,l her report, anda letter from,,a former nmupil, David Brooks ofSeattle,Wasl,ington,

The Memorial gave the namesof six’wimo im,md passedon- durIng the year.They were, Wilson Lane,Mills Black’wood, Edward Kennedy, Mrs. charlesCole, whose maiden nm,n,e was SarahCork, FredDodge of Detroit, and Stu-art Greer of Pontiac. -

The group decidedto meet nextyear at the schmsul groundson the lastSaturdayin June.

Mrs. \‘eena GageMcClure of River-side, Call fornia, mu forimier pupil, gaye,, short tmmlk imbout C,ilifornlmt weatimer,Harry Bogart gmive a brief slimmmnmaryof his trip to the west coast last Sep—ti’umi,er, and advised all who eosmld tosee smsme of time bem,utlesof otmr coun—try, David Wilson of Ann Arbor gave

- lw,, request reeltatioas whiclm ali ea—joycd. -

Officers were- elected as foli,,ns’smPresident,Newton Jones; VIce Fees,,Harry Bogart; Sec—‘I’ reas,, Mrs. Jas.Clnpj~,Pontiac. After a song, “MyBmsnnle”, time crowd adjummrned to thescim’o,,i ymurd for sonic arousingcontestsat_wi,icl,_Byron Greer -an,l dam,gimtcrJ%mlene of Ilartlan,l, Mr. Bogart andDmtwsun Mm,solf -were prize Winnero.

Mrs. EariGrubb,62,Invalid For 9 YearsDied At Her Home

N rs, Earl (Jr,mhh i’assesl an’msy atib,,mit ilman ~lmmm,:l,m~’night, .ltiiy 1st, other hi,mm,me On l’t’er r,,mul. She rims a’simit’aliii ,,,,il hmmii nmmt w,slked fist nineyt’i,riI, i”,sr t lie isast. two weeks herhealth, mail not beem, mus good ‘us usu,mltmit her iit’mmuise t’am,me as 5 surprise toimer f:m,,,jI~-and friends. She was sIt—iIu,g mm sir cimi,le ,tnti ~\1r_Grmsbh wasI iy isor s-I ,Ic sviicm, the emid smicleleimlyCl IIm II’.

the funeral was held at her. Imer lute liisume this \Vednest]ay after—flmmm,~m it 2mImi) :,‘cioek, Re”, Elisi \S’i,ms—bvrlu- pastor 0 f time First l’remhyterlmsnchmimrc’Is iii charge, Intermneot in SouthLymso cemimetery,

Mary EiIzaI,cti, r,nppin, one of fourchildren ,if ,\Ia cvin and Olive 1-Imullb.Iip~mimm, was born near Kent, 01mb,I’t’i,rsm,mry U, 1878, timsi is,,d reachedtilem,ge sf (i’2 years.She,,tten,iedschoolat_Xcnt I msJ’er y outh, graduating (rim,,,tIme highs schoolthere, I-let -fatlmer diedv.’imt’n SIft. WOt I I yearsold,

On Su’teusher 7, 1898 she mmsarrledi:arl (Jrmzbbof that vicinity, andexcep—ting two years in Delaware county,New York, they lived In Olilms ,mntilI 1211 when they mold omit and cause toStmmi t Ii i ,ynn, bsmyiug the It, .1. Iteadfi,rmmm ‘~mm l’eer road where timcy have.5Ims m’s’ rt’si i]e:l, - -

‘Ihmey n-crc time flarents of tIm ree dm1I-‘lT”mm, srI,,, survive wIth tht’lr father.‘l’Iw’r’ are~ G,sr,loo Cmrmmimis tsf l’msntlrim,’,~lvs. ~‘,‘i ,:nmi,,, I i,milsm,l ,mf .-tmtms .-trb,sr,rimiji I .ii,~ (;rmjhh, at i:msmmie,

\irs. (ri,ilm s,mtrereil is .clrnke if

h’Irl~’.~isii, .~priI, 10311, anti jlim,st!mi’rin ~imbmt(iiIller,I P~ll,width, lift her anin:-:diii ,,,,il inusemi tier to shir:mil l,s’rri’iIi:Iiliiliir >‘t’ar.S I:: ~t s:’h:m’t’l chaIr ,m:tlii, Ili,r lii’il.

‘I’ll,! :1 ii’m: is:’mli’I:Iiri’Ii ‘it’,‘‘‘5’ Cs, thu stillI Ii — it

iii., jilt’s un Iii:sl,;i,ici inil eI:iIilr,’n,~lr’ (~ri:Iil, is —,iir:i:,’,l Isp two Isrisli,—‘‘C’ is::1 ‘‘sit’ s:slm—r, lt,ii

1slm I..-iislsimi, Ibsir—

irs I :sl’I’i,m imsil ~ huh:’ i’iirtt’h,~’,ill ,,~‘ i5IILLI, :1,111 ‘‘‘sir gr:mm,il—s,,ns,

—~ p

:.i.~hr it,’m,n’it.k ‘p ~ flirmingisami, spentII:,. : I’,,’ kpmol mere iviiIt his sister, ~lrs,

F~1-itlit’ llaiIt’~’

‘ ‘s_c.’

Advice From an Expert .1 - _____

I

4- ii

key H. ~ AI~a., adC_ ‘ ,, iien Feed114, DetroIt

STATE OF MICHtGAN, Is. the Pro-bate Court fop the County of Oak-land.At a session of saId Court, held at

the Probate OffIce In tl~eCity of Pen-Use, In saId County, on the 12th dayof June A. IX 1040.

Present,HodorsbleArthur E. MooreJudge of Probate, -

In the Matter at the Eaakef SW-the t Dawn, Deees.i -

Victor C, Gersch, Administrator ofsaid estatehaving filed In said CourthIs First and FInal Account and pet!-tloa praying for the examination andallowance thereof; determination , ofthe heirs of said deceased,assignmentof the residue of said estate; and thedischargeof said Administrator;

- It I. Ordered, that the 18th day ofJuly A. fl 1040 at nine o’clock in theforenoon,at saId Probate Office, beand Is hereby appointed for hearingsaid petition;

It Ia Further Ordered,that publicnotIce thereof be given by publicationof a copy of this order, for three aue-eesslveweeks previous to saId day ofhearing, hi the South Lyon Herald, 5newspaper prInted and circulated inask! County,

AI4THUR.E. MOORE,(A true Copy,) Judge of Probate.Florence Doty, Probate Register.

RoyHL25-Sle

lana I~:-..-‘ ~

t~~ ‘FM. Nat anaouncemënt sounds anr~; ‘ etjieenmete not only for our ecoad-l~.- ~ : ~ bet for ear security, Naturaliy,lIt ‘ stir expert time are frightened. Hencefr. - - the Ins job-seeker should not count0 : - èlt foteign tradeopportunitIes.

~. -::: ~ cpmnut~mzsSELECTIVE~I~ - ~ - ~ ~ this Is a pretty dismal out-~3- _: leak, hut balanced against the uneer-~:- lain picture of America’s economy asI a whale are definlte-opportunbtlesIn. --- selectedIndustries.Here are t few,

: ~. fl~kaks Most chemical corn-I paniesan prosperousand have a tre-- nimdous future. Great developments

, - , am’s taking place in the plastic industry, : particularly. The future offers uallm-‘-_- S~ ited opportunities—waror peace,las’

- clan or Democracy, New Deal or Oldb-- DaLii -S. AvIations ‘The industry Is Amer-,- ~ lea’. youngest,America’s most hope-‘ -.- fat. Theday is not too distant when It-~ will be as&5C5D to ride the airways as

~ railways and the highways. Those- interested In commercial piloting

-- gould enter through the sir corps-But the industry needs more than p1-

, &sts,—it needsyoung men to grow upwith it irs its vital administrative work.

— S. Bc3IdI~s One of the greatesteontrlbntioas of the New Deal to the

- - Amerlcsn sceneIs its attempts to put-- homes in the reach of small income: brackets,It hassolved the problem of

financing and it Is now attempting to- solve the problemof high costs. Dn-: $te the uncertaintiesthat war always

- brings to home buildIng, I beli~vethat- buIldIng, its products, and trades of-

-- icr real opportunities.- 4. Merehandlsiags America still

needs better salesmen. This includes- stores, mail order, advertising, and

- personal nthng. Whatever goods are- made, or whoever makes them, they

-- mint be sold, irrespectIveof the value; of the dollar or the character of the

.‘ government. -

85 Defense, The army, -navy, nirforce, coast defense need able young

-- men to make defense their career.- The past 25 years clearly show that- r disarmament Is a snare and a delusion,

—that this country must not be cammghtunawares as were France and Great

~ Britain in 1089, ‘ - -

MUST MAKE OPPORTUNITIES- I am attending a Convention of

Fire Chiefs — men who never consid-er themselvesand have no fear of

- danger. I èannbt help thinking but. That they have the key to real success.

It is true that today there are newconditionsto combAt, that competitionIA very severe,and that 1040 gradu-ates cannot depend on government aid,relief, or artificIal crutches of any

- kind, Those, however, who make’ alptheir minds to work harderand longer

, hopn, to follow the New Testament’s-, command, —‘to give full measmire,

presseddawn and running over”—- those gradasataswill-snake opportual’

tin for -theasseivcewhIch may lead toF men in the end than. they ever hoped.F - In short, the future of the ‘1020

- graduate depended upon what was~ , abouthim; but the future of the 1040

graduate depends upon what Is In him.Opporwnlti&—Yeai—But the oppor’tualtia of today are Ia the devoiop,neat—not of II,. cbaracbr of tIseland bat of th. character of Usa mani

Tim SOUTH“~‘ L~o~N HERALDVolume 60 . SOUTH LYON, OAKLAND COUNTY, MIC HICAN, WEDNESDAY. JULY 3, 1940 - Number 21

- dflfl Eat Trees’The Adirondacks,mountaInousdie-

tSt of northernNew York, takesIts nasnofrom the Mohawk word“raflf~55t~5”meaning isff

4y eat

trees,” saystheColutbia Universi-ty Press.

in— ‘5. ~

- ,

- 9M. jj j~~~j-’.jL ~Ho.40LAJ.TewacoVeJev .

TRAcTOR OIL, ~Hon,bulk . ~‘

LAS~UC

WALT’S $E*Y2CE -

24-HOUR WRECKER SERVICE AAA

Puce. lOWDay—tfigU 70,1

MASON WORK- mARxistNEW CONSTRUCTION AND

REPAIR WORKCement~Iock~.Washed Sand..

& GravelC. L. ALLENTelspkanoSoistkLyon 199 -

WALT, SCHROLN, Proprietor

1. - -

VON ECONOMY, 16~apupIl at Brasnofi-andDon review the bookthe- -Maekonsio High School, Do- on skIlled drIvingwhIch ivoryboytrolt, Is one of tho enthusiasticreceivesfreeon joIning theLeague.Michigan boys who has joIned the “Don’t over-control . . . . skilledFord GoodDrlvors Leagueandon- driversaregraceful drivers,” saystend the League’s $30,000 priso the book and Captain- Brasnellcontest for champIonshIp hIgh- poIntsout that this haslong beoaschoolagedrIvers. Out to win one a basic rule of safety In flying,of tho 49 freo trips to tho New MembershipIn the Loaguo Is openYork World’s Fair and a chance to all boys betweenthe agesof 14for a university scholarship,Don end18. Theroareno duos or feesseeksexport advice from Captainand applIcationblanksmay ho se-Walter BrancH of American Air- cured at any Ford dealersor bylines, Inc. While StewardessGet’ wrIting directly to the Ford Goodtrudo Ackermanlooks on, Captain Drfters League at Dearborn,

BERT Ii~ROBERTS

DENTISTOFFICE HOURS,

9a.m.tel2

mOO lp.u~.*oOm0OWednesdays—Ua, m. Ia lVsOOOpen Tees,andThai-s. Nights

7sOOtoOmQO

Phone 156W South Lyon

-DEAD or - CASH!ALIVE!!! ForDeadendDlsablodHORSES $1’ - CATtLE $1

Farm Animals Collected Fi.~~ ,I...Promptly—SundaySeMce. -

HiGHESt PRICES PAID FOR PHONE COLLECT TOHORSES and COWS Detroit . Vinewood 1-9400

PhoneCollect Ann Arbor—2-2244 -DARtING & COMPANY

CENTRAL DEAD STOCK ~ toMILLENBACH BROTHERS CO.COMPANY The orIginal Company to pay for

Detroit RENDERING CO. ‘ - ~ ~ad stock.a- —

RayH,Iiurreii PIuIM.Buxrel

A. S. WJRRELL 8. SONS—An;st;ç Msmodals—K, M. ~karleswertb,Mgi.

Phone 31 BRIGhTON, MIsS,

Mse-reli J. Reawlak ~South Lyon Representative -

ALL AMERICANirirott - 4ply•~I U~k J LIFETIME

GUARANTEE

8Y000DifAR

——a .4— Sn

F5 A~LAMOREAUXM.D.

OFFICE HOURSm10-to II a. m.

2 to B p. n and75 0 p. m.Sunday by AppolntanatOnly

Telophone48

501,7TH LYON, MICH.

-6OOz14-~--$636-

*t ~A6-At

. For a quick cooling off of emotion.al ardor, that the United Statesshould go to war, consider the MIch-igan national guard.

Six thousand~sons of Michigan,who form half of the 32nd DIvision,are handicapped today by lack ofthe fohiowlag modern equipment:

No new anti-tank guns.No anti-aircraft guns. -

No anti-aIrcraft searchlights,No Gnrant automatic rifles.No mechanization of cavalry.Only 12 observation planes.In the light of 1040 Hitler-style

warfare, mechanized to the msth de-gree,the deficiency of the above ma-terial Is serious. War has become ahnttbe of machines on land and InaIr; its temmipo has been speeded tre—mendously until the 16’milq infantryadvance of a World war day hashcen multiplied tenfold by motorizedtransportation.

C 5 ‘5 -

Better-TrainedAnd yet In spite of the appnlling

shortageof vitai arms, the -MichiganNational Guard is ‘‘five thousandtimes” , better equipped and bettertrained than it was in 1917.

The statement coiaes from Col,John S. Bersey, the adjutnnt generalof Michigan, whose full-time busin-ens is national.defense. -

It offers an insight into the rela—tive mmnprepnrednessof the Gm,ard Inloll us compared with 1940 ~whenthe German blitzkrieg, unorthodox inIts methods, -changed- rules of themssliltnry manmmaI,

For exanmple, Michigan is one of11 states authorIzed to maintain anaircraft arnu. The- 107th ObservatIonSllmmadron Is based nt the Waynecounty airport, Detroit, Its totalequipment today is twelve planes. Itwas only in the pasttwo months thattimy unit received nine new observa-tlon planes,eachof which carry a pilota maacimine-gunnerand an observer,

At a tinue when Germany’soutputof airplanesIs estimatedto be’ 100 aday, the dozen airplnne~at Detroitwommld not begin to meet militaryneeds for 30 seconds. (Time federalgovern,m~entmaintains a large corpsnorth of Detroit at Selfridge Field.)

Then there Is the new nutomuaticrifle of which the Unite,1 States hasabout 78,0(50 to date, None of theseha, been distributed to Michigangumirdsm,men who rely upon the oldSpringfiuld rifle, firing five -timesautoimmatically from,i cartridge clips.

S 5 C

Horse Cavalry -

Time World ‘War style of horse cnv-.alrv.still -prevails,-’ ~

-‘I’he 106th Cavalry depends on lior—aes which mire fine - for polo gamesandwhIch are still reliable for umllitnrymuse after the tanks, airplanes andtrucks s,miash tlmrommgh enemy -lines.

‘l’his is In cimntrast s~’Itim ,neclmanix—ed cavalry umnits in otlmer states.‘limecimvaIry nlso lmi,s two rIders for everylmorsc, -

‘l’Ime 182nd Field Artillery, a mao-tm,rlzed umnit, Immeks sonic I ractors andtrucks ( Mieisigmmn’s guard is to get‘12 trsmcks tlmis s’e,mr,) -~

Fro,mm coast to coast Michigan isIs mi ,,s; n - as the fo remmiimst In ml mstrialstmmte tviisssc ted,n,slmsgicmmI - adv,mfleehas been the marvel imf engineersfrom n,mtlons of the sv,mrid, This limels,sf ar,mls Is mmiso contrast to ihe st,mtu’simbility to mmmanmmfat’timre them.

Congress immus,, mist ammthorlzed afour billion dimllimr expenditure forrirniammments of all kinds, ‘l’he regulararmmmy is to lIe almost dosmlmied In sizefrom,, 228,0011 to -1Ot1,IlIIP. l)tmri ng thelast year the Miebmigamm gmmard wasammthmsrized to recrumit 1 ,Oflfl macn, andtodmiy the state force it mm,ore than0,1)00 strqng.

4 5 5

Military ViewpointIf llitlcr over,vimeI,mis time English

isles, milit,,ry observers ii re canvinc—ed - that this country will be forcedto emimbark upon a military traioingp rograOs that ‘a’,,umlsl mu mu k e t iic 31I clii—iran force of 6,000 oici~husk like pyg-nies,

lnstenml of Cm,Oflfl soldiers, time state‘5’ om:ld proha siy im aye 00,0011,

,,t natinnaI gima rd strength oftimree nmiliimsn i,mi’mm Is l,eing rccomsm—

mm, enled by eisnerts,likewise, Michigan’s rim rrcnt effort

to dIg ii ti $50,nEsfl or so to providetommie additi,snal a rmnorles for cx—

nmilng guard ummilts still seem,, hikem:miitehln g fur Penn es, ‘uh,e explosionO”s’rscas lmiis tr:,nsfi,r,,sed ‘mile mm—

emsI~si,s\’uisentps’oii]Ctm, Into a isreisarcil—‘mess isrolsiemi, ‘myt’rnighmt, ( Uoyermsorl.Iiren I), i)iek’insmsn res’enily impededI,, isrr.s.smre if adi-Is,,rs smiml rrmbm:este,ltin’ ~~niit’mISti:trs immss-erms,mmrm,t 1,5 ami—lli,srize in ililti—airersift sunit for lit’—troll.

l’lmi’ rust if mustier0

nmillIi yr ar!mssfimirly striggerimsg is time lmi,,,lna—

thus. ll:mm’Ii if )lli’i:lgrsmm’s ness— oIlIer—S sill,,:, iI;tn.’.s, fur exrmniiil,’: rusttiumIm’ S,mui ni,nuil r~l~ui,IIiiII t’;it’I:. Itlikes aisouut ~iuI,uuiii1,ui,1iiI,, equii

1s mr

im:ti—:mirm’r:ft regimii,-mst ! ‘I’h:it ,‘,mlls furmu mit if blue m’imIlss in the fnrmii sf I,:—irt-.-I.srul fe,lerjml I,uses,

Turn to MIRROR-—Lsst Page

hiatedeI!ctrIcaIIy. far your fumliy

wtihotttajtfntli,rL/1-’

An overegefamily of 4 parson. usesaveritable ,jNiagara of hal water, , . ever 15,000 gallonsayearl This doe, not Include the cold waterused to mix with the hot water. imogine the ‘

time and labor spent in heating all this water .

. , . An automatIcELECTRiC water heater does Jthe Job quickly and eosily, wIthout attentIon

-— while you slap. In the mornIng your hotwater is stored•up and waItIng, ready for lm- (I

mediate use. ~ ~ ~ No other method of waterheating is so convenIent,so clean, so depend- ~able and trouble-free. It It one of the fIn’s!

ssvahI qesre

47h19 $4.95 , -

tome iii ~ndno theta

SMITH’S SHELL S~RVIC~FORD E. SMITH

JOHN GALLIGAN

PlumberPlumbing

EayetrougWag

South Ly~

‘New Tax UnderDefenseBill WentInto Effect July 1.

Folks WiN Pay AnLaIrs PamyOr Extra PolarOsi Various Articles

Income tax payers will bear theheaviest increase under the new $4r692,500,000 defense tax bill signedlast week by President Roosevelt,

.-tfter them will come the millionsof Anmerican, who will pay an extrapenny or extra dollar on such thingsas cigarets,playing cards,theatre ad—mission, automobiles, radios, ‘ toiletpreparations,liquor and beer.-

Part of the income tax changes arepernmanent,Such changesInclude a it—dmmctlom, fronm $2,500 to $2,004) In theexemptIon for heads of families andfrom $1,000 to $aoo for single per-sons, Permanentalso were changesinthe ssmrtax rates On Incomes from $4.—000 to $100,000,An extraone per centS%’a.s added permanentlyalso to corpo—ration rates. -

On top of all otheriiscometaxeswas -

ad,Ied for five yearsa “sm,per thx” of~D per cent, Underthis tax, a taxpayerwill figure out what he owes the got’-ernment, and then add a flat bO percent, Thus. if he figures his bill is $100he will pay $1 10.

Becausemiliionnaires are subject toSmirtaxes up to 75 per cent phi’s nor—,,m,mI ineomm,e t,mxes of fosmr per cent,C’sngresswrote in an escapeclauseforthe,a sayingthat the “sumper-tax’ mustnot an,oiint to more than 10 per centof the inconmc left after paying theregusiarlnco,,me taxes. This meansthatif yo,m pay a federal income tax of5000,000 and have$i0O,000left. yoursmlpertmnx will he only ~an additional*5(5.000, insteadof $611,000.

The tax boostswere effective July Imm all eomnmndities,such asltq,mor andelgarets,nnd will im,st for five years.‘lime income tax ~cimanges are retroac—live t

019-10 income, and will he pay- -

ahle March 15, 19-Il. Minor increasesalso were inside in Inheritanceand gifttaxes, effectiveon deaths.or gifts oc-cimrring after the President’ssignatmmre,

Here are the conuamodity Increases,Old New

Rate RateDistilled spirits, per 100 -

proof gallon $2.26 $3.00Brandy, per 100 -proof gallon

. $2.00 $2.78

Beer, per harrel $&ao $0.00~Vine, per gnilon 5-20c 0-SOcA am mmse,msent asimmuissions, -

tax Ic per Inc or frae—tion If prIce Is 05cr ____ 40c 20c

Cigarets (reg. size), perpackageof 2’) Sc 6k

Playing cards,per pack —_——lOc lieAutomn,mhile, on èahe prlce_3% 8+‘I’m-ncks, on sale price 2% 2+Umsisline, per gnlloa Ic lieOil, per gallon 4c 44%Siife deposit boxes, rental - -

—price..,,L.. io% . . ii -llefrigcr,ttors, on saleprice—$~7sf’’‘lire,, per pound 2’%c 2’/,cInner tmmhCs, per pound __4c 43%Ci,humret adnmissions,per .

eimt’lm Inc or fraction ofprice _ lie 2c

St,mek s,mles, Per $100 valime__Se 8-Cell,mnd sales,per $100 value.lc ScFl reimrmmis, ‘in sale priee———.J0% IIAmmtii pm rts, accessories,

on slmie isrice .2% 23

p

Clara Henning Will.Model Frock AtThe State Fair

Miss Clara-l-Iennlng, who took partii, time Style Revue at the 4—H ClubWeek at lansinglast week,washonor— -

cci isy beingplmiced in the “Upper i2”,mileumoing that she was chosen one ofIi! girls fr,smo this section of the state“iuo will style gnrn,ents at the StateFair In l)etroit, Last Thursdayafter—noon the girls modeled a display ofdresses—sports,afternoon and even—ing-wear—for the ml’. L, Fludson Corn—puny. Miss 1-lenniogwas one of twodelegatesfrom ~Vashtenawcounty.

Me, and Mrs. GeorgeHenningwereat~F.amtLiunsing last Thursday night - --attending the Style Revmme of the 4-H(‘Immh, Week, In which their dammghterClara took part.

~0

Local St. Jos.’sTag DayAdds $38.15to Coffers

ThIrty-eight dollars and fifteen centswas git’emi ht- Smssmth Lyon folk Satur—ili ~‘ mm time ‘Fag Day drive for St..IO5Chili’.s 3leri’y Hospital, Pontiac.ThisI’ iImnmlimt ts’sus $10.05 more than wasgiv— -S n Inst year Mrs. F. E. Weinhurger,u’ nm immi ml charge_of~the drive here, is\‘i-ry grrm tefmil In all the women andin ri’s is’lmmm assistedin the drive, and to,bI ts’lmim contributed to the worthyt’JiiiSe, Mrs. Welnhurger’s assIstantst”ere: Mrs. F. M. Glenan,Mrs. RussellCrulkins, Mrs. Wilhmmr Tahip, Mrs’ A)—tirrt \\:‘Inissmrgm’y, Mrs. Iim,m”arsl MusolfMrs. Nettie Kennedyanml Miss Dorothy1<rihmmslmaeh, (Uris who .siiiil tags u-erem.1;, ne Fi,rii, Phyllis Di, rh ngton, HelenSl,uli,msmgh, flelte It, \Vlnslseriy, .Ieslclyilracihm’y, Yuirmii a lessn ions’s, JoAnaItramiles’, (‘I’” riotte ‘F.-sylor, BarbaraI Iass’les’, 1,4511 Mi:solf, I reneRend.Loi ~“anAtta, \‘ehmm:a Joyce GriswalMssrs’ I .msmm I Inwhey, Ge.-srgIana La—Ilrançh, Is’raiiec, and Marjorie Mosten.

StALL GriswoldOS1tOPATHIC

Physidanand Surgeon— GENERAL PRACTICE —

ait AND COUNTRY CALLSOFFICE HOURS:

I. to 12 a, m.—1i30 to B p as.Enaiagss7,00 to 9,00

Me .me.~ Wednedayp.m.Telephone170

~ N. Lafafttt. South Lyon

serrucesmat etecirucumyorungsTo 70UT nousenomo—osud it Ia NOT expensivel Ask ol,oW auto-matic slectric water heating at any DetroitEdison office today. - ‘

THE DETROIT EDISON COMPANY

EYESGlasses Fitted

REASONABLE PRICES

Dr. F. P. Lamoreaux

Phone 48 for appointmentOPTOMETRIST

Auto Loanand ftc-Financing

1934 to 1940 MODELS

LOW RATES ‘EASY PAYMENTSNO INSURANCE REQUIRED

“PROTECT-U-PLAN”You may miss payment. for fourmonths without boeing your car, whensick or unemployed,

BRING TITLEIt i. S~f.te Deal Wth this

Frlsndly Company.

BUCKNER FINANCE CO.2nd floor . First National Bldg.

Cm, N. S..aiaaw & W. Huron St..PONTIAC . MICHIGAN

Phone - 6129Office Hommn, 0 to 5 daIly, includiagSaturday, newt cloesul Wednesday

aft.r 1,00 P. M-South Lyon

,01

jolne,] t lie l)l.::’i sIcOldm: it this- age ,‘f Isrrt,miuit’mi m:iemuil,m’rsl:i

1,