pinckney dispatch - Village of Pinckney

Transcription

pinckney dispatch - Village of Pinckney
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PINCKNEY DISPATCH
4-
No. 35
Pinckney, Livingston Couuty, Michigan, Wednesday, August 30, 1922
Vol 39
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UNSOLVED MURDER
MYSTERY
OUR RADIO SALE
•J*
FORD STATE FAIR
EXHIBIT
Of Amplified Shoe Values
W e Are Broadcasting Out to You Shoe Value* That Shock the
Entire Country. Tune in on Thi* &vent Now.
^v'
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Broken Lines of
Mens Oxfords
Broken Lines of
Mens Oxfords
3 98
1 85
Broken Lines of
Mens Tennis Shoes.
98
4 95
3 75
98
Broken Lines of
Ladies Oxfords
Broken Lines of
Ladies Oxfords
Broken Lines of
Child* Oxfords
USE
IT
YOUR
WILL
HEAD
ON THIS
BE A SAVING
f
SALE
TO YOU
D. D. MONROE & SON
OPEN WEDNESDAY
EVENINGS
HOWELL
MICH.
<?
CHAPELS
L a s t F r i d a y the body of a man WHS
found in G r e e n Oak township by t h e
roadside when F r e d Reese of H a m b u r g
stopped t o fix hi* automobile. T h e
stench a t t r a c t e d his a t t e n t i o n , the body
having become decomposed- T h e t h r o a t j
was slashed.
The Washtenaw authorities
were
notified and after finding the stilleto
which probably was the i n s t r u m e n t of
m u r d e r , it was found t h a t the case was
for Livingston county a n d Sheriff
Teeple then took c h a r g e .
T h e inquest was held a t H a m b u r g
Monday, the; j u r y r e t u r n i n g a verdict
t h a t the deceased lost his life a t the
h a n d s of unknown p a r t i e s .
A f t e r some delay the body was identified a s Tony Gardino of Highland F O R D N O W O C C U P I E S S E V E N to the highly efficient modern utensils equipment.
will h% traced .step by step.
T r a c t o r * will be shown
opcrntir.Park, aa Italian formerly of W.ebber*
ACRES AT STATE FAIR
Also on display a s a historical ex- clectric lighting plants and a speci.il
Tille.
hibition will be shown each of t h e var- display is being UTrunged t o show th
Mrs. Gardino, widow of the victim,
GROUNDS
ious types of gasoline engines built un- ability
of the' F o r d s o n
T r a c t o r in
with her three -small children was in
der
the
direction
of
Mr.
F
o
r
d
,
includplant
operation
where
the
coal shortPinckney Tuesday a f t e r n o o n and called]
In connection with t h e Michigan
on J o e Gentile who was a friend of' State F a i r opening Sept. 1st a t t h eing models of the hrst t y p e of Ford- age h a s forced t h e a b a n d o n m e n t ot
G a r d i n o a n d boarded with the family Fair G r o u n d s on W o o d w a r d Ave., De- son Tractor, t h e hrst t y p e F o r d Cur steam p o w e r plants. This special t x
for nearly two years in D e t r o i t . She troit, Mich., the big F o r d s o n I n d u s t r y ! and successive developments In these hibftfon has been developed because of
the demand for Fordson t r a c t o r s by
told Mr. Gentile t h a t her husband left and Agricultural T r a c t o r Show as well models u p t o the present stage.
Showing the high developments in many m a n u f a c t u r i n g p l a n t s throughhome two weeks ago S u n d a y morning, as a display of. Ford and Lincoln cars
s a y i n g he was going to t r y and iind a will occupy a special section located p o w e r equipment, the newest Russian out the country who are meeting the
fruit a n d ice c r e a m store for sale. a p p r o x i m a t e l y a t the c e n t e r of the F a i r type locomotive used on the U. T. and coal shortage by utilizing the Fordson
A f t e r some days Mrs. G a r d i n o be- G r o u n d s . E l a b o r a t e p r e p a r a t i o n s have 1. R a i l r o a d will be exhibited on special power plant.
There will be a t r a c t o r driven planc a m e alarmed a t his absence and her been u n d e r
way f o r t h e past t w o spur t r a c k built into the F a i r Grounds.
This
locomotive
is
one
of
the
largest
ing
mill. T r a c t o r s will operate «1« ifriends began a search which was only months t o m a k e this F o r d s o n showing
ever
built
nnd
a
n
idea
of
its
size
can
rick hoists a n d bucket hoists in thy
e n d e d when t h e g r u e s o m e find in the biggest and most complete expot h e fact t h a t
it is same m a n n e r which this type of v, oik
Green O a k was identified as her miss- sition of t r a c t o r p o w e r a s well as a be gained from
is now being done by Fordson equip
ing husband. She has no t h e o r y as t o m o t o r c a r display t h a t has ever been ninety feet long.
T h e 6,000,000th m o t o r built in t h emeet by c o n t r a c t i n g concerns t h r o u g h who p e r p e t r a t e d t h e deed b u t stated put on a n y w h e r e in t h e world.
her h u s b a n d had nearly a thousand
T h e t r a c t o r division devoted t o ag- factory of t h e Ford Motor company out t h e country.
dollars with him which was not found, r i c u l t u r a l , i n d u s t r i a l a n d commercial will occupy a p r o m i n e n t p a r t among
Every .type of commercial
tniler
Fordson which can be utilised with the T r a d e r
although about ten dollars and a good displays of t r a c t o r ability is a com- t h e display features of the
watch were in the pockets.
bination of a series of F o r d s o n Indus- show a n d each d a y d u r i n g t h e pro- for the moving of heavy loads will he
Mr. Gentile stated t h a t the Gardino's trial T r a c t o r shows t h a t have been go- gress of t h e Fair, t h e serial number shown.
In t h e commercial tnr section, fifc o n d u c t e d a fruit store and ice cream ing on t h r o u g h o u t t h e United States of the latest motor to be built on the
day
previous,
will
be
placed
on
t
h
e
teen
m a n u f a c t u r i n g concerns of comp a r l o r at Webberville which they sold since May
a n d will show
between
last spring. They then moved to seventy-live a n d ninety t r a c t o r s in pedestal holding motor No. «,000,000. mercial car bodies will be represented
H i g h l a n d P a r k . His bank book show- c o n s t a n t o p e r a t i o n in all kinds of in- In connection with the t r a c t o r show, among the exhibitions and the types of
ing a balance of nearly three thousand dustrial, a g r i c u l t u r a l a d commercinl a day and night motion picture pro- bodies .shown will repivsent a model
dollars was found a t t h e home. Mr. work to which
this power plant is g r a m will be held in a special d a r k for every commercial requirement.
tent at which all of the newest releases
Gentile speaks very highly of the mur- a d a p t e d .
These exhibitions will be housed in
of
the
Ford
Education
and
Geographidered man and his family, saying he
tents
and in a large central amphiA special arch is being built as an
was a sober, industrious m a n , well re- e n t r a n c e t o the F o r d s o n section of the cal and Industrial films will be shown. t h e a t r e which will also he used as a
Special band concerts will be given d e m o n s t r a t i o n ground in which t h e
spected by his c o u n t r y m e n a n d t h a t F a i r G r o u n d s , this arch being construcevery
day d u r i n g the F a i r by the Ford large portable equipment which derives
the family ties were strong.
ted of stucco and c a r r y i n g a s a decHand
in
the afternoon and evening.
its power from t h e Fordson will be
o r a t e d f e a t u r e , an e l a b o r a t e series of
Included
in
t
h
e
Exhibition,
will
be
kept in constant operation.
oil paintings showing t h e evolution of
"DEAD MAN'S CURVE"
t
r
a
c
t
o
r
s
utilized
as
locomotives
by
t
h
e
W h e r e v e r this Fordson
Industrial
f a r m i n g from t h e earliest authentic
installation
of
special
flanged
wheels.
T
r
a
c
t
o
r
Exposition
hns
been
shown in
NO MORE
record of early E g y p t down to t h e
This
t
r
a
c
t
o
r
locomotive
will
be
in
all
the
major
cities
of
the
c
o
u n t r y , it
most m o d e m appliances used in ugristeady operation hauling railroad cars lias elected
keenest interest
among
The Counts Road Commissioners, c u l t u r a l work,
over a specially constructed railroad c o n t r a c t o r s , builders, engineers, town,
B;t(-k
of this n u
H t T M w i ! l he a
realizing t h e d a n g e r o u s condition o H
^
track.
city and state officials and has a t t r a c t the curve north of town on the How- s p ^ i a l display of a n t i q u e agricultural
L o a d i n g machinery of the most ad- ed t h e close attention of t h e largest
ell road ha\ e rebuilt t h e roadway so implements. Over fifty groups will be vanced types m o u n t e d on" a Fordson engineering institutions who have sent
that now drivers of a u t o s and teams shown in this a g r i c u l t u r a l museum sec- T r n c t n r will he kept busy t r a n s f e r r i n g special groups of men to study t h e
and foot passengers can see the whole tion including besides a complete pic- loads of dirt and gravel in huge trail- workings of the T r a c t o r as a factor
torial display of antique and now obdistance of the t u r n i n g point.
ing bodies drawn by a Fordson T r a c t o r in modern engineering achievement.
Land was bought from F . H. John- solete farm operation displays of old Lime pulverizers and rock crushers
The historical displays alone showo p e r a t e d by horses
on a
son, the hill scraped, a new roadway t h r e s h e r s
t
r
a
c
t
o
r
operated
will
he
d
e
m
o
n
s
t
r
a
t
e
d
ing as it does practically every step in
built and fenced and now " D e a d Man's t r e a d m i l l , an old wooden moldboard every d a y from t h e opening of* the the development of farm implements
plow nnd many o t h e r agricultural imCurve,'' where one man lost his life,
grounds until
the closing o u t is a displaj which is worthy the closest
p l e m e n t s which have been collected to- F a i r
several people injured and m a n y auto
night.
aftction
of e w r y o n c who visits t h e
g e t h e r after a most elaborate search
biles wrecked, is merely history.
T
h
e
r
e
w
i
l
l
be
t
r
a
c
t
o
r
s
s
h
o
w
n
i
n
c
o
n
State
Fair.
It is the only collection of
t h r o u g h o u t the c o u n t r y which has been
The people who use the highway benectfon
with
all
types
of
road
building
its
kiml
in
existence
and demands arc
directed u n d e r t h e personal direction"
tween here and Howell will appreciate
and
road
m
a
i
n
t
a
i
n
i
n
g
equipment,
already
being
received
by t h e manuof Mr. H e n r y Ford.
the change.
Mr. F o r d himself is particularly in- s c r a p e r s , ditchers, planers, and graders facturers of this Ford Exhibition for a
terested_ip.Jhis section of antique farm r e p r e s e n t i n g the latest and most effi- display of this historical section in the
MASONIC PICNIC
implements through
t h e showing of cient development of many of the lar- hiVgcst S t a t e F ^ r s t h r o u g h o u t t h e
m a n u f a c t u r i n g concerns in t h e country,
which the d e v e l o p m e n t of a g r i c u l t u r a l gest
c
o
u
n
t
r
y
in this t y p e of industrial
The Pinckney Masons and Eastern m e t h o d s from the most primitive types
S t a r s held a picnic a t P o r t a g e Lake
last T h u r s d a y . Although the weather
m a n t h r e a t e n e d to spoil it in the morning, a really enjoyable time was had
by all.
Picnic lunch, games, sports, swimming and boating were the order of
the day.
HOWELL
MICH.
" GIFTS THAT LAST"
W A T C H E S , CLOCKS, J E W E L R Y , D I A M O N D S , S I L V E R W A R E ,
F I N E CUT G L A S S , MUSICAL S U P P L I E S , O P T I C A L GOODS ETC.
OPTICAL DEPARTMEET
In Charge of
MR. GEO. H. CHAPEL
Livingston County's Oldest Registered Optometrist—
35 Years of Successful Practice
W E H A V E T H E L A T E S T A S W E L L AS H U N D R E D S OF
S T A N D A R D "VICTOR*' R E C O R D S W H I C H W E W I L L
BE P L E A S E D TO DEMONSTRATE TO YOU
W H E N IN H O W E L L
W e a r e Howell's Leading and Ongtnal
Victor Store
You'll Do Better At
CHAPELS
BARNARD'S
Final Clearance
Saturday, Sept. 2nd
ca
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IV
f
y
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A Good Time to Buy Your
ANNOUNCEMENT
I
the
the
and
for
set
<'.<*&** u
.
Winter Supply
will be in Pinckney next week ns
duly appointed r e p r e s e n t a t i v e of
Spireiia C o m p a n y t a k i n g orders
making private demonstrations
" T h e Best M a d e t o Measure Corin the W o r l d . "
MRS. M I N N I L . G R A V E S
E x p e r t Corsetiere.
Of Flour, Canned Goods, Soaps, Etc.
A PLEASANT SURPRISE
Tissue Gidghams, 69c valoes
Only 39c yd
49c Dress Voiles go at
39c yd
39c Dress Voiles go at
29c yd
SPECIAL VALUES
In Underwear, Hosiery
Mens Work Sh,rts
Overalls
*••*••
••.
FOR GROCERIES
(Watch Our Blackboard
Our Cash flifces Talk
i
IIIHIWHH1MI
v>
'MM
Our prices in case or barrel lots are guaranteed to be
the lowest. The quality of our goods is the best.
Our guarantee is behind EVERYTHING we sell.
On Friday evening about 60 members of the F e d e r a t e d S u n d a y School
came together in the Ladies Aid rooms
in honor of Mr. and Mrs/ F\ E. Weeks.
F o r the past three years Mr. Weeks
has been S u n d a y . School Superintendent and a very c e d e n t w o r k e r with
the y o u n g people j>f the community.
Mrs. Weeks has been a g r e a t help a s
organist and teacher. It is with regret
the Sunday School was obliged t o accept their resignations, Mr. Weeks
having accepted a position with t h e
U p j o h n C o m p a n y of Kalamaxoo.
It was a jolly crowd and the evening
was pleasantly spent visiting, also several contests and stunts were enjoyed
by all present.
Miss Clella Fish then read one of her
original poems which was greatly appreciated. While Miss Fish was reading thp n o r m , a t the appointed time P .
H. S w ^ - t h o u t placed a beautiful wicker fernery in front of Mr. and Mrs.
Weeks ns a slight token of esteem
from the S u n d a y School. It is an unusual thing for "Billy" to be in a place
where he c a n n o t talk, but he sure had
t h r o a t t r o u b l e that night.
HWerer,
he responded with well chosen remarks.
Ice cream and cake were then served
after which all joined in singing "dod
Be With You T i l l We Meet Again."
611 departed with best wishes for Mr.
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IIIIMI
Cash Specials
Calumet Baking Powder, one lb
Flake White Soap, 10 bars
Jello, per package
Del Monte Beans, per can
Yeast Foam, per package
Lilly White Flour
Howell Flour
28c
47c
10c
10c
Sc
1.12
71c
J^
C. H. KENNEDY
and Mrs. Week* la their newfieldof
work.
Vi':\..- ; ; ;*
Wi-t
ifcjS&Xi
^
- **ifr* £',
'•filA*Vf
,V
PINCKNEY DISPATCH
WORN OUT AFTER Outing Garb Is
SHE COOKED
RESULT IN DOUBT
in
Prime
Favor
A MEAL
Took Lydia E. Pinkhun't
Vegetable CompoundRead the Result
Cincinnati, Ohio. — " I aufTered for a
t a x w i t h nervous trouble* and irre^ular•litiea before I took
Lydia E. Pinkham'a
V e g e t a b l e Compound. M y b a c k
pained all the time
and I w a s unfit for
housework. I w a i
worn out if I cooked
a meal, and w a s unable to do my washing. My girl friends
and m y sister told
me if I would take
your Vegetable Compound and Liver PUls I would be relieved. A f t e r taking the first bottle I
felt better, and neglected it awhile, but
found I could not do m y work until I
w a s stronger. So I took the Vegetable
Compound again and now I am the
mother of a Id months old boy. He is
f a t and healthy and I am sure I could
never h a v e carried him if it had not
been for your Vegetable Compound. I
recommend your medicine to all women
although I am young to be advising some
one older." — Mrs. C H R I S T . P E T R O F F ,
818 W. Liberty S t , Cincinnati, Ohio.
Lydia K Pinkham's Vegetable Compound contains no harmful drugs and
can be taken in safety by any woman.
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Hi* Far Oft Only Job.
Settlement
Worker—What makes
your husband look so worried, Mrs.
Mixer?
Mrs. Mirer—He's dreadln' the time,
ma'am, when he'll have to go back to
work,
"Whom does he work for and what
does he do, Mrs. Mixer?"
"He works for the Salvation Army,
ma'am. He Santa Clauses."—Judge.
Double chins are considered a masculine charm when the cleft Is In th«
middle and perpendicular.
BETTER "
DEAD
Life is a burden when the body
is racked with pain. Everything
worries and the victim becomes
despondent and downhearted. To
bring back the sunshine take
COLD MEDAL
The National Remedy of Holland for over
200 years; it is an enemy of all pains resulting from kidney, liver and uric a d d
troubles. All druggists, three sizes.
for the name Gold Modal on •vers* beg
and accept BO imitation
Stop Laxatives
Which Only
Aggravate
Constipation
Nnjol is a lubricant—not a
medicine or l a x a t i v e — s o
cannot gripe.
When you are constipated,
not enough of
Nature's
lubricating liquid is produced in the bowel to keep
the food waste soft and
moving. Doctors prescribe
Nujol because
it
acta
like
this
natural
lubricant s n d
thus
replaces
it. Try it today.
Nuj_ol
A LUSfilCANT-NOT A LAXATIVE
Beaut?
in Every Jar
Freckles Positively Removed
br Dr. Berry'* Freckle Ointment. fMng beautiful
complexion. Yo.-r druaglK cr by mall 65c; tend for
fnebsoklec lr.C.I,l«r|^IITiaiekt«Miai,CUa|e
V
Will reduce I n f l a t e d ,
Strailed. SwoIUa Tss>
dens, L l g a a e a t s . or
sfaactea. Stops the lassenest
and sata from s SpUat,
Side BSM or Boas Sparta.
N o blister, no hair gone and
borae can be used. #2Jo bottle at druggist* or delivered.
Describe roar caee tar special 1»
etmetieoa and latereetioa* borae
t e e * I A tree,
, f. TOONO, ha* 1» Te»e*i St. SsstsJslJ. Ms*.
Hay Fever and Catarrh
C^lt^m^—m
DUnereTS
Get quick, lasting reliei
by using
No-POLLEN
Gaarantfd
if n rain
Ask year dragtiet tor FRM TRIAL BOTTLS, or
J.VF0LLEN CO., l t O e e r e f l , C O O W U T i a
There Is no abatement in the tre- nixed the desirability of flannel for
mendous interest shown in pastime outdoor skirts, Jackets and frocks,
clothes. Women of aii ages are se- and this season sees them adopted In
lecting them for general
day-time a larger way than ever before. Many
wear practically to the exclusion of American women have felt that flanother types.
Even those who have nel w a s not the most practical matelong realized the versatility of clothes rial.
Mexican Drawn Work.
F e w women realize that the Vlyella
flannels are absolutely unshrinkable if
properly laundered and that they come
in a large variety of styles and
weights. It Is possible to obtain the
creamy white shades In six different
weights. Then there are the stripes,
the checks and the Scotch tartan
plaids, in addition to the heavy or
suiting weights In both white and
fancy checks.
Smart costumes consisting of a dress and cape are developed from the lighter-weight flannels
in. both the white and Ivory shades
and topped with hats of a vivid hue.
Crepe de chine nnd crepe marocaln
still are very Important fabrics for the
development of pastime clothes. Lanvin has made a beautiful model in two
shades of crepe marocaln. The blouse
is of bright red, while the skirt is
cream white. The bodice is made to
slip on over the head and cut in pointed scallops at the bottom. The sleeves
are finished in like manner.
The
girdle consists ot a narrow strip of the
white silk run through
medallion
slides of coral-colored composition.
The skirt has a plaited front panel set
in with hemstitching and Mexican
drawn work—types of trimming which
are very popular Just now.
Trimmed With Red Clre Braid.
Another successful Lanvin model
also is developed in crepe marocaln
In t w o colors, but in this Instance yellow and white are chosen, the blouse
being in citron yellow trimmed with
black and the skirt in pure white;
J e a n Patou has been featuring the
three-piece suit In his summer Collection. In one of Patou's best models
of this sort white serge is the material used and the trimming is red clre
Whits Serge Dress Trimmed With braid. The lining of the Jacket and
the foundation skirt are of red silk;
Red and Black Leather.
the blouse is of w h i t e crepe georgette.
of this sort never, in their most sanPatou in many of his recent models
guine moments, dreamed that they,
ha8 shown an extreme fondness for
would be adopted in such a worldred.
He apparently never misses an
wide way, declares a fashion writer lo
opportunity to use this color with good
the New York Tribune.
effect. It Is pleasingly exploited In a
Paris is competing with London and
Jacket and dress.
These two make
New York in the making of the smartup a costume developed In white and
est and most appealing styles in outred serge. The loore-fltting Jacket is
door clothes. When any type of dress
of the red material trimmed with black
is exploited from all sides It always
and red leather, while the dress Is of
means thnt if the* models are pretty
white serge with leather trimming,
and hecoming a certain number of
An interesting Idea in connection
women will wear them with little
with daytime garments Is the use of
sense of fitness. That is, a so-called
pastime hat may he worn with a pown
to which It is entirely unsulted. This
ts ulso true of shoes.
We have cut adrift from the old
standards which governed the selection of footwear. The hnnl blow was
dealt with the wholesale adoption of
patent leather for low-heeled walking
shoes. With the flooding of the market with many excellent Ideas in dress
at one time there J w a y s comes a misnppliratlon of the best of them.
Both sweaters and dresses are made
In two or more contrasting colors;
that is. of silk or • oo| In a plain color
patterned in hl;:h relief.
Among the prettiest of the sweaters
are those in lavender bro. ad*jd In blue.
A new model in these shades which
closes down the front like the very
old-fashioned coat s w e a t e r is long,
coming almost to the knees, and has
long sleeves which flare at the bottom.
The>re Is a high cobar buttoning up about the neck. The sweater
itself Is lavender and around the bottom and on the sleeves and the collar
are squares knitted In blue.
]t Is
bloused by means of an elastic band
placed low on the inside.
White Flannel and Serge.
A great demand for any particular
type of dress is a wonderful Inspiration to designers and manufacturers
and an Incentive to do their best in
that particular line. While there <s
the greatest diversity of color in the
outing costume, here as everywhere
else, a few colors become the extreme
of fashion.
In the plain
shades
hrown. gray i n d white are favorite.
while in the brighter hues there are
unusual shades of cerise, purple, yellow and red, Emphasis Is placeu on
Another Winsome rostume l rimmed
yellow and black used In unison.
With Red Cire Braid.
A complete reaction from black In
daytime clothes Is manifesting itself large embroidered (;ren-worK rno-rrv
In the other extreme, white, for street grams placed on the center of the
wear, particularly white with color. blouse just beneath the i#>lnted V colAnd on thl* w a v e comes white flannel lar. This idea is also shown In knitns well as white serge of an extremely ted garments.
soft and *5ne texture woven In psrt
of camel's hair, which, mixed with th?
wool, gives a marvelous effect.
The
kasha ser<e of Iiodier Is of this character.
Jeanne Lnnvln has been responsible
largely for this movement to white
serge nn I flannel with trimmings of
embroidery In high colors, a trimming
which she a l w a y s bar favored and In
which st e ever h: s excelled. One of
her best models is In white serge em-,
hroldered in a brilliant Chinese red
with little flakes of black as a relief, j
Another Interesting model of white
serge '" r>t simple design wirh slim |
panels on the bodice and on the skirt.
Tlds frock Is embroidered in red and !
black in n .Tugo-Slav pattern. A great
many of Lanvin's embroideries are in
Russian and Jugo-Slav designs. There
are charming frocks of white serge
done with bead embroideries in high
colors after Russian motifs. Very
often such frocks are in coat styles
with the Russian bodice crossing.
Knglish women long have recog- '
Enormous Hats.
One of the enormous hats beneath
which the Parislenne hides herself at
present has almost the proportions and
half the characteristics of a tent. In
black, for example, It has a large,
crushed crown of satin rising very
high and spreading very wide. Below
this spreads a huge expanse of brim,
half the size of a parasol. And from
the tent-like brim hang curtains of
beautiful black lace, falling In front almost to the nose and in back almost to
the waist.
All-White.
All-white costumes are very fashionable.
Sometimes a bright-colored
hat, or a scarlet lining to the cape,
offers a contrasting color note.
Orange Blossoms.
A set of lingerie for a fastidious
hrlde Is made of white silk, and on
each piece is a tiny bouquet of orange
blossoms.
U N R E S T A N D D I S C O N T E N T OF
T H E PEOPLE W O R R Y T H E
REPUBLICAN LEADERS.
SECRET CONFERENCES HELD
National Organization Won't Attempt
to Direct t h e State Campaign*—
Democrat* Not Yet Making Political
Capital Out of Strike Trouble*.
By JAMES P. H O R N A D A Y
Washington.—The
1922
elections
are approaching.
In three months
from now the country will have Indicated how it feels about a good
many matters, some of nation-wide
import, others of purely local Interest.
The politicians would be happier If they had a better line on what
is likely to happen.
If surface Indications can be relied on, there are many cross currents to be reckoned with.
The
United States Is about the only country where people should be happy and
contented, but a great many of them
are not.
Unrest is manifested in
many ways. The season has brought
bountiful agricultural crops, there is
now work for nearly every man who
wants work ; w a g e s are high compared
with wages In other countries; the
country Is at peace with all the world.
And still there is disturbed state of
mind.
The Republican party is more concerned about the existing conditions
than the Democratic party because,
being the party in power In the federal government and In nearly all the
states, It has much at stake. The peculiar situation received attention at
a series of secret Republican conferences held at the headquarters of the
party here recently.
Many of the
"best minds" of the party participated
in these conferences.
The situation
in 15 or 20 northern states was examined by the party chieftains, and
some 150 congressional districts received attention.
Hard to Plan the Campaign.
These conferences, according to persons who attended them, did not find It
easy to decide on a plan of campaign
that would obviously meet the situation. The representatives of the party who were called here have gone
home with the understanding that the
national organization will probably not
attempt very much In the way of
leadership in the campaign.
Local
conditions, it Is asserted, are so unusual that It Is deemed wise for each
state organization to work out its own
salvation, so to speak.
The Democrats, who ulso maintain
national headquarters here, have been
conferring a good deal and while they
are hopeful that things will come their
way in November, they realize that
no well-informed person would attempt at this time to prophesy as to
what will happen on election day. The
outstanding feature of the situation
les* than three months before the
people are to go to the polls, according to spokesmen for each of the national organizations, Is an unusual
lack of interest among the masses of
the people in purely partisan politics.
Party leaders, it is asserted, are
not acclaimed as they once were and
In some sections of the country may
consider tl emselves fortunate If they
get a fair hearing. It Is not In evidence that this attitude of the voters
generally is directed specially at either
of the old political parties. Rather,
according to the spokesmen for the
two national organizations, it is an
Indication of a growing
tendency
among voters to cut loose from purely
political affiliations.
No Real National issue.
It appears now that there will not
be eny outstanding national issues In
the coming campaign, unless the tariff can be made such an Issue. The
strategists in the two old parties are
not disposed to get much excited about
the tariiT. They are of the opinion
that, generally speaking, the people are
not likely to take the tariff Issue very
seriously.
The Harding administration will, of course, be up for Indorsement. Until recently the Republican
leaders have regarded the Harding
record as a big asset. Just now they
are not certain as to the value they
will be able to place on it when the
campaign comes on.
There has been criticism of the administration's handling of the Industrial situation, but the Republican
politicians believe that in the end the
country will approve the President's
handling of the problem. The Democrats thus far have not been inclined
to attempt to make any political capital out of the administration's handling of the strike situation. One decision reached by the Republicans In
their series of conferences here this
week was that an heroic effort will be
made to overcome t h e feeling against
the congress.
The congress is, of
course, a liability today. The Republican speakers who will go out Into
the campaign will be under Instruct i n g to attempt to show that the
record of the special session and of
the regular session Is not as bad ns
the puhllc has been led to believe. It
was t h e n e n s e of the Republicans who
came in for the week's conferences
that the tariff legislation should be
disposed of as quickly ns possible and
that the c o n f e s s should adjourn by
the middle of September.
President Stick* Close to Job.
President Harding has abandoned
ail
hope
of
getting
a
vacation
this summer.
Until very recently
he had held on to a tentative plan
for a rest of three or four weeks
in N e w England. With so many problems pressing for solution, he has decided to remain here. H e was compelled to cancel plans for a vacation
last summer because of the inability
"of the congress to complete the work
he had laid out for It. He has had
17 months In the White House without a real break. This surpasses the
record of any President within the period of the present generation.
Last spring the President made definite plans tor visiting Alaska this summer. H e w a s to have spent the entire month of August in the territory
as the guest of Scott C. Bone, the
territorial governor. But as the summer came on the congress was still
on his hands and it became necessary
to abandon the Alaskan trip.
Following the cancellation of this plan,
the tentative arrangements for a prolonged stay In New England were made.
Then the miners' strike and the strike
of railroad shopmen demanded the
President's attention, and the general
industrial situation became no unsatisfactory that it was deemed advisable
to give up the plans for going to New
England.
T h e United States has had a good
many hard-working Presidents, but not
one of them put in more hours at hia
desk than does President Harding. H e
frequently gets over to the executive
office before the clerical force reports
for duty, and It Is a common thing for
him to be at his desk until ten o'clock
or eleven o'clock at night. This does
not mean that he works these long
hours without taking some time off
during the day.
Playa Golf In Early Morning.
U n l e s s the pressure of official duties
is unusually heavy, Mr. Harding goes
out for a round at golf every day. During the last few months he has been
going to the golf game early in the
morning two or three days in the
week.
The driver of a milk wagon reported
the other morning that as be was passing the White House a little before 6
a. m. he observed the President starting out In his automobile headed In
the direction of one of the golf
courses, while four secret service men
were putting on their collars and neckties as they hurried away in a second
machine in pursuit of the President.
The sight that interested the driver
of a milk wagon is not an unusual one.
When the President makes up h l i
mind the evening before to get an
early start on the golf course, he
leaves a call for 5 a. m. The secret
service men, whose duty it Is always
to keep him in sight, are called at the
j same hour, but some of them live some
j distance from the White House, and
' It frequently happens that they are
compelled to hustle. On days when
the President does not go to the golf
course at 0 a. m., he goes out immediately after breakfast and is back at
his desk about 10:30 a. m. Recently
on account of the press of business
he has done but little golfing In the afternoon. No person acquainted with
the hard tasks that confront the President of the United States every day
would think of criticising him for taking a little time off each day for recreation. Mr. Harding seldom goes out
in his automobile for the mere pleasure of riding.
Keep* on Shaking Hands.
Recently the President's cabinet has
been trying to persuade him to conserve his strength by declining to
shake hands with the folks from all
over the country who throng Washington during the summer seasou. The
President has declined to tun] the
tourists away empty handed. Three
times a week—nn Monday, Wednesday
and Friday—long lines of tourists
form in front of the executive oftce,
and at one o'clock or thereabouts
these lines move forward. Not infrequently the President shakes hands
with 500 or 600 persons at )ne of
these midday affairs. To a considerable extent the handshaking crowds
represent
organizations
of
various
kinds.
If the industrial situation s.iould be
straightened out within the next week
or two the^-Presldent would still have
the dilatory congress on his hands and
would not feel like leaving the .national capital. The determination of the
President to stick to his tasks—a determination that has kept him in Washington through two
summers—has
made it difficult for members of his
cabinet to take vacations.
Some of
them have not had a week's full rest
since March 4, 1921. In the old days
Washington used to practically shut
up shop during the summer season,
The Landlord Lied.
"You fellows are always pitching into u s landlords," he said to a reporter,
"but we have our side to the story.
Yesterday morning I got news that
something was wrong with some of
my houses on the East side. I went
up there to find 40 windows broken
out. When I asked one of my tenants
the reason of it. he replied :
" 'It was the thunderstorm that did
\t:
"But there has been no thunder
storm.
" 'Ther. u hailstorm.*
"But there has been no hailstorm.
" 'Then it was an explosion.'
"But there has been no explosion.
" 'Oh, well,' said the man in a careless way, 'maybe an auto ran away or
one of those flying machines fell down
and did the damage, hut please don't
bother me with any of your troubles.
Just go at It and have the glass put
In again, and If the war don't break
out again everything will be all
right' M
ALMOST WRECKED
STATES R. R. MAN
Stomach T-euble * a d Him Nearly
Past Going, Declares Mowrer.
"Tanlac h a s helped m e to gain t e a
pounds," Bald J. E. Mowrer, 157 Park
St., Akron, 0., well-known railroad
man.
"My stomach w a s In such bad fix
that for several days at a time I could
hardly retain any food. I had no appetite and often the very sight of food
made me sick. I w a s Intensely nervous, too, could not rest at night, felt
tired and worn out all the time, and
lost weight and strength until I wa»
almost a wreck.
"Tanlac h a s made m e feel ljke a different man. My appetite Is enormous
and I haven't a sign of indlgestioa
left, I. never felt stronger.
Tanlap
certainly does the work."
Tanlac is sold by all good d r u g g i s t s
—Advertisement,
-
i
i
•
•
i
Her Reason.
Mary Louise and her little friend
had had a falling out. Explanations
were hard to obtain, but the trouble
finally carne out.
'•What was the trouble between you
and Hazel?" Mary Louise's aunt asked
her.
"Aw, Hazel flirted with a boy In the
park," replied Mary Louise.
"I'll bet you flirted, too," said the
aunt.
"No, I didn't either.
Mamma w a i
along."
No Place Like Home.
Rub—I get so tired of eating at restaurants.
-^
Dub—I'm married, too !
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YOU C A N
W. N. U., D E T R O I T , NO. 34-
>«a».t •••*.. jwfc.^ ...>oC. ^v^.^^w^vu½^4»UHa'JMrCMn*A«WM*IA
' ii^liLIihTffttg,
3CL
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IIBIII
I'm
« « . • ^awaitteatoOTt^iftfciiftt^^
aV'"
, W
PINCKNEY DISPATCH
FLOCK TO CANADA
EMPHASIS ON FIELD SELECTION
OF SEED CORN IN ALL STATES
Immigrants of High Order Settling on Western Plains.
ECONOMY
FOR
REAL
In the Kitchen
Removal of Restriction* N • c a n a r y D u r
Ing the W a r Has Shown World's
USE
F a i t h In Dominion's Future.
For a period during the late war,
and for a while after its close, there
was put into operation by the Canadian
fovernment legislation restricting certain classes and people of the countries
which were not lined up with the allied
nations from being admitted to Canada.
This was quite necessary, and the reasons for it will be so apparent that
they need not be given. However, the
time came, In the early summer of this
year, when It was deemed possible to
remove some of these restrictions. It
was found that there were many who
came under their ruling that were of
a class that Canada needed and who
needed Canada.
The restrictions,
doubtless, were drastic, but were needful. The news of their removal, sent
broadcast, has met with such a response as to give ample evidence that
they had not killed interest in Canada,
and that faith In the Dominion as a
country where a new existence, happy
and fruitful, was as complete as ever.
As has been stated by one writer dealing with this subject, "the opening of
the doors a little wider has but disclosed the dammed-up state of the
stream, which, given freer release, 'Is
pouring In fuller force over the Dominion."
As to the moral effect of the legislation that enabled these restrictions to
be carried out, it showed that while
Canada was seeking settlers, its lands
and Its homes were not intended as a
shelter for those unable to meet the
standard set as Canada's laws of civilization, the concessions which have
removed these restrictions still have
In view the maintenance of this standard, and those who are still allowed
In are subject to the same requirements that have prevailed for years.
As pointed out by the writer previously
quoted, "Canada h a s successfully Impressed on those countries from which
she draws her people that her prime
and crying need Is for those who will
go on land, and of those entering the
country the bulk Is composed of agriculturists. Every country which has
formerly contributed to Canada's population has resumed Its mission to its
shores.
"The lowering of the barriers has
had a farther-reaching effect than the
entry Into the country of many formerly debarred by reasons of financial
stringency. It has had a moral effect.
The restriction was rightly regarded
as an indication of Canada's internal
economic condition, and many persons
and families of comfortable means contemplating Canadian settlement were
discouraged from doing so. In the removal Is seen the first blush of the
dawn of better days, and consequently
many of those arriving are In a condition to establish rapidly and securely,
"Though Canadian Immigration falls
broadly Into the two classes, British
and American, many European peoples
have contributed in a large measure to
the agricultural development of the
Western provinces, and it Is gratifying
to note the same healthy Interest In
Canada evinced by the most desirable
of these.
"Amongst those from the European
countries are Serbians, Poles, Swiss,
Roumanians,
Dutch,
Jugo-Slflvs,
French, Danish, Norwegians, Swedes,
Finns and Lithuanians. All have constituted fine, desirable cltlzen-bulldlng
material, as the few detentions and
lesser deportations bear testimony.
Furthermore, the disturbed industrial
conditions of the New England stater 5
have resulted in the commencement of
an exodus of French-Canadian families
Iback to their old homes, which maj
j-each an appreciable size.
"On all sides this awakening of Interest Is evident. It Is a new faith
borne on the crest of the wave of
brighter prospects, the dawn of a fuller
realization, In the continued inability
of many other countries to emerge
from the economic slough tnto which
the war plunged them, of the desirability of Canada as a country more rapidly throwing off i t s post-bellum depression, and its great place in the world's
Immediate future.
"British migration Is of a healthy
and desirable order,- of sturdy composition, and frequently heavily capitalized. Many Scottish fanners have
already arrived this year."
Every state In the Union Is contributing its quota, and Joining with
those who have been In Canada for a
number of years In the work of reclaiming the virgin prairie of the great
plains of the West and converting them
into immense fields of golden grain,
or its grasses into fodder for the dairy
cow or the fattening steer.—Advertisement
The Economy BAKING
POWDER
A
Big
Time
and
Money
Saver
er^^***^
When you bake with
Calumet you know
there will be no loss or
failures. That's why it
is far less expensive
than some other brands
selling for less.
Selecting Corn for Seed in the Field.
(Prepared by t h e United States Department
of Agriculture.)
Seed corn for next season's planting
should be selected In the field from
the standing stalks in September. The
(Jsappointjng search for good seed
corn every spring should be a sufficient reason for following this practice, strongly advocated by the United
States Department of Agriculture.
Any intelligent farmer can go into his
own cornfield when the corn Is mature
and select high-grade seed if he has
planted suitable types of corn and cultivated properly. If he has joined a
county movement to develop certain
standard varieties of corn which grow
In that locality, and If he has raised
these strains on his own land, he may
reasonably expect a market for any
surplus seed.
County Agents Report Progress.
Various methods were followed last
fall by the county agents of the Northern and Western states In their efforts
to convince the farmers that field selection of corn was a good thing which
would amply pay for any trouble Involved. Similar tactics may well be
used this season where for one reason
or another the local people are not in
the habit of field-selecting their seed
corn.
In Steele county. Minnesota, selection between September 10 and September 20 was urged. The week of
September 24 was chosen as "good
seed corn week" in Nance county, Nebraska. It seems likely that the corresponding dates this year will be the
best time to go out Into the field and
choose the most promising ears,
noting the character of the plants on
which they grow and the details which
Indicate a vigorous and healthy condition.
The county agent for Dakota county, Minnesota, reports that a permanent and reliable source of seed corn
is being developed by getting certain
farmers in the county to speclallre In
seed corn week. They are asked to
produce a dependable type of Improved
corn and to put In facilities for drying and storing it properly. The average farmers are also encouraged to se-
in the winter bring the best ten ears
to the local county schools where
shows will be held. The best ten ears
from each school will then compete
with the other schools of the township
and the best from the town with the
rest of the county. Six hundred and
thirty-nine youngsters promised to try.
The agent for Washington county,
Indiana, mailed circular letters and
publications on the subject to all t h e
farmers of his county in the fall, and
had demonstrations given at the
schools for the younger generation.
The rural teachers in this county include seed selection of corn as a project in their agricultural work.
In spite of the development of a
very successful central seed corn testing association in Rush county, Indiana, for several years, it Is the opinion of the county agent that the testing alone cannot be depended on for
eliminating corn diseases. Soil conditions and the heredity of the seed corn
are factors which affect the growth of
the corn, and the latter of these can
be controlled by more careful selection
of seed corn in the fall from the field.
Field Selection In Some New Places.
A great deal of Interest was manifested in six field demonstrations of
seed-corn selection held In Cass county, Missouri. This line of work was
entirely new to many of the farmers
present. Those who participated in
the 260 bushels selected were further
convinced of the value of early seed
selection from the stalks, because of
the adverse weather conditions later
in the fall. The autumn was abnormally wet in this section, and the corn
matured slowly; then an early freeze
in November caused a low percentage
of germtnatlon in seed selected haphazard in the ordinary way after
gathering the corn.
In Mississippi county, Missouri, the
work done in relation to the field-crops
project in 1920 was mainly concentrated upon* field selection of corn.
This was carried out through community meetings which were held in
co-operation with the county school
superintendent. The advantages of
Farmer Should Endeavor to Strike a n Average of Good Ears Like These.
lect their own seed, but the definite
work of safeguarding the seed corn
supply of the county Is being carried
on with a few men who are really
competent to produce certified seed
corn and equipped to handle It. Eventually it is hoped that there will be a
man In every township doing this seed
corn work and, where possible, having
seed corn houses In which to dry It.
In Scott county, Minnesota, last
year, 4,300 acres of selected seed were
planted. For their 1921 planting 32
farmers field-selected their seed corn,
and all bad a surplus to sell. Stearns
county has 31 co-operators In seed
corn work. Minnesota No. 13, Rustless White Dent, and Northwestern
Dent were the varieties used. Some
of this certified seed was awarded to
30 farmers with their farm bureau renewal, thus Insuring a good distribuW h y and Wnere.
Relieving Officer (to applicant who tion for this year. The boys and girls
Is slightly deaf)—And where did you of the county Include field selection
of seed corn In their club work.
marry yonr wife?
Applicant—I'll be hanged if I know, Indiana Has SchooLChHdrsn'a Contest
Indiana has been especially active in
sir.
emphasizing
the importance of having
Relieving Officer — Whatl
Don't
erery fanner field-select his seed com
know where you were married!
Applicant — Beg pardon, sir. I from the standing stalks. A report of
thought you said why.—London Tit- the county agent leader for Indiana
states that In White county a unique
Bits.
proposition was placed before the children In six rural township schools.
Ths Unlucky Ons,
The
pupil and father were to pick out
Biz—Owens tells me he had a tough
the
best
bushel of seed corn to be
t i n * during his vacation. Says he had
found is the seed at home. This was
to borrow money to get home on.
Dtx—He was in better luck than I to be planted on one side of a field,
for Identification. The* la tfee fall the
was, for I was t h e m a n who had to
pupil I* to pick out 30 or 40 ears from
H to b i n .
the standing stalks fee asai, and later
the method to t h e Individual farmer
were considered paramount, and the
improvement of seed corn in the county was also stressed. The demonstrations showed also how field selection
would help to eliminate corn-root rot,
if ears were selected from stalks that
were vigorous and not ripening prematurely and on shanks that showed
no evidence of decay.
Co-Ope rat I on by Written Agreement
The county agetit for Huerfano
county, Colorado, visited 20 farmers
last year who were among the foremost corn growers, s n d made written
agreements with each, whereby they
promised to raise their corn accord
ing to the usual method of cultivation,
select seed corn in the field and store
It in a dry place where the air would
circulate. These fields were all visited
by the county agent daring the summer and an accurate estimate made of
the percentage of stand each had, thus
showing the men of what importance
it was to plant seed corn that germinates 100 per cent.
BEST BY TEST
Don't be led Into taking Quantity f orQuallty
Calumet proved best by test in millions of
Bake-Day contests. Largest selling brand
in the world. Contains onlv such ingredients as have been approved by U. S. Pure
Food Authorities
The World's Greatest Baking Powder
Didn't Know H e r Place.
A Bargain.
Mistress—"Why did you leave your
Ad in Chicago paper—I will trade
last place?" Applicant—"The missus
Bishop
Probably
H a d Read
T h a t my husband, aged twenty-eight years,
was too Independent."
for a good electric fan.
"Much Shall Be Forgiven," but
THAT WAS ASKING TOO MUCH
Really, Professor Jones!
10c
Gives Old Capes Glow of New
An English clergyman now visiting
ihls country tells a story of an emiPutnam Fadeless Dyes—dyes or tints as you wisb
nent Church of England ecclesiastic
now dead, who on t h e occasion of the
gathering of the British association, MADE NO SORT" OF APPEAL" EVIDENTLY HER UNLUCKY DAY
invited the members to an entertainment at his place. But he sent no Colored Messenger Couldn't See Where Woman Probably Convinced T h a t a t
T h a t Moment H e r "Jinx" W a a
the "Sport" Came In in T h a t
card to one member of the association,
Strictly on the Job.
Kind
of
Fishing.
who, thinking that he was the victim of an oversight, mentioned the
I was very busy upstairs with some
In a government office In Washingmatter to a mutual friend.
necessary
writing, and, glancing out
"I will speak to the bishop and make ton one day a Callfomlan was disthat right," said the friend. "It was a coursing on the sport of fishing off the the window, beheld Mrs. "Stay-Forever," a neighbor, coming up the walk.
Pacific coast,
mere accident."
"We all get out in small motor- Calling my small daughter, I told h e r
He did speak to the bishop, to this
boats," said he, "and fish with a long to tell the visitor I was not at home.
effect:
She descended the stairs to do my bid*
"By some mischance, Professor line baited with flying fish. Anything ding and I tipped softly to the top of
Jones has not been invited to the en- less than a hundred-pound tuna isn't the stairs to hear the conversation.
tertainment. Of course you mean him considered good sport."
"Mother home?" Inquired Mrs. NeighA colored .messenger had been listo come?"
bor.
"No, indeed, I do not," said the tening with great Interest to this con"No, ma'am," said my faithful child.
bishop, "Nothing can Induce me to versation.
At this unfortunate moment t h e
ask under my roof a man who has "Excuse me, boss," he said, wideheavy blue beads I wore around nay
eyed,
as
he
stepped
up
to
the
group,
defended the execution of Socrates I"—
"but did I understand you to say that neck broke and rattled down In the hall
Philadelphia Ledger.
My small
you were fishln' for hundred-pound like a heavy hailstorm.
daughter
glanced
at
the
dancing
glass)
fish in a little motorboat?"
The Princess Threatens.
"Yes," said the Callfomlan. "we go particles and, looking up in consternaThe friend of a New York girl who, out frequently."
tion, cried, "O, mother you broke your
some years ago, became a European
pretty
blue beads!"—Chicago Tribune.
"But," urged the messenger, "ain't
princess, tells of an Incident in the you all afeared you might ketch one?"
A r t Crushed to E a r t h .
royal household.
—Pittsburgh Dispatch.
Ptanlslaw
Szuk.ilskl. a New Xork
The friend was just entering the
sculptor, marries a Chicago girl and
Lack of Interest,
princess' dressing room when she
Mrs. Rose—"I think, Clarence, we makes her live on a pig farm.
chanced to overhear this colloquy behad bettor move to another hotel."
"Sculpturing isn't very profitable,**
tween mistress and maid:
Clarence—"Why, my dear. We are de-he says, "but those who raise pigs
The Mnld—But, madnme—
Tho Princess—If I catch you and my lightfully situated here." Mrs. Hose— make a lot of money."
Thus, once more, is art crushed to
husband kissing again, one of you will "I know we are, Clarence, but the peoearth.—Washington Times.
ple here have seen all my dresses."
have to go.—Exchange.
Lets disarm the thermometer
EATS and starches for the body are like
fuel for the furnace.
Why not adopt for breakfast or lunch, GrapeNuts with cream or milk and a little fresh fruit
—and turn off the internal heat? Here's complete nourishment, with cool comfort.
Grape-Nuts contains all the nourishment of
whole wheat flour and malted barley, including
the vital mineral elements and bran roughage,
and it is partially pre-digested in the long baking
process by which it is made.
*«
There's a wonderful charm for the appetite
in the crisp, sweet goodness of this ready-to-eai
food, and fitness and lightness afterward, which
meet summer's heat with a smile.
' T W e ^ a Reason*
for
Grape-Nuts
Emphasis on field selection of seed
corn has been general In all the state*
where corn is an Important crop, and
many interesting notes on the progress
and reception of the work are found
In the reports from Ohio, Nevada,
New Mexico, Connecticut. Idaho. Illinois, Kansas, New Jersey, New York.
Pennsylvania, Sooth Dakota. Utah and
Washington. Many germination tests
have hepn mad*, and there are frequent school contests to bring to the
attention of boys and girls In club
work the need for good seed c^rp
Med.**
Battle Creek. Mies,
}L
L ''JtJ-
>wei^r-^*MHW*'»»«?•'
v
^¾¾
J&i ./J'l-'^i^^WU****..-**,!**** 1 .!**'-.^'*.^^ vt«*:
y«™i
^i^i'ini'i-i'i'
s •
.. V
PINCKNEY DISPATCH
EXPERT CAR REPAIRS
Cost the Least
Miss Veronica Fohey spent T h u r s
day in Ypsihtnti.
Mrs.
Albert Dinkle a n d s u a ar<_
spending t h e week in D e t r o i t .
,
Mildred and Clifford Bennett have
heen spending a few days in Albion,
the guests of their b r o t h e r a n d wife.
Paul t'uhey started Wednesday for
a yisit t o t h e N o r t h e r n p a r t of t h e
state.
Root.
G r a n g e r a n d family
spent
S u n d a y in Detroit t h e guest of his
sister.
Anyone can hang out a garage sign and make a
bluff, but only an expert mechanic can keep your
car in the pink of condition that gives complete
satisfaction.
Bring your cart to us for repairs that are 100 per
cent satisfactory.
TIRES $7.80 AND UP
30x3
30x3 1-2
./
v
CHUBB'S CORNERS
7.80
8.B0
A. J . Gaffney a n d wife have been
e n t e r t a i n i n g company from Detroit.
SEE MEYERS
FRANK E. MOWERS
Candidate for
ANDERSON
PINCKNEY G A R A G E
Republican Ticket
Livingston County
Mrs. SRder and children who have
F r a n k E. Mowers, who has decided
been visiting in Ohio f o r some time
to
seek the nomination for Drain Comr e t u r n e d home Monday.
missioner
for Livingston, County is an
Mr. H e n r y Evers is visiting his relexperienced
m a n in d r a i n a g e of farm
atives in Manchester.
lands, having served his county as
Mr. and Mrs. Win. I.edwidge and Drain Commissioner for two t e r m s
G e n n a i n e spent Sunday with Mr. andabout twelve years ago, and w a s r e Mrs. J o h n I.edwidge a n d fainiyl of elected b y a larger majority t h a n h e
Dexter.
received a t his first election. H e h a s
Dr. Andrew Rocl>« of CRiumet vknit- also been Highway Commissioner f o r
eri relatives here Sunday.
P u t n a m Township t w o terms.
H e is 51 years old, 'has lived in
Mrs. I,. A. Devereaux of Ypsilanti
is visiting friends a n d relatives here Livingston County 35 years a n d f o r
25 years was a successful f a r m e r ,
a n d a t Pinckney.
Miss Rose Dunn of Adrian visited having developed his farm from what
was practically a wilderness to o n e of
Ben White's this week.
the most productive farms i n his
Mrs. Ellen Heffernan spent t h e week- vicinity.
end with Mr. a n d Mrs. Ed. Spears.
As he h a s always m a d e a study of
Mr.
a n d Mrs. J o h n Brogan of farm d r a i n a g e a n d h a v i n g had a g r e a t
Stockbridge, Mr. Jim B r o g a n and Miss- deal of practical experience in t h a t
es W i n t e r s of B u n k e r Hill called on Tine he is p a r t i c u l a r l y well fitted for
Mr. a n d Mrs. Max Ledwidge Sunday. the office which he filled so acceptably
twelve years ago.
W. H. MEYER
GLASGOW BROTHERS
GOOD GOODS CHEAP
NOTED FOR SELLING
Jackson, M i c h .
129 t o 135 East JVU3n S t .
Another Chance
To Buy Suite Cheap
S
Drain Commissioner
T W E L V E S P R I N G S U I T S — B l a c k aad White Check, Tweed and
Homeipun, mostly
size
16
.
.
$5.00
C H A N C E TO B U Y S W E A T E R S
A L L SILK S W E A T E R S — N a r y , Black, and all high* shades
$22.50
T U X E D O S W E A T E R S — F i b r e Silk, Bl.jck
$12.00
B E A U T I F U L SILK
and Taffeta
DRESSES—Of
IMIMMMUMIMMHIIIlim————<
SWEATERS—In
$3.50, $3.95, $4.95
Cr»pe d« Chene,
__
Georgette
$15.95
NOTICE
Have You Tried Our
TO THE VOTERS OF
LIVINGSTON COUNTY
' i am a candidate for renomination
for a second term as State Senator.
As ninst of you know, I am a farmer
and have always lived in Brighton
township, except when I w a s in t h e
Michigan Agricultural College where
I g r a d u a t e d . Have been supervisor,
chairman of the Board of Supervisors,
S t a t e Representative, and have been
Of Flint, Michigan
S e n a t o r from the 13th district, (Livingston and Genesee counties) for one
t e r m . Livingston county is entitled to
Republican Candidate
the next term because we did not have
a senator from lf)f)H to 19*20. I have
heard no complaints regarding my
work in the Legislature and have been
Sixth Congressional District
assured by many t h a t they would like
to see me return. 1 am opposed by
At Primaries, Sept. 12, 1922
t h r e e other candidates from the city of
F l i n t - and in order to win, must have
the solid support of t h e voters of my The Sixth Congressional District inown county. I appreciate t h e support
"oinny. i appreciate m e support eludes Genetee, Oakland, Livin?sten,
have accorded m e in' t h e past, Ingham Counties and part of Wayne
nd hope you will consider me worthy
if your vote a t t h e p r i m a r i e s on Sept. County,
2th, for a second term as S t a t e Seni.
ator
Verv T r u l v Yours,
H E N R Y T. R O S S
WM. W. BLAGKNEY
FOR CONGRESS
m
On and after Monday, April 3rd|]
! ml!, have my Office and Salesroom at Farm No. 2,
formerly Bellinger Farm. A full line of Poultry Supplies
and Poultry Feed will be carried.
Agents for the
BUCKEYE LINE
Icicubalors and Brooders
*
to send your child
to us.
We always give them
the best cuts.
(••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • » • • • • • • • « • :
B U Y F U R N I T U R E A T THIS ST D R E D U R I N G A U G U S T
13 B A R S W H I T E F L A G S O A P , 25c
Al
/
GET YOUR DINNER A T O U R CAFETERIA
k
BARGADMS IN G R O C K K Y SECTION
\
\
t
Don't hesitatate
Reason & Reason
O N E G R O U P OF. W O O L A N D SILK S H I R T S — L a r g e and small
F U L L LINE O F T U X E D O A N D S L I P O V E R
Wool and Fihr* Silk—Very Reasonable.
J E R S E Y SILK P E T T I C O A T S — A l l colc*rs
Don't eat a dry one
when a juicy one
costs no more
$10.00
S M A L L SIZES I N W O O L D R E S S E S — N a T y Blue Serge, Tricotine, Challie, and Jersey, size 1 4 , 16, and 18
$10.00
sizes
That's what they say
of our steaks
Highest market price for butter and eggs
$19.75
S E V E N S P R I N G SUITS—Check, Valour and S i v g e
FULL
7
o
JUICE
The Wctrld's Best. Come and see them working
1000 Baby Chicks to arrive Monday, April 3rd, ccme and
select your Baby Chicks— my price will please you.
We represent the Continental Hatcheries, .'the Worlds
largest wholesalers of Baby Chicks.
PINCKNEY
MICH
Ice Cream Bricks
?
. DEE-LICIOUS
Vanilla, quart
50c
Palmer House, three colors, quart 55c
Sweet Cider on draft
Gilbert H. Campbell
J
•M
ft
GUY BORDEN
• LAPHAM FARMS
';>-
Marion Twp., Livingston Co.
Candidate for
itfi
County Treasurer
CLEANS EVERYWHERE
EASILY, THOROUGHLY
ALLAN J. CORBETT
Hamburg, Livingston County
Candidate for Sheriff
Republican Ticket
1
J
•
{%_
That's the beauty of the Electric Cleaner. It
gets into the corners—under the furniture and
beds—behind the chairs—all with hardly any
effort on your part.
3 , Your rugs take on a new freshened appearance—
j their rich colorings are restored—they are given
J
renewed life and vitality.
1ST
M
The Detroit Edison
Company
C. M. TAYLOR
Of Green Oak Township
Candidate for t h e Republican nomination of County Treasurer.
A g r a d u a t e of Owosso High School
and Detroit Business University.
His p l a t f o r m : Cut down the expense
and lower t h e taxes.
Y o u r s u p p o r t a t primaries Sept. 12,
1922, would b e appreciated.
Y o u r support at t h e p r i m a r y Sept.
12th, 1922 will be highly appreciated.
If nominated and elected thereto, I
will faithfully discharge t h e duties of
the office with the least expense possible t o t h e tax payers.
I think t h e parole a n d probation
laws as administered, very generally
fiiil t o accomplish t h e purposes for
which t h e laws wcie designed, a n d
w e a k e n t h e administration of criminal
Too Bad I
justice. I -recommend t h a t first of-J
Little Helen, ngod six. was taken t o
fenders only should be eligible f o r ' her first bnsehalt game. She became
p r o b a t i o n . I recommend t h a t t h e in-quite excited when h e r f a t h e r cheered
d e t e r m i n a t e . e n t e n c e laws should b e some p a r t i c u l a r play a n d waved Ms
so modified so a s t o apply t o first ofarms, Helen followed suit. A t the
fenders only, a n d I believe t o o , t h a t
critical stage. In t h e eighth Inning,
neither probation n o r p a r o l e should
the batter got to first and then
be p e r m i t t e d those convicted of homscooted for second, which h e man- i
icide, b u r g l a r y , rape or highway robaged t o reach Just In time by a per* '
bery. I a m n o t a candidate of any
feet slide. Helen w a s quite distressed
faction either political o r otherwise,
and t a m i n g t o her mother she said:
and am simply s t a n d i n g upon a plat-}
"Oh, mama, what a pity! T h e poof
form of fair and equal enforcement o f :
all the laws, and a square deal for a l l man slipped."—Boston Transcript.
Republican Ticket
Your consideration will be appreciated at the
Primary, Sept. 12
H a t served a t Township Treasurer and Supervisor, Marion Township,
Chairman Livingston County Board of Supervisors.
What is Better
These Warm Days
Than a Cold
Refreshing
Sundae or Soda?
JOE GENTILE
•MMMMMMMMMMMI
< *
: • * : * • *
pppi|swpwwf^py»ygiii, J umunpjijA
^\ """f,^""
'c8
PINCKNEY DISPATCH
9!
G R A N T HUDSON'S CAREER !i
OFFERS MANY CONTRASTS;!
»**
pinckney
School
Supplies
Entered at the Postofficeat Pinckney, Mich., as Second Claas Matter
LINCOLN E. SMITH
PUBLISHER
Subscription, $1.25 a Tear la Adtauc
Now on tale
Don't forget to attend
y*
Dispatch
Advertising rates made known
•indication.
Curds of Thanks, fifty cents.
Resolutions of Condolence, $1 50
Local Notices, in Local column*
:eut per line per each insertion.
All matter intended lo benefit the |MTaon&l or .business interest of any io livid
ua.1 will be published at regular adv<-jiis«
•ng r»tes.
Announcem-ni <>r euUrlainruei is, eic.
mast be paid fm m regular Local Noiic*
rates.
Obituary and mnrriage notices are published free of charge.
Poetry must be paid for at the rate ol
live cents per line.
The Big Fair
and call to see us
Line'sBazaar
HOWELL
Funeral Director
P. H. SWARTHOUT
Phone No. 39
Mich.
LOCAL A N D GENERAL
P i n c k n e y B r e a d — a home p r o d u c t .
E. H. LENEBERG
Ann Arbor Auctioneer
Sells Everything for Everybody
See me before«having a sale. I
furnish tin cups and auction
•
bills free.
531 Second Street
Phone me at my expense
2436-R
Arrangements can be made at the
Dispatch Omoe
Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Reason were
Detroit visitors the first of t h e week.
Miss R u t h H a r g e r r e t u r n e d to Yspilanti S u n d a y .
Mrs.
C. V. Van W i n k l e
visited
L a n s i n g friends the first of t h e .
F. K. W e e k s t r a n s a c t e d business i n '
Howell Monday.
Mrs. T h o m a s Read is visiting
tives in A k r o n , Ohio.
Mrs. G r o v e L u m b e r t s o n
relatives at Sand L a k e .
WANTED!
Cream,
Eggs,
visiting
J. C. B o w m a n spent the week end
with D e t r o i t relatives.
Poultry
Cream teceived Monday forenoons, poultry Monday and
Wednesday, and eggs every
week day. Will pay all the
mirket affords at all times.
E. FARNAM.
*
Ors.H.F.&C.L.Sigler '
CIMNCKNEY
Mrs. J. Fitch is visiting J a c k s o n relatives this week.
Gilbert H. Campbell was a Ypsilnnti
visitor S u n d a y .
Tim M c C a r t h y goes a b o u t his work
with the aid of a crutch.
Rheunmti.-m.
Kring in your Watch, Clock an<!
levelrv repairing. All work gmirnnrec*'.
D A L K D A R R O W , Jeweler.
D. S, Denton and wife of Gregory
called to see their mother S u n d a y evening at Mrs. H e n r y ' s .
t
\
O f f i c e . Hours:
I 2 i 3 0 to 2 : 3 0 P. M
Sundays. I to 2 P- M.
»»»»%%»»%»%»»»%»%»»
is
rela-
M*»»»»»»»»»%*
David B e n n e t t of Howell is a gurst
at the h o m e of Mr. and Mrs. B. M.
Hicks.
Mr. and Mrs. S. J. A s h e n b r e n n e r of
Detroit spent the week end with her
p a r e n t s , Mr. and Mrs. F r e d Bowman.
Mr. and Mrs. C. F. B u r g e r and .son
of J a c k s o n were Sunday callers at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. S. E. I>iirwin.
Raymond
L r a v e y and
family of
G r e g o r y spent Sunday with friends in
Pincknev.
Mervin Nile and family of Jackson
are spending the week at the home of
P. Leavey,
Met Chalker is suffering with a
strained leg, the result of a mix up between a swarm of bees and his team.
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Irwin of Owosso
are s p e n d i n g a few weeks at the home
of the S p e a r s B r o t h e r s .
The Pinckuey
Exchange Bank
Does ft Conservative Banking Basinets.
••
Mesdames Alice Teeple a n d Nellie
D u n n i n g w e r e ' H o w e l l visitors Saturday.
Mrs. M. K. D a r r o w and d a u g h t e r s
spent several days last week with her
p a r e n t s in B r i g h t o n .
Mr.
a n d Mrs. H a r r y
W a r n e r of
J a c k s o n spent several days last week
with Mrs, Alice Teeple.
Paid on all Time Deposit*
Mr. and Mrs. Claude R e a s o n and
children spent S u n d a y with relatives
in H a m b u r g .
Mich.
Mrs.
D o r r Quail a n d children of
B a t a v i a , N. Y., were guests of Mr. and
Mrs. V. G. Dinkle last week.
4 per
cent
Pinckney
6 . W. TBBPLB
Prop
Catarrh
<"*
Mr. O s c a r Heisig of New York is
s p e n d i n g a few weeks a t the home of
F r e d Burgess.
Catarrh is a local disease, greatly
influenced by constitutional conditions.
HAWS
CATARRH
M E D I C I N E is a Tonic and Blood
Purifier. By cleansing the blood and
building up the System, HALL'S
CATARRH M E D t C I N E restore*
normal conditions and allows Nature to do its work.
All Druggists. Circulars free.
T. J . Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio.
Naf * • « • * • • » » • • • • • • • • • • • • • • » • • • • • • * « *
School Supplies
A FULL LINE OF SCHOO L
SUPPLIES
Tablets
Pencils
Penholders I nks
Everything
HOME BAKERY
FOR FRESH BREAD
EVERY DAY
PIES, COOKIES, FRIEDCAKES
Also
LUNCH AND SHORT ORDERS
B. D.
CAPPLE
PROPRIETOR
\ 1
jitJa9M9ieiBiiiiin
D
O YOU WANT your friends to avoid you? T h e y
will certainly do so when your breath is bad.
There is no excuse for anyone having a bad
breath. It is caused by disorders of the stomach
which can be corrected by taking Chamberlain's
Tablets. Many have been permanently cured of
stomach troubles by the use of these tablets after
years of suffering. Price 25 cents per bottle.
Chamberlain's TaBlets
S T R A Y E D — T o my farm, a white hog.
O w n e r please call for same and pay
expenses .
H e n r y Kellenberger.
Sell H a r d y N n r a a r y Stock and earn
Misses Bethel and R u t h W a t k i n s of
D e t r o i t a r e guests at t h e h o m e of M. $30.00 to $50.00 weekly with p a r t expenses. W e show you how. Supplies
Swarthout.
free. Easy work for y o u n g and old.
Mrs. J o h n C h a m b e r s and d a u g h t e r W r i t e
H a r e l , and Guy and Lewis Lewis vigH A W K S N U R S E R Y CO.
ited relatives a t Macon last week.
W a u w a t o s a , Wig.
Sheriff a n d Mrs. Teeple of Howell W A N T E D — T o let m a r s h h a y
on
were S u n d a y visitors a t the home of
shares.
J a m e s Speara
Mrs. Alice Teeple.
C L O S E D A U T O M O B I L E — F o r hire.
E d g a r Clark and family of DecrR a t e s reasonable.
fteld a n d A. H. V a n O r d e n and famI n q u i r e Casimer Clinton.
ily of G r a n d R a p i d s spent the past
R E G I S T E R E D P o l a n d China Boar.
week a t WT. H . Leland's.
( W . E. Livingston s t r a i n ) for ser
Mrs. D o n Fiedler a n d d a u g h t e r s of
vice. E d . S p e a r s , one mile west
D e t r o i t , Mrs. E v e r e t t Burchiel of Toof town.
ledo,
and Mrs. J a c k S n y d e r
and
d a u g h t e r Marilyn of Walkerville are F O R S E R V I C E — O . J . C Boar eligible to register, tot $1.00 a t time of
g u e s t s of Mr. and Mrs. Ross Read.
service.
J o h n R. M a r t i n
M e s d a m e s R. D. L e w e n and 1. J.
Cook
of B r i g h t o n , Miss
Genevieve P U R E L I F E I N S U R A N C E . Age 80,
$14.26.
Age 40, $10.41.
L y o n s of H a r t l a n d and Miss Francis
R. J . C a r r , Agt.
Burch of D e t r o i t called on Pinckney
friends M o n d a y .
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE
C. A l b e r t F r o s t
W e a r e again aaking those who h a r e
FAUSTMAN AND CBAXAM
Pens
Erasers
C. W. BARRY
F O R S A L E — E i g h t y acre f a r m , six
miles northwest of Pinckney. Basement b a r n , 8 room house, 5 acres
h a r d w o o d , 13 acres apple o r c h a r d ,
35 acres seeded to clover, 2 good
Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Clinton and sons
wells. Rolling land, sandy
loam
w e r e D e t r o i t visitors t h e last of the
soil. $4500 with $1200 down will
week.
take
it. A d d r e s s :
Robert
Hoff,
900
Saginaw
St.
W.,
L
a
n
s
i
n
g
,
Mich.
Miss L a u r a Hoff, M r . and Mrs. F r e d
Lake
and
Alden
Carpenter
were
AGENTS WANTED!
B r i g h t o n callers S u n d a y .
M s a s u r t m t n t of Car Corn.
T h e r e s e e m s to be no general
"*tfcndnrd ^ s a s u r e m e n t of ear corn. In
t o m e p s r t P o f t h e c o u n t r y t h e custom
La t o flftiri d o a b l e t h e q a a n t l t y of ear
c o r n t o t h a t of shelled corn. T h e
s t a n d a r d U n i t e d S t a t e s bushel cont a i n s 2,160.4 cubic Inches, so In a c c o u n t s p a s t d u e with u s to settle
m e a s u r i n g e a r eorn t h e b u s h e l would t h e same at once. W e do n o t wish to
b e 4 J 0 0 J cubic l a c h e s . T h e w e i g h t resort to e x t r e m e m e a s u r e s b u t we are
of a b u s h e l of dry e a r corn Is seventy in g r e a t need of cash a n d m a y be oblig. «_ Itf
. . sverj stste
_i.-«._ except* Indians
t a x t l a n * ed t o use u n p l e a s a n t m e t h o d s of col
neuads
Mat Oate, la wglct It Is sixty-eight lection.
f e e * * sad MMsalpei la whWHtto
Mr. and Mrs. T. H o p k i n s
and
d a u g h t e r s of T o r o n t o , O n t . , Mr. a n d
Mrs. C. W a t s o n a n d Mrs. Reith of
S t r a t h r o y , O n t . , a r c g u e s t s of Rev.
Confrsmatcaal
Candidate
Has
Had
a n d Mrs. J. E. Cook this week.
W k U E x p e r i e n c e in Business,
F a r m i n g and Public Affairs
Mrs. F . E . W e e k s , Mr. a n d Mrs. G.
W. Dinkle and Mr. and Mrs. B. M.
G r a n t M. H u d s o n , c a n d i d a t e for the
Hicks were Ann A r b o r visitors S a t u r republican nomination f o r Congress
day.
from this district, was born on a farm
Eyes tested. Lenses duplicated. Op- in O h i o in 1868. P a r t of his boyhood
tical repairing.
was spent in Lansing, Mich., with his
Dale Darrow,
uncle, M a r t i n H u d s o n , p r o p r i e t o r of
Optician and Optometrist
the old H u d s o n House.
As a y o u n g man, he learned the
Prompt
work s u b d u e d
fire which
p
a
i
n t e r ' s t r a d e , and it was while folt h r e a t e n e d t h e b a k e r y Monday. T h e
showmefi in b u r n i n g rubbish allowed lowing his t r a d * that he first came to
the fire to s p r e a d too n e a r the stores. realize t h e a d v a n t a g e s of higher education. D e t e r m i n e d to realize his a m The
Northville F a i r will be held bition a l o n g this line, he w o r k e d his
Sept. 27, 28, 29, 30. It is a c o m m u n i t y way t h r o u g h Kalamazoo college, gradF a i r a n d ail officers
a n d d i r e c t o r s u a t i n g in 1894, a n d then e n t e r e d t h e
serve without pay. T h e Northville University of Chicago for his M a s t e r ' s
F a i r is g r o w i n g each y e a r in p o p u l a r degree.
"" Because of ill health, he was obliged
favor.
to d i s c o n t i n u e his college work a n d
O t t o N . F r y k m a n , electrical c o n t r a c - took up f a r m i n g in Kalamazoo county.
tor, Howell. W i r i n g , r e p a i r i n g , fix- In 1897 he e n t e r e d the m e r c a n t i l e held
t u r e s , etc., ranges, v a c u u m cleaners, at Schoolcraft, Mich., in a small way,
fans, a n d irons. P h o n e 89. Shop over the business prospering a u d developing
to a point where it was the largest
Young's Market.
38tf
m e r c a n t i l e establishment in t h a t section
While he was in Schoolcraft, Mr.
South Lyon's home coining this year H u d s o n was a member of t h e school
was a g r a n d success, and there was a board, m e m b e r of the council, and
large crowd in town to enjoy t h e fes- president of the village t h r e e t e r m s ,
tivities. W e d n e s d a y ' s ball g a m e end- and r e p r e s e n t e d his county in t h e s t a t e
ed with a score of 4 to 2, in favor of legislature d u r i n g the sessions of 1905
Holly. T h e ball game on T h u r s d a y , and 1907, as well as the special session
Howell vs South Lyon, ended in favor of 1906.
of South Lyon, 10 to 11.— South Lyon
In the legislature, he was father of
Herald.
what was then widely k n o w n as the
Miss Ella J o h n s o n of D e t r o i t spent H u d s o n Local Option bill. H e also
last week with Mrs. S. A. D e n t o n be- took an active p a r t in the adoption of
fore going north on a two weeks auto the bills providing for a two cent railtrip. They will stop at m a n y places road fare and for direct p r i m a r y elecof interest from Chicago to Bay View, tions.
In 1910, Mr. Hudson became superr e t u r n i n g S a t u r d a y to spend the week
i
n
t
e n d e n t of the Detroit district of t h e
end with her sister Mr«. Denton who
Anti-Saloon
League, a n d in
1914
has been staying in P i n c k n e y several
weeks, and is feeling much b e t t e r at became s t a t e superintendent when the
h e a d q u a r t e r s were removed to Lansing
this writing.
,
The a d o p t i o n of the state wide constiA self acting sofa, j u s t large enough t u t i o n a l d r y a m e n d m e n t was accomfor two has been invented. If p r o p - plished u n d e r his leadership a n d direcerly wound u p , it will begin to- ring tion.
H e resigned from the superintena w a r n i n g bell just before ten o'clock.
dence
of the Anti-Saloon L e a g u e in
At one nf?nute past ten it spilts a p a r t
and while one half carries the d a u g h t - 1919, and was appointed by Governor
er upstairs, the o t h e r half kicks the Sleeper a member of the state Indusyoung man out the door. They will trial Accident Commission. He served
come high, nevertheless, several p a r t i e s the s t a t e in that enpaciy until the
in the village feel t h a t one of these s u m m e r of 1920, when he became gen-sofas will b e , a household necessity in eral director of the Michigan Baptist
Convention. This position calls for n
the near f u t u r e . — E x c h a n g e .
large a m o u n t of executive ability, and
places him in active business control
R E M O V A L NOTICE
of the extensive p r o p e r t y holdings of
the Baptist denomination t h r o u g h o u t
I am now located in G r e g o r y , havthe entire state.
ing moved from P i n c k n e y . I am
Since Mr. Hudson sold out his merready to continue service to Pinckney
cantile
business, he has been actively
p a t r o n s as in the past, with driving
interested
in agricultural
problems,
wells, repairing, etc. A full line of
l
i
e
is
thoroughly
familiar
with all
pumps, pipies, etc. always on hand.
A g e n t for the Hoosier
Electric phases of farming and farm managep u m p i n g system. H a v e an electric ment, as he has continuously operated
a farm for many years, his holdings
p u m p in vour house.
now comprising 320 ,icres.
GFORGE MEABON,
Mr. H u d s o n is a typical self-made
T e l e p h o n e : G r e g o r y 21-18.
American citizen who has achieved siuan h o n o r a r y
degree from
Hillsdale
college. He is a t n u t e e of both Kalamazoo :md Hillsdale colleges, and was
W A N T S , FOR S A L E , ETC.
for some time on the board of control
of the state School for the Blind.
While in the legislature, he was especially active in behalf of the Industrial
F O U N D — O n Dexter Road newly re- School for Boys, and took a leading
built auto tire with cover. O w n e r p a r t in the establishment of the Wesinquire Dispatch Office.
tern S t a t e 'formal.
This spring, his home c o m m u n i t y ,
F O R S A L E — H o r s e , b u g g y and harthe
city of E a s t Lansing, elected him
ness; a good driver and n good
member
of the council, and it has
worker. Cheap if sold at once. Inpaid
him
an unparalleled tribute in
quire at this office.
recent weeks in that every republican
FOR
SALE—Vacuum
Cleaner
and voter who could he reached, with but
Electric W a s h e r . C h e a p if t a k e n twH) exceptions, signed the
Hudson
et once.
N o r m a n Rea?on.
congressional nominating petitions.
Mr. Hudwson is a t) pical self-mnde
L O S T — R o s a r y cross and pearl beads.
A m e r i c a n citizen, ho has achieved sucKindly
return
to Mrs.
Gregory
cess t h r o u g h hard work and public
Devereaux.
office t h r o u g h recognized public serW A N T E D — E i g h t e e n c o r d s d r y sea- vice. His wide experience in business,
soned hardwood. Will received seal- f a r m i n g , and public affairs admirably
ed bids for some. All bids must be fit hitn for membership in Congress as
in by S e p t e m b e r 15. Address all r e p r e s e n t a t i v e from the sixth district.
bids to W, H. Smith, D i r e c t o r
School District No.7, Pinckney.
5CHS5«P
h
*3Si -tm$49n*sao9*vnq£*
J. B R A D F O R D
PENGELLY
Flint, Michigan
For State S«iutor
O n the Republican Ticket at t h e
P r i m a r y Klectlon
Saptambar, 12 th, 1922
Besides living in the city, Mr. Pengelly o p e r a t e s a large farm in Mundy
Tow T nship, Genesee County. He is int e r e s t e d both in city a n d rural life.
V I L L A G E T A X NOTICE
T h e tax roll for the Village of Pinckney is now in my possession and I am
ready to take taxes c r e r y S a t u r d a y at
the T o w n Hall until August first, 1922.
F o u r per cent collection c h a r g e *
a f t e r t h a t date.
D. W. M U R T A ,
T r e a s u r e r Pinckney Village
LIST YOUR PROPERTY—If
you
wish to sell. H a v e c u s t o m e r s in Ind i a n a who dealre t o bay Michigan
farm and town p r o p e r t y . Commission reasonable. Also p a r t i e s want, ing to buy, see me.
J . W . Fall, G r e g o r y .
!
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PINCKNEY DISPATCH
m
Mackinaw City—The carferry Chief
Wawatam, which was in drydock at
Ecorse for a complete overhauling and
repairs, 1B back on the run in the
Straits of Mackinac.
St. Louis—Seven Masonic orders oi
Gratiot county held a big reunion Aug.
'ii, when they gathered at Crystal lake
Monroe—The board of education Cor a joint picnic. The reunion will
fixed the annual appropriation for the be observed iiereafter as an annual
public schools at $120,000, $16,000 less event.
than last year.
Marshall—At a meeting of the board
Flint—Naturalization petitions have of directors of Calhoun county Agribeen filed In Circuit Court by 62 per- cultural society, it * a a decided to
sons. A Federal examiner will' be* take out a $7,000 insurance policy
here Sept. 12 to conduct the exam- against rain for September 19 to 22,
the dates of the fair.
inations.
Allegan—William Murphy, an emCentreville—George Belote, 50 years
ploye
of the Allegan Milling Co., was
old, experienced a sudden dizziness,
inBtantly
killed by the collapse of a
had just time to reach the office of a
physician when he fell from a stroke two-story brick and frame addition to
of apoplexy. Que side was completely the mill. A wife and one child s\irvlve. The wife is seriously ill.
paralyzed.
Saugatuck—A. L. Jillson, performing
Big Rapids—In brushing a wasp off
a
medicine dance at his home, near
the neck of his mother-in-law, Mrs.
Mary Holly, while driving an automo- this city, slipped and fell, striking his
bile, J a m e s Stockwell was stung him- head against the iron leg of a sewing
self on the neck and upset the car, machine in such a way that he diud
within a few hours. His skull had
breaking Mrs. Holly's arm.
Lansing—An efficiency survey of been fractured.
Houghton-—The Lake Superior Minevery state department will be starting
Institute held its first meeting
ed immediately, Gov. Groesbeck has
since
1917 in Houghton, Aug. 28, 29
announced. It is planned to check up
on all departments with the idea of and 30. The Institute is composed of
eliminating needleca waste of money mining men from the copper and iron
mining districts of Michigan, Wisand labor, the Governor said.
Flint—Heavy fines, some as high consin and Minnesota
Flint—Margaret Salay was given a
as $70, are being imposed on bus
drivers convicted of speeding. Just- divorce from Julius Salay after testiice Tanner, in whose court speeding fying before Judge Fred W. Brennan
caseB are heard, has resorted to this that the only piece of furniture her
method of curbing the practice of husband ever purchased during their
married life of two years was an WM
speeding on the county roads.
box.
She charged non-support.
Athens—Although Frank Shutt was
not struck by lightning, he was burnRoyal Oak—The 1922 school census
ed seriously by the flames caused by of Royal Oak Townshio, announced by
the bolt's igniting the bed on which Meiville S. Osgood, <ownship clerk,
he was sleeping. Members of the fam- shws an increase of 797 over 1921.
ily extinguished the blaze and phy- This year's total is 6676, compared
sicians were summoned to attend with 5879 a year ago. Primary school
the young man.
money to be received )<y the 10 school
Lansing—Word was received by districts wiU total $68,784.30.
Samuel Odell, chairman of the state
Manistee—With the pouring of conpublic
utilities
commission that ; crete for the foundation of the new
freight rate reductions on salt, which Filer Fibre company's paper mill, ac
had been scheduled by the Interstate i tual construction on the project has
Commerce commission, have been begun. It will be utilized in the mansuspended until December 1. Old i ufacture of wrapping paper exclusiverates, according to the message, will j ly and will consume In the process
hold on Michigan shipments until that I practically all the palp product of the
time.
j present mill.
Centreville — Suffering
from
a ! Port Huron—Judge V. R. Black
strange attack of aphasia, Kennear ] took the police department to task for
Smith, 27 years old, is under observa- its "blanket" use of search warrants
tion at the St. Joseph county Jail j in connection with liquor raids. The
here, one of the most baffling cases court contended that a search warthe officers have had to deal with in rant should be used within a reasonyears. The young man was found : able length of time, Bay 24 to 48
wandering in a cornfield near Three I hours, and Bhould not be held for use
Rivers. His horse, hitched to a bug- for a month or more.
gy, was tied to a tree at the road,
Monroe—Claude H. Dunn, Dundee
along the edge of the field.
telegraph operator, Is free on $500
Pontiac—Sheriff James S. Butler bond pending trial in '.he circuit court
has announced a plan whereby, it is on a charge of perjury. He is alleged
believed, the risk of driving on high- to have persuaded 15-year-old Rlllia
ways of the county can be reduced. Getty, also of Dundee, to elope with
Following conferences with repre- him, and to have given her age as 18
sentatives of villages along Woodward in obtaining the marriage license. A
avenue, It has been decided to enlist minister at Milan performed the cerethe aid of a large number of motor- mony Aug. 15.
ists who Will be equipped with cardB
Macatawa Park—Plans for the reon which they will note all offenses building of Macatawa Park, nearly deagainst the traffic laws they observe, stroyed by fire a month ago, are being
Dowagiac—When circuit court con- worked out by the Macatawa Park Cotvenes next month at Cassopolis, the tage Owners' Association. One of the
county seat of CaBS county, Mrs. first steps taken was the purchase of
Maude Storick will be tried for the a chemical Are engine and 250 feet of
alaying by slow poison of her former fire hose. Contracts for the erection
husband, Claude Cushing. She was of the board walk to take the place of
arraigned here before Justice Bilder- the old cement walk have been let.
back and waived examination. Mrs.
Hastings—Plunging through a fence
Storick is accused of doing away with and 80 feet down the steep embankher husband so she might collect a ment on the McCumber Hill curve,
$1,000 Insurance policy and marry five miles south of here, the coupe of
E m o r y Storick.
Frank Herney, of Hastings, was
Detroit—May H. Ford, suing Hen- wrecked, and Miss Luella Caswell,
ry Ford's cousin, Ney Ford, for di- Hastings, was Internally injured, her
vorce on the grounds of non-support, right shoulder fractured and doctors
asked Judge Ormond F. Hunt for $400 Bay she may not live. Herney was
a month temporary alimony and $1,000 cut and bruised but not seriously hurt.
attorney fees.
She set forth that
Mt. Clemens—The war department
Ney Ford has a farm worth $250,000,
has notified the city commission here
and has an Income of $25,000 a year.
that owing to the fact no commercial
Judge Hunt awarded her $15 a week
shipping is carried on over the Clinton
alimony, $50 attorney fees, and orderriver, that no funds will be available
ed her to move from the farm on or
to raise a sunken steamer at one of
before September 4, pending the outthe bends in the river between Mt
come of the suit.
Clemens and Lake St. Clair. The
Ontonagon—Authorities have an- wreck practically halts all launch and
nounced t h a t Joseph Stimas, suspect- yacht traffic between here and the
ed since last April of the murder of lake.
F r a n c e s Pannlen, 13, daughter of an
Pontiac—May a village sell one of
Ontonagon mine owner, flally has conits
streets to a village official who had
fessed his guilt. Taken to the scene
voted
in favor of the sale? Charles
of t h e crime, a remote* power-house,
and
Myrtella
Everett ask this quesStlmac, it is said, broke down and
admitted that he killed the girl fol- tion of the village of South Lyons in
lowing an assault. The alleged slayer an action started for an injunction to
is said to have sworn revenge when prevent a village street being deeded
he was discharged by the girl's fa- to Walter Marshall village clerk. The
Everetts set forth that
Marshall
t h e r . He is held in the county Jail.
bought for $75 a street which was the
Grand Rapids—Alleging no author- outlet to their 17 acres of property.
ity is vested in the board of control
Adrian—The development of the
Of the Michigan Soldiers' home to
Cedar
Hill State park in the northc a r r y out an order of collecting from
all inmates of the home receiving a western part of Lenawee county, near
pension of $30 a month or more, a Wamplers lake, is under way with a
deposit of $35 "to cover possible fun- force of about 15 men under Robert
eral expenses," Edward Rich and six Hark, of the state park department.
other Civil war veterans, members of The improvements contemplated inthe home, asked in circuit court an clude road making, preparing certain
injunction to restrain the board from portions of the grounds for campers
carrying this order into effect. It is and the reclamation of the high bluffs
alleged t h e board will collect $25,000 on Wamplers lake, which is wearing
from the members, If the order is car- rapidly down. About $6,000 has been
allotted for the work.
ried out.
Grand Haven—By-laws proposed by
Hart—The body of Mrs. Sallie Mosier, 68 years old, was found in a the trustees of Highland Park, the
cornfield near her home by Mrs. Sam- fashionable resort of Grand Haven,
uel Franklin, a neighbor. The proba- have caused a protest. The board of
bility 1« that Mrs. Mosier had been control proposes to assess cottage
dead about four days. She lived alone owners, who rent their places, $25 a
In * littt* log house about a quarter year extra and also assess those who
of a mile *rom any other residence, sell their homes $100. The question
and about one and a quarter miles is to be decided by the membership of
from t h e home of her daughter, Mrs. the association as Highland Park is
Charity Wilson.
Mrs. Mosier had located in a part of the city operating
been carrying a basket and an oil can, under a special grant. The park is
both of which were standing upright ruled by a board of control. The board
b e t i d e the body as though dropped I holds that rented property is not kept
i up as well as other property.
when she fell.
t
FRED K. NIELSEN
UNUSUAL HAPPENINGS
AND OTHER BRIEF NEWS
STATE NEWS
IN BRIEF
ammammammmammmummKmmmmm
Postmasters
CONTROL OF COAL MARKETS
AND RAILS URGED
U. ••
BURBAU OF M A R K E T S
Washington, D> C
Most September 26-28.
Washington—The national associa- P R E S I D E N T ' S P R O P O S A L O F F E R E D
(For week ending August 24. 1922.)
tion of postmasters, comprised of
IN
SENATE
BY
SENAHay
heads of first and second class offices
Receipt* exceed demand at N e w Yort
TOR
CUMMIN8.
ind Chicago and price* have declined.
will hold its annual convention here
Dther market* fairly firm with receipt*
September 26, 27 and 28.
I. C. C. WOULD BE GIVEN CHARGE
Record T r i p Through Panama.
San Francisco—The Pacific mail
liner President Tuft set a new record
for the run between New York and
San Francisco, arriving here in a few
hours more than 12 days after leaving
the eastern port, the Pacific Mail line
announced.
English Beauties T a k e to Air.
London—Britain's famous
beauties are deserting rail and auto traveling for the air routes. Elsie Mackay,
daughter of Lord Inchape, and one of
Fred K. Nielsen, of Nebraska, a the heiresses to his millions, has
solicitor of the State department, has won her official pilots' certificate and
been named by President Harding to now travels in her own airplane.
be agent of the United States on the
British-American claims commission.'
Channel S w i m m e r Gives Up.
Mr. Nielsen has had extensive trainDover, Eng.—T. W. Burgess, the
ing and experience in matters relating Englishman who swam the English
to international law and diplomacy.
Channel in 1911, again essayed the
feat, starting from the French shore.
He had to give up in mid-channel,
however. Jean Mitchell, a FrenchDeclares Opera- man, also started the swim, but failed.
SAYS PROFITEERS CONTROL FUEL
State Administrator
tors Comprise Advisory
Board.
Lansing—William W. Potter, state
fuel administrator, has charged that
t h e coal concerns most closely affiliated with the Federal Fuel Administration are "getting theirs and getting
it first."
He declared that the public is not
in control of the distribution of coal;
that coal is being daily offered at exorbitant prices, and asserted that the
inability or disinclination of the Federal Fuel Administration to furnish
Michigan sufficient coal for its necessary needs, makes it evident that
enough coal can not be gotten into
the state in time to prevent serious
discomfort and loss of life.
Mr. Potter declared that the operators comprise the advisory board of
the Federal Fuel Administration and
added that "when a handful of men
may throttle the American public and
demand double a fair price for coal,
it is time this American public was
taking some action to change the personnel of the activities of the Federal Government."
SIX OFFICERS URGED TO RETIRE
A r m y Would
Reduce Personnel
Letting Aged Officers Quit.
by
Washington — Suggestions
have
been advanced
by the war department to four major and two brigadier generals of the army that, in
view of their early retirement from
the army under the age limitations
fixed by statute, they make application for transfer from the active to
the retired list.
If the six general officers applied
for retirement without waiting until
their brief time limits were reached it
was said, they would do the service
a tremendous good by making possible
the retention of a number of the
younger personnel in Junior commissioned grades.
C.E. HUGHES ON WAY TO BRAZIL
Wrenches Shoulder in Berth.
Buffalo—Or. R. F. Flack, of Asheville, N. C , threw his shoulder out of
Joint trying to dress in his berth on
a Pennsylvania train. He could not
set the shoulder without assistance,
and he suffered greatly until the train
reached Buffalo where he got medical aid.
Mother of 16 Children at 30-
Plainfleld, Wis.—Triplets, two boys
and a girl, were born to Mr. and Mrs.
Irvin Wilson here. Mrs. Wilson is
only 30 and is the mother of 16 children, 11 of which are living. She has
three sets of twins. Mr. and Mrs.
Wilson reside on a farm 16 miles west
of here, near Kellner.
Amazon Bound Plane W r e c k e d .
Washington—The cruiser Denver,
picked up Walter Hinton and his com
panions of the Rio-bound seaplane,
Sampaio Correia, wrecked en rouv.
from the Bahamas to Haiti, reported
to the navy department that she wcs
proceeding to Guantanamo, Cuba, with
the disabled 'plane in tow.
Finds Husband Gored By Bull.
Castle Rock, Wash.—Alarmed by
the long absence of her husband, Mrs,
Hiskis Johnson instituted a search at
the Hazel Dell ranch and found Johnson had been gored to death by a bull,
Following the attack he was able to
drag himself to a corn field, but died
Just as his wife reached him.
Shipping Board Cuts Expenses.
Washington—The shippiing
board
and emergency fleet corporation reduced its personnel by 3,158 between
June 13, 1921, and August 12, 1922, at
an aggregate Baving of $5,338,728, it
was announced by Chairman Lasker.
In the controller's department of the
board the force WBB reduced from
3,015 to 1,289.
Places
Bed Across T r a c k s .
No. 1 timothy quoted August 24 N e w
York $29, Philadelphia 120, Chicago »22.
St. Loula $22. Atlanta $24. No. 1 ai'*J f a Kansas City $14.75, Memphis 128. AtlanFuel Problem Recognized as Most ta $26
No. 1 Prairie Kansas City $11,
3t. Louis $17, Chicago $17.50.
Important Issue and Need
Feed
Of Drastic Action Sean.
Market quiet. Offerings fair.
Production and supplies of most feeds good. NO
demand at present levels. Good inquiry
bran from T e x a s and
Southwest.
Washington—Control
of
mines, for
Mills reported storing feeds In preference
prices and distribution of coal during :o making concessions In prices. Linseed
meal easier, offerings fair. Gluten and
the period of the fuel emergency, and nomlny
feed situation unchanged.
Alcomplete control of coal transporta- falfa meal strong, offerings and demand
tion by the interstate commerce com- lght. Receipts and movement J'ght.
Quoted August 24: Bran $13.76, mlddmission, has been proposed to con- ,lngs $16, flour middlings $22, linseed
White
hominy
gress by the president, and put before meal $42 Minneapolis.
reed $26.60 Chicago. $24.60 St.
Louis.
the senate in the form of an admin- 31uten feed $29.85 Chicago. No. 1 alfalfa
istration bill, ofTered by Senator -neal $19.60 K a n s a s City.
Grain
Cummins, chairman of the committee
Highest prices for the week
were
of Interstate commerce, Aug. 24.
reached on the opening day, but there
Almost coincident with the Intro- was weakness the 18th and 19th and alprices worked higher later the
duction of this bill came a serious though
oloae showed a net decline of 1 l-4c in
debate in the- senate on the coal and Chicago September wheat for the week;
ind a drop of 1 cent In Chicago Septemrail crisis, and, just before adjourn- ber
com.
Bearish factors were lower
ment, Senator Walsh, Massachusetts, Liverpool markets and Increase In Canallan orop estimates. Advances were due
member of the committee on educa- to
removal of hedges against sales to
tion and labor, offered a Joint resolu- exporters oversold condition on the 22nd,
ind short covering. «Grain market ertion empowering the president to take ratic
on the 24th within about 2 cent
range. Prices opened weak with Liverover and operate the coal mines.
pool and on break In exchange, then adDuring the debate there was refer- vanced on short covering and buying
ence by several senators to the pos- induced by strength In corn. A reaction
lame later qn selling influenced by adsibility of government operation of vices of permission of Indian Governthe mines and Senator Lenroot, of ment to export 16,000,000 bushels wheat.
prices In Chicago cash market:
Wisconsin, hinted at government seiz- So.Closing
2 red winter wheat $1.04; No. 2 hard
ure of the railroads.
winter wheat $1.05; No. 2 mixed corn
No. 2 yellpw corn 64c; No. 3 white
Senator Lenroot said the time had 54c;
:iats 83c.
now come to vote the president auClosing future prices:
Chicago Sepwheat $1.01 3-4; Chicago Septhority to take over both the coal tember
tember corn 60 7-8c; Minneapolis Septemmines and the railroads, the presl ber wheat $1.03 7-8: KanBaa City September wheat 85 l-2c; Winnipeg October
dent to use such authority^ "in his dis- wheat
99 7-8c.
cretion and when he thinks It necesDairy Products
sary,"
Butter markets steady to firm during
week.
Upward tendency of prices
Senator Cummins in the debate In- the
followed the generally firm conditions
ferentially approved of this sweeping ruling early In week. Some export Infor undergrades.
Closing prices
suggestion and the temper of the sen- quiry
August 24: 92 score. New York 36 l-2c;
ate was plainly for drastic action.
Philadelphia 37c; Boston 36 l-2c; ChiSenator Cummins and others warn- cago 34c.
Live Stock and Meats
ed the senate that the coal question
Chicago
showed net detoday is the vital problem of the na- clines duringhogtheprices
week ranging from 10c
tion transcending in importance the to 16c per 100 lbs., heavy weights declinmost. Beef steers 26c to 60c lower
soldier bonus, the tariff or any other ing
and butcher cows and heifers 15c to 60c
lower; calves weak to $1 lower; feeder
issue.
however, were 10c to 25c higher.
"I wonder while the senate was go- 9teer8,
August 24 Chicago prices; Hogs, top,
ing along discussing 2,000 amend- $9.55: bulk of sales. $6.6009.60; medium
good beef steers, $7.85010: butcher
ments to the tariff bill if it realized and
cows and heifers, $3.8509; feeder steers
the seriousness of this coal situa- $6.50@8; light and medium weight veal
$10.B0@12; fat Iambi $12.25®13.16;
tion?" said Senator Cummins. Later, calves,
reeding lambs,
$11.50(312,76:
yearlings
he said he was willing to go to any $8.76011.26; fat ewes $5.5007.75.
August 24 prices good grade m e a t s :
end possible under the constitution to Beef
$15017; veal $15@19; lamb $24@28;
meet the emergency, and would sup- mutton $18018: light pork loins, $24027:
port drastic temporary measures that heavy loins $14019.
Fruits and Vegetables
he could not support as a permanent
Potatoes steady to strong.
N e w Jerproposition.
sey cobblers 10c higher New York, up
50o Chicago, firm shipping points. Early
Ohlos and cobblers midwest states slow,
dull. Wisconsin, Colorado. Idaho round
whites firm Chicago.
Prices reported August 24: N e w Jersey sack cobblers No. 1 firm N e w York
Michael Collins, Heroic Figure, Is $1.15® 1,25 per 100 lbs.; strong Chicago
at $20MO.
Up 10®80c other cities at
M a r t y r for Irish Cause.
1.6501.75.
Steady shipping points at
1.0501.25, F. O. B. Giants steady most
London—Michael Collins, head of markets. 86c®$1.15; Cincinnati $1.40®
1.45. Steady 85090c f. o. b. Wisconsin
the Irish provisional government and cobblers
In Chicago and Cincinnati, $1.76
the Irish national army, was shot and
1 80, Kansas and
Minnesota
early
hloe, partly graded, weak 7£c@$l in
killed from ambush at Bandon, Coun- midwestern
markets, 60095c f. o. b.
IRELAND LOST ANOTHER LEADER
J
ty Cork, Aug. 22, a few hours after
he had been given an ovation by the
people of Cork, who for the first
time saw the Free State hero in the
uniform of commander-in-chief.
Thus within 10 days two of the
most prominent figures In the new
Irish government have been removed
by death. Just 10 days before President Griffith of the Dall Eireann, considered the brains of the new organization, died In Dublin.
Chicago—Michael Durokovitch was
told
in plain words by a Judge that
Secretary of State To M a k e Official
his
method
of campaigning for a 5' V i s i t During Centennial.
cent street car fare, while quite "orig- FORMER MAYOR OLES ARRESTED
New York—Charles Evans Hughes, | Inal," was "all wrong." Durokovitch
secretary of state, sailed Aug. 24, on dragged a bed across the car tracks Youngstown'a Eccentric Leader Charged W i t h Obstructing Sidewalk.
the Pan America to return the visit \ and retired to peaceful slumber. A
j
sign
said
he'd
move
when
the
nickel
to Brazil, which Emperor Don Pedro
Youngstown, O.—George L. Oles,
made to the United States in 1876, [ fare was granted.
who
resigned as mayor two months
and to visit the Brazilian centennial
ago, after a stormy administration,
Cox Abroad Studying League.
exposition.
London—James M. Cox
of
Ohio, was arrested Aug. 24 and taken to
Ambassador Aflencar, of Brazil,
Consul General Lobo, in New York, i Democratic candidate for president in the police station in a patrol wagon
and the entire staff of the New York the last national election, has begun to face charges of obstructing the
Brazilian consulate were at the pier. preparation of a statement setting sidewalk in front of his downtown
The ship, delayed almost two hours, [ forth the results of his study of Eu- market.
The complaint was made by Morbecause Mr. Hughes was late in arriv- j ropean conditions and the work of
ing, finally got away at 6 o'clock, with the league of nations. Mr. Cox favor- ris Squires, proprietor of a rival martugs, ferries and small boats In the [ ed entrance of the United States in ket. Squires and Oles have engaged
in bitter personal exchanges through
harbor whistling a farewell salute. I the league of nations.
their newspaper advertisements for
a long period. The former mayor
136,441 Enrolled In Club*.
FRANCS AND MARKS AGAIN DROP Washington—A total of 138,441 boys gave bond of $10 for his appearance
later for a hearing.
and girls were enrolled in agricultural
German M a r k Now 5'/ 8 c a Hundred,
extension clubs in 1921 for training in
or 20 For a Cent.
various phases of live-stock work,
according to the department of agriNew York—Reported failure of the culture. These Junior farmers last
Reparations Commission to reach an year owned 76,18 head of farm animalB Machine Stopped W i t h i n SO Feet of
Place rt 8 t r u e k .
agreement with the German govern- and 554,286 fowls, representing an agment, combined with disquieting cable gregate value of $3,,605,176.
Farmingdale, N. Y.—Using skids,
dispatches regarding political and
instead
of wheels, an aeroplane, piloteconomic conditions in
Germany,
Would
Execute
Train
Wreckers,
ed by Lawrence B, Sperry, one of the
caused another sharp collapse in GerWashington—The
death
penalty
for
governors
of the Aeronautical Chamman exchange.
train
wreckers
when
passengers
or
ber
of
Commerce,
stopped within 50
Marks, which have been steadily
employes
are
killed
is
provided
in
a
feet
of
the
place
it
struck. The landdeclining for the last two months,
bill
Introduced
in
the
senate
by
Senaing
broke
all
records
for quick stops,
were quoted Aug. 24 at 5 1-8 cents a
hundred or approximately 20 for a tor Sterling, South Dakota. The bill he declared.
The 'plane was equipped with
cent. The normal, or pre-war, price was referred to the senate interstate
commerce
committee.
The
introducwheels
for the take-off, but as soon
of the mark was 23.S cents each.
tion
of
the
bill
was
prompted
by
the
as It got into the air, dropped them
French francs also sank to the
alleged
deliberate
wrecking
of
trains,
automatically. The skids stopped the
year's lowest level, being quoted at
craft as It hit the ground.
particularly
the
one
near
Gary,
Ind.
7.76 cents each.
NEW RECORD IN PLANE LANDING
Board Absolves Slain Officer.
Washington—Lieut. Col. Paul W.
Beck, army aviator, whose death at
the hands of Judge Dean Day of Oklahoma City, under sensational circumstances, Involving Day's beautiful
young wife, was killed "in line of
duty," according to the final official
report of the investigating board of
army officers. The conclusions of the
board are that there is no evidence
worthy of credence to show the
slain officer was guilty of any act reflecting on hli honor.
Father and Son Claim Wife
Marion, O.—Father and son battled
I in Mayor George W. Neeley's court
I for a woman both claimed as their
; wife, and the mayor compromised by
j turning her over to a man who said
he was her brother. It was the old
\ story of gypsy law, which the mayor
; refused to recognize. Frank Elie, Jr.,
I Cleveland, said the woman was his
I wife according to gypsy rites. The
j elder Ella, who came here from Chicago, said she was his wife, according to gypsy law.
East Buffalo Live 8tock
Cattle; Receipts, 175; market
thoroughly active and steady on handy
grades; common slow and easy. Calves:
Receipts, 160; active and steady, $5®
$13.50.
Hogs:
Receipts, 1,280; active;
heavies and pigs, steady; others, 25040c
higher; heavy. $909.60; mixed, $10010.25;
yorkers. $10,250)10.85; light yorkers, $9®
10,10; pigs, $S.50(g;8.75; roughs, $707.25;
stags, $404.50.
Sheep and lambs:
Receipts, 1.060; active. ^ Lambs 36c higher;
lambB, $6® 13.35.
D E T R O I T QUOTATIONS
Faed and Qraln
WHEAT—Cash No. 2 red, $1.08; September, $1.08; No. 2 white and No. 2
mixed, $1.06.
YELLOW CORN—Cash No. 2, 70 1-2;
No. 3, 69 l-2c; No. 4, 68 l-2c; No. 6,
6T l-2c.
W H I T E OATS—Cash No, 2. 36c; No. 3,
34c; No. 4, 31c; No. 2 old, 38c.
BEAN8—Immediate and prompt shipment, $7; September, $5.76 per cwt.
SEEDS—Prime red clover, $10; alslke,
$10: timothy, $2.75.
HAY—No. 1 timothy, $17018; standard, $16@17; light mixed, $16017; No. 2
timothy, $16@17; No. 1 clover mixed,
$15016; No. 1 clover. $14@15; rye straw,
$12.50013; wheat and oat straw, $11.50®
12 per ton In carlots.
FEED—Bran. $24; standard middlings,
$26; fine middlings, $30; cracked c o m .
$32; coarse cornmeAl, $29; chop, $24.50
per ton in 100-lb. sacks.
FLOUR—Fancy spring wheat patents,
$8 50; fancy winter wheat patents, $7.60
®8; second winter wheat straights, $5.75
®6.25; K a n s a s patents, $7®7.60 per bbl.
Live Stock and Poultry.
CATTLE—Common to fair cows, $3®
3.75; best heavy steers, $8,50; best handy
weight butcher ateers, $7.2608; mixed
steers and heifers, $5.50®6.50; handy
light butchers. $4@6; beat cows; $5;
butcher cows, $4®4.50; cutters, $2.7503;
canners,
$2®2.76; choice light bulls', $7,75
5
lo na
, J.. J?° fr . bulla, $4®14.50: stock bulls,
J/i°r®AB*''eeders, «5.5006.26: stockers.
$405.50; milkers and springers, $40076.
CALVES—Beat grades. $13® 13 50; fair
Kffl/I
' , 1 0 @ 1 2 R f f : ^ 1 1 8 *"<* graasers,
S H E E P A N D LAMBS—Best
lambs.
$12.00012.75;
fair
lambs, $9®11; light to
0
181
1
SJTJH ?.,. "^* WO 8.2»; heavy sheep.
$8,2504.60; fair to good sheep, $506.50;
tyjlla and common, $102.50.
HOGS—Mixed hogs. 220 down, $9.60;
heavy. 220 up,
$808.50; pigs,
$8.26;
roughs, $6.76; stags, $4.5005.
LIVE POULTRY—Best
springs. 28®
2 2 £ i » m e d l u m 8 P r l n * » - 27028c; leghorns,
23024c; large fat hens, 24@26c; medium
hens, 22@24c; small hens, 18@19c; old
roosters, 16c; geese, 13e; large ducks, 22
@24c; small ducks, 18®20c; turkeys, Mc
per lb.
Butter and Eggs
B U T T E R — B e s t creamery, In tubs, 82
@32 l-2c per lb.
EGGS—Fresh, current receipts, 2 3 0 2 4 c
fresh candled and graded, 24 l-2@25 l-2c
per dozen.
Farm and Garden Produce
PLUMS—$1® 1.50 per bu.
GRAPES—Michigan,
23@25« per 4quart basket.
A P P L E S — N e w , [email protected] per bu
Blames Volstead fdV Trouble.
Edwardsvllle,
111.—Representative
Volstead, of Minnesota, is blamed by
S I ? A S ? E 8 ^ E l b * r t a 8 - »2.6003.25 per bu.
Mrs. Barbara Korblick, in her divorce
PEARS—Clapo'g Favorite, $1.2601 60
petition, for her marital difficulties. P « r b u , Bartlett's. $1.5001.75 per bu.
CELERY—Michigan. 25030c per do*
Her husband, the petition recites,
GREEN
CORN—20025c per dot
liked to drink before prohibition days,
£?F! H F.?£ M S — F a n c y . 50060c per lb
CABBAGE—Home grown, 60©60o per
but he was ever peaceful and quiet.
When prohibition came she hung a
picture of Mr. Volstead in the parlor,
1 stock,
$80
but when her husband turned their < £ ^ . TOTATOES-No.
y CObbler
l
M
l
b
^
s
i
S
.
*
*'
M-TBdl
P«r
home into a distillery by becoming
ONIONS—$2.7608 per sack of 100 lb*.
an expert moonshiner, she took it DUSnSL
down.
medium. 15016c, large cocrae, fOllo
JvHi^f'-l^frSfSTfStHyjVUWf'^ftSH^l.
***»*»uNb-
=C3J
—**•
• Ji Hi in III l
^^^^.^^^-^
'.i»a.-tf »A-•.*>'oMfw>
>.x'^;«-V
PINCKNEY DISPATCH
Smmer Find Y M MisenMe?
THE INDIAN DRUM
'By William ZM.acH.arg and Gdwin cBalmer
Q 9 p y f l £ H Uf Edwin Balmcr
Is a lame, achy back torturing you?
Does the le**t exertion leave* you tired,
weak, all worn-out? You should find
tho cause of your trouble and try to
correct it. More than likely it'* your
kidney*.
Miserable backaches with
headaches, disxy spells and annoyiag
urinary disorders are common signs ol
kidney weakness. There is danger sa
delay. Begin using Doon'$
Kidney
PQlt
today.
Dcxm't have helped
thousand*.
They should help yea.
A.tk
your
neighbor!
A Michigan Came
iiiranramiiiBini
^ Aian'a passion broke out suddenly.
We're anything but that, Judah. I
.ound him, the first night I got here
and while you were away, going
through my father's things. I fought
with him, and he ran away. H e w a s
the one that broke into my father's
desks; maybe you'll believe that, even
If no one else wllL"
"Yes?"
the Indian
questioned.
M
Yea?" it was plain that he not only
believed but that believing gave him
Immense satisfaction. He took Alan's
arm and led him into the smaller library. He knelt before one of the drawers under the bookshelves—the drawer,
Alan recalled, which he himself had
been examining when he had found
Wassaquam watching him. He drew
out the drawer and dumped Its contents out upon the floor; he turned
the drawer about then, and pulled the
bottom out of i t Beneath the bottom
which he had removed appeared now
another bottom and a few sheets of
paper scrawled in an uneven hand and
with different colored Inks.
At sight of them, Spearman, who
had followed them Into the room, uttered an oath and sprang forward. The
Indian's small dark hand grasped
Spearman's
wrist,
and his face
twitched itself Into a fierce grin
which showed how little civilization
had modified in him the aboriginal
passions. But Spearman did not try
to force his w a y ; instead, he drew
back suddenly.
Alan stooped and picked up t h e papers and put them in his p o c k e t If
the Indian had not been there, it
would not have been BO eaay for him
to do that, he thought
Mrs. Annie Kltxlg,
TOT W. Maple fit,
Lansing, Mich., says:
"My back ached so
badly I could hardly
do my work. I got
up mornings with a
s t e a d y , dull ache
a c r o s s my back.
Headaches a l m o s t
drove me wild and
I became dizzy. My
kidneys acted too
often. I UB«d Doan's
Kidney Pill* and the
aches and pains left
and I felt fine."
Get Doan'a at Any Store, 00c a Be*
a t The name* and addresses on these Corvet'* life w a s not only in the past; Sherrlll hesitated, then a s s e n t e d ; and
oldest, yellowed page* had been first it waa something still going on. i t had they went round the block together to
written, it waa plain, all at the aame amazed Sherrlll to learn that Corvet, the Corvet house. Sherrlll, after a few
JTNOnXS.—Wealth/ and highly
time and with the same pen and lak, for twenty years, had kep f ~ace of Instants' hesitation, took t h e key from
plMMl la ta* Chicago business
and each sheet In the beginning had A l a n ; but Corvet had kept trace in the his pocket and unlocked t h e door and
world, Benjamin Corvet I* w m t thins; af a reolua* aad a my»t*ry
contained seven or eight names. Some same w a y and with the aame Becrecy went in. The rooms, they s a w , were
to a l l > son gists*! After a etonny
of these original names and even the of many other people—of about a all in perfect order; gurnaer cover*
Interview with hi* partner, Henry
addresses
had been left unchanged, score of people. When Alan thought had been put upon the furniture; prokelpaanaaa, Corret seeks Constance
but most of them had been scratched of Corvet, alone In his silent house, tecting cloths bad been spread o\w
•herrlU. daughter of hi* other
•Hainan partner, Lawrence Bherout and altered many times—other he must think of him a s solicitous the beds upstairs. After their Inspectill, and secures from her a promand quite different names had been about these people; as seeking for tion, they came out again at the frost
tat s o t to marry Spearman until he
substituted; t h e pages had become their names in the newspapers which door, and her father closed it with a
returns. He than disappears. SherMU laaras Corret has wrltun to a
finally
almost
Illegible,
irowded he took for that purpose, and as re- snapping of the spring lock.
osrtala Alan Conrad, in Blue Rapscrawls, rewritten again and again in cording the changes in their lives. The
Constance, a s they walked away,
FOSTER.M1LBURN CO- BUFFALO, N. V.
id*, Ksniu*. and exhibited strange
deaths,
the
births,
the
marriages
Corvet's
cramped
hand.
Alan
strained
turned
and looked back at the old
agitation over the matter. Alan
forward, holding the first sheet to the among these people had been of the house, gloomy and dark among Its
arrive* In Chicago. From a atat*Trouble Ahead.
SBont Of BherrUl It seem* probintensest interest to Corvet
light
newer, fresher-looking neighbors, and
During
the
recent visit to Washingafel* Conrad la Corvet's illegitimate
Alan seized the clippings he had
It w a s possible that none of these suddenly she choked, and her eye*
son, Corvet haa deeded hie house
ton of a Frenchman and his wife, tho
looked at before and compared them people knew about Corvet; Alan had grew w e t That feeling w a s not for
and Ita content* to Alan, who take*
gentlemen having been sent to thl*
possession. That night Alan disswiftly with the page he had Just read ; not known about him in Kansas, but Uncle Benny ; tke drain of days past
country on official business, there occover* a man ransacking Corvet'•
two of the names—Westhouse and had known only that some unknown had exhausted suc> a w:rg« of feeling
curred un interesting event.
apartment*. The Intruder thinks
French—were the same a s those upon person had sent money for uls support. for him. That which sh* *o*ild not
Alan a ghost and ravea of the "MlAt the hospital the nunse In attendthis l i s t
Suddenly he grasped the But he appreciated that It did not wink away w a s for the boy wtr» had
waka." After a struggle the man esance called out to Maria, an Irish
capes. Next day Alan learns from
other pages of the list and looked matter whether they kaew about him come to that hous« a few weeka ago
woman employed about the place:
BnerrUl that Corvet has deeded his
them through for his own n a m e ; but or not; for at some point common to and for the man who Just now bud
"Muria, do come here and s e e a
entire property to him. Introduced
It w a s not there.
H e dropped the all of th,em, the lives of these people gone.
to Spearman, Alan Is astonished at
French baby born In Washington."
sheets upon the table and got up and must have touched Corvet's life. When
the discovery that he Is the man
Whereupon Maria came over and
whom h* had fought In hi* house
beran to stride about the room.
Alan knew what had been fhat point
CHAPTER X I I
surveyed
the wee bit of humanity.
ta* night before. Spearman laughs
of contact, he would know about CorHe
felt
that
in
this
list
and
in
these
at and defies him, Spearman poiTln.'n compassionately, she observed:
clippings there must be, somehow, vet ; he would know about himself.
The Thing* From Corv<T*s Pockets,
son* Constance'* mind against
"I'oor little darllnt;
It's a great
Alan. Somebody tries to kill Alaa
some one general meaning—they must
Alan had seen among Corvet's
"Miss Constance Shei »111,
perplexity
ye'll
be
to
yourself,
I'm
m t a t night Corvet's Indian servrelate In some way to one t h i n g ; they books a set of charts of the Great
Harbor Springs, Michigan."
thinkin',
when
you
begin
sphakin'!"—
ant, Wassaquam, Ulls Alan he bemust have deeply, Intensely concerned Lakes. He went and got that now and
The address, in large s c i t w l l n g let. Exchange.
Uevaa his,employer is dead. He
Benjamin
Corvet's
disappearance
and
an
atlas.
Opening
them
upon
the
taters, w a s written across tiw. *rrown
also tslhritm the legend of the Indian drum, which according to old
his present fate, whatever that might ble, he looked up the addresses given paper of the package which hefli been
Cutlcura Soothes Baby Rashes
superstition beau once for every
be, and they must concern Alan's fate on Corvet's list. They were most of brought from the post office in fMj litTbnt Itch and burn, by hot bath*
111« tost on the Great Lakes. Twenas well. But in their disconnection, them, he found, towns about the north- tle resort village only a few moments
ty yaara before, the great freighter
of Cutlcura Soap followed by gentle
their incoherence, he could discern no ern end of the lake; a very few upon before. The paper covered a shoe kox,
Krwaxa had geae down with
anointings
of Cutlcura
Ointment.
twenty-five oa board, but the Drum
common thread.
What conceivable other lakes—Superior and Huron— crushed and old, bearing t h e nam* of
Nothing better, purer, sweeter, espehad aoundad for only twenty-four,
bond could there have been uniting but most were upon or very close to "S. Klug, Dealer In Fine Shoes, M*\nl
leaving the Inference that one percially if a little of the fragrant CutlBenjamin Corvet at once with an old Lake Michigan. These people lived by towoc, Wisconsin." The box, like the
•oa had seen saved. Luke, who
cura Talcum is dusted on at the finman dying upon a poorfarm in Emmet means of the lake; they got their sus- outside wrapping, w a s carefully SletH
aaa long been blackmailing Corvet,
ish.
25c each.—Advertisement
talks mysteriously and
county, wherever that might be, and tenance from it, as Corvet had lived, with a string.
with a baby girl, now Borne t w o years and a s Corvet had got his wealth. Alan
Constance, knowing no one In ManlMoment of Suspense.
old,
in Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin?
was feeling like one who, bound, has towoc and surprised at the nature of
CHAPTER X I
Young Walton had been wooing Miss
He called Wassaquam i n t o . the li- been suddenly unloosed. From the time the package, glanced at the postmark Truelove for a long time—years and
brary and brought the lists and clip- when, coming to s e e Corvet, he had on the brown paper which she had re- years it seemed to her father.
The Land of the Drum.
I
C H A P T E R X—Continued.
found Corvet gone, until now, he had moved ; it too was stamped Msoito
Alan went with Wassaquam into the pings out again.
At last the couple stood before t h e
felt the Impossibility of explaining woe. She cut the strings about the altar, and the clergyman put the fatal
"Do
you
know
at
all
what
these
are,
front
library,
after
the
Indian
had
B u t D i k e had said nothing about
from anything he knew or seemed like- box and took off tho eover. A black question:
Judah?*' he asked.
•pearman. It had been Corvet, and shown Spearman o u t
"No, Alan. I have seen B e n have ly to learn the mystery which had sur- nnd brown dotted silk cloth filled the
"This was the man, Judah, who came
"Will you, Henry Walton, take this
Oorret alone, of whom Luke had
rounded himself and which had sur- box; and, seeing i t Constance caught woman to be your luwfully wedded
s p o k e n ; M w a s Corvet whom he had for Mr. Corvet that night I w a s hurt?"
rounded Corvet. But these names and her breath. It was—at least It wa« wife?"
"Yes, Alan," Wassaquam said.
a c c u s e d ; It w a s Corvet who had gWen
addresses!
They indeed offered some- very like—the ttiuffler which Uncle
"He w a s the man, then, who came
"This was too much for Miss Truehim money. W a s It conceivable, then,
thing
to
go
upon, though Luke now Benny used to wear in winter.
here
twice
a
year,
at
least,
to
s
e
e
Mr.
love's little brother Jimmy, who had
that there had been two such events In
was forever still, and his pockets had
She started with trembling finger*, watched the progress of the long courtO o r v e f s life?
That one of these Corvet T*
told Alan nothing.
to take it from the box; then, rtaUi
"Yes."
ship from various points of vantage
areata concerned the Mlwaka and
He found Emmet county on the map lng from the weight of the packegt during the years.
"I w a s sure of I t " Alan said. "Can
Spearman and some one—some one
and put bis finger on i t Spearman, that the cloth w a s only a wrapping or,
"with a bullet hole above the eye"— you tell me now why he came here,
"Giosh, pa I" he gnsped out, excitedly.
at
least,
that
other
things
were
in
'h«
Wassaquam
had
said,
came
from
Judah?"
•Who had "got" Oorret; and that the
"Suppose he won't !"
there. "The Land of t h e Drum 1" he box, she picked up box and wrapping
other event had concerned Luke and
"I have told you I do not know,"
said aloud. Deep and sudden feeling und ran up to her room. She locked
something else? It was not conceiva- Wassaquam replied. "Ben always saw
Important to Mother*
stirred in him as he traced out this the door and put the box upon the
ble, Alan w a s s u r e ; it was all one him; Ben gave him money. I do not
Examine carefully every bottle of
land on the chart--the little towns and bed; now she lifted out the cloth It CAKTOIUA, that famous old remedy
thing. If Corvet had to do with the know why."
villages,
the Islands and headlands, was a wrapping, for the heavier thing* for infants and children, and see that it
Mhraka, then Luke had had to do with
Alan had been holding his hand over
their
lights
and their uneven shores. cams with It; and now, also, ft reIt too. And Spearman? But If Spear- the papers which he had thrust Into
Bears the s~JK
SfV7>
iA
feeling
of
"home" had come to him, vealed Itself plainly a s the acarf— Uo«
m a n had been involved In that guilty his pocket; he went back into the
Signature of CJutS^/.
/¾¾¾¾¾^
which he had not had on coming to Chi- cle Benny'a scarf! A paper fluttered
thing, had not Luke known It? Then smaller library and spread them under
In
U
s
e
for
Over
30
Years.
cago. There were Indian names and out as she began to unroll it—a little
why h a d not Luke mentioned Spear- the reading lamp to examine them.
C h i l d r e n Cry for F l e t c h e r ' s Castoria
French up there about the meetings cross-lined leaf evidently torn from a
m a n ? Or had Spearman not been real- B u t s s he looked the pages over now,
It had
of the great waters. The sense that pocket memorandum book.
ly Involved? Had it been, perhaps, he felt a chill of disappointment and
Juit Dimly Remembered.
been
folded
and
rolled
up.
She
spread
he
w
a
s
of
these
lakes,
that
surge
of
omiy evidence of knowledge of what chagrin. They did not contain any
I
hud
n<>t seen my friend and her
feeling which^&e had felt first in con- it o u t ; writing was upon it, the small
Corvet had done that Spearman had narrative concerning Benjamin Corversation with Constance Sherrlll was Irregular letters of Uncle Benny'i smnll Ron for a year, so when I saw
triad t o discover and destroy?
vet's l i f e ; they did not even relate to
him pia.ving in his grandmother's yard
hand.
strengthened an hundredfold.
a single event. They were no narraI Bald: "Aren't you Charles S m i t h T
Alan went to the door and opened
"Send to Alan Conrad," she read;
tive at all. They were—in h i s first
He gazed down at the lists of names
"Yes, I inn," said Charles.
It, a s he beard Spearman upon the
examination of them, he could not tell
which Benjamin Corvet had kept BO there followed a Chicago address—tha
•tap* again. Spearman waited only
"My,
how you've grown!" I said.
what they were.
carefully and so secretly; these were number of Uncle Benny'a house on
mntfl t h e door had been reclosed be• "I w a s at your house the night the
his father's people, t o o ; these ragged Astor s t r e e t Below this w a s anothai
They consisted in all of some dosen
faiad Mm.
Ftork brought you to your mamma."
shores and the Islands studding the line:
"Oh, yes," he nodded, gravely, "and
•Well, Conrad, what was the Idea of sheets of Irregular size, some of which
"Better care of O c s t a n c e SherrUl
channels were the lands where his fahad been kept much longer than othyou
stayed fill n!«lit. I can Just barebringing atlas Sherrlll into this?"
There followed tho *ber>
ther had spent the most active part (Miss)."
ers,
a
few
of
which
even
appeared
ly remember It."- Kxrhnnc<\
"I didn't bring her i n ; I tried the
*****
of his life. There, then—these lists rills' address upon the Drive. Aad t*
fresh
and new. The three pages
beat I could to keep her o u t "
which Alan thought from their yel- "Do You Know At All What The** Are, now made it certain—that events had this w a s another correction :
"Omt of what—exactly?"
"Not after June 1 2 ; then to Harbor
happened by which that life had been
Judah?" He Asked.
T e n know better than I do. You lowed and worn look, must be t h e oldblighted. North, there by the meeting Springs, Mich. Ask some one of ibati
teow
exactly what It is. You know est, and which must have been kept them, and tak* them out and put them
of t h e waters, w a s the region of the be sure the d a t e ; after June 12."
that mam. Spearman; you know what for many years, contained only a list back. That 1* all I know."
wrong which w a s done.
Constance, trembling, unrolled th«
ha e u n o here for. I don't mean money; of names and addresses. The remainscarf;
c o w coins showed from a fold.
and ha* brought contentment and happines*
"Do you know any of these peo"That's where I must g o ! " he said
X mean you know why he came here ing pages, which h e counted a* ten
to thousand* of home seeker* and their faminext a pocketknife, ruined and rusty,
aloud. "That's where I must go!"
lies who have started on her FREE homestead*
money, and why he got i t I tried, In number, contained nearly a hun- ple r
next a watch—a man's large gold
or bought land at attractiTe prices. They have
He gave the list* to Wassaquam,
well a s I could, to make him tall dred brief clippings from newspapers;
established their own homes and secured proswatch
with
the
case
queerty
pitted
Constance
Sherrlll,
on
t
h
e
following
perity and independence. In the great grain*
; but ha wouldn't do I t There's the clippings had been very carefully who studied them through attentively,
growing section* of the prairie provinces then
and worn completely through in places
afternoon,
received
a
telephone
call
cut
out,
they
had
been
pasted
with
holding
them
to
the
lamp.
ice of aome sort here, of course—
ta still to be had on eaay terms
and
last
a
plain
little
band
of
gold
ot
from her father; he was coming home
"No, Alan."
that involves my father and, painful regularity on the sheets, and
Fertile Und at $15 te $30 an Aere
- H a v e you ever heard e f a n y of earlier than usual, he s a i d ; if s h e had the size for a woman's finder—a wed'
1 think, you too. If you're not guilty each had been dated across Its f a c e —lend
simitar to that which through many
Conetance, gasping and
planned to g o o u t would s h e wait un- ding ring.
year* has yielded from 2 0 to 4 5 bushel*
W4th m y father, you'll help me now; if dates made with many different pons J their names before?of wheat to the acre—oats, barley and flax
-That may be. I do not'know. They til after he got there? The afternoon's with fingers shak&g BO frota excitearm guilty, then, at least, your r#> and with many different inks, but all
also in great abundance, while raisin*
ment
that
s
h
e
could
scarcely
hold
mall w a s upon a stand In the ball. She
I
horses, cattle, sheep and hoga is equally
in the same irregular handwriting a s are common names."
t o help will let me know t h a t "
these objects, picked them up and e x
profitable. Hundred* of farmer* ta Westers
turned
It
over,
looking
through
It—inD
o
you
know
the
places?"
don't know what you're talking the letter which Alan had received
Canada have raised crops in a single season
arnlned
them—the
ring
first
She picked
, "Yes—th* places.
They are lake vitations, social notes.
worth more than the whole cost of their land.
X told you this man may have from Benjamin Corvet
Healthful climate, good neighbors, churches,
It
very
evidently
was,
a
s
she
had
from
among
them
an
envelope
adports
or
little
village*
on
t
h
e
lake*.
I
t wheelsman on the Corvet; I
Alan, his fingers numb In his disapschools, rural telephone, excellent markets
and shipping facilities. The climate and soil
kmow more about him than that; pointment turned and examined all have been in most of them, Alan. Em- dressed to herself in a firm, clear Immediately thought, a wedding rins
offer inducements for almost every branch Of
once
fitted
for
a
finger
only
a
trifle
hand,
which,
unfamiliar
to
her,
still
met
county,
Alan,
I
came
from
there.
1 don't even know that certainly. Of these p a g e s ; but they contained nothagriculture. The advantages for
queerly startled her, and tore It open. less slender than her crwna O n e aidi
I knew Ben Corvet was paying ing else. H e read one of the clippings, Henry comes from there, too."
Dairy In a;. Mixed Farming
of the gold band w a s vary much worn,
"Then that 1* where they hear the "Dear Mis* Sherrlll," s h e read.
Pve known for years thst which w a s dated ' T e b . 1912.and Stock Raletna;
make a tremendous appeal to industrious
"I am closing, for the time being, not with the sort of wear which •
1st waa giving up monsy to some ene.
T h e passing away of one of the Drum?"
settler* wishing to improve their circumthe house which, for default of other ring gets on a hand, but by some dif"Yes, Alan."
1 d e a l know who he paid it t o ; or for oldest residents of Emmet county ocstances. For certificate entitling yoo
The othet
te reduced railway rates, illustrated
M y father took newspapers from ownership, I must call mine. The pos- ferent sort of abrasion.
curred at t h e poorfarm on Thursday
literature, map*, description of farm
side
of
the
band
w
a
s
roughened
and
sibility
that
what
has
occurred
here
opportunities tn Manitoba, Sr*
Mr. Fred Westhouse those places, did h e not?"
T a * strain of th* last faw hour* wax ef l a s t week.
would cause you and your father anxi- pitted but not so much worn; the in- katchewan. Alberta and Briwas
one
of
four
brothers
brought
by
Wassaquam
looked
over
t
h
e
adtenia* upon A l a n ; his skin flashed hot
tish Columbia, e t c write
ety about me in case I went away side fitlU bore the traces of an In
cold by turn*. Ha paced up and their parents into Dmmet county in dresses again. "Yea; from all. He
| scriptlon. "As long as w e bo . . ,
J. M. MacLACHUN
1846. H e estsbliahed himself here a s took them for t h e shipping news, he without telling you of my intention is
walla h e controlled h l m s a l l
10 Jefferson Av*n*s E.
all
alive,"
Constance
could
read,
an<l
the reason for this note. B u t it is not
D*treH.HIeh.
* ^ a a f a not aaoufh, Spaarman," ha a farmer and w a s well known among said. And sometimes he cut pieces
the
date.
"June
2.
1*91."
the only reason. I could not go away
our
people
for
many
years.
H
e
w
a
s
out
of
them—these
pieces,
I
s
e
e
n
o
w
;
aaM finally. "I—Pre fait you, sornewithout telling you how deeply I apatow, aadaraoath all these thing*. T h e nearly the last of b i s family, which and afterward I burned the papers;
preciate the generosity and delicacy
TO BUY OR 8EI.I,—HTATK YOLK WANTS.
tfss* X s a w you, you were In this was quite well off at o n e time, Mr. he would not let me only throw them you and your father have shown me
"You mean y o n want mo t o
F i n n i , hotel-., «tor*», patents, business opWestnouse's
three
brothers
and
his
away."
doing a e a e t h l n r you ought not
portunlt!*-., co».l, oil and llmb*r lands. Ohio
marry y o u — a t oaco, Hoary?*'
"That's all you know about them, in spite of my position here and of the
CooperfMlv* Afenry, MeCotiMlsvflle, Ohie.
* » h a r e been doing; you fought me father having perished in various disfact that I had no claim at all upon
asters upon t h e lake. H i s wife died J u d a h r
t a a a ; yon would b*T* killed m e rather
MlMmm—A -tuple, dignlflad line, never beyou.
I shall not forget those, even
two years ago. H e Is survived by a
"Yea, Alan; that is slL"
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
fore offered through agents. Fine Imported
t a a a not get away. T w o weeks ago,
though
what
happened
here
last
nlgUt
meroerlied da.musk fublec'.oth. S yde »q., and
daughter, Mr*. Arthur Pearl, of P l i n t Alan dismissed the Indian, who,
>a**ao one attacked m e oa t h e street—
\ 2 napkin*, aella complete 14.9«, Worth doObla
make*
it
impossible
for
m
e
to
try
to
Human
Llf*
Too
Short.
0*t dftalle. A. K. JJ«wmin, Cedarhurst. N, T.
stolidly methodical in t h e midst of
He read another:
far robbery, they amid; but I know it
see you again or even to write to you.
By all the rule* which nature **• California Hand Carved Flower Beads, eee*>
"Hallford-Spens. On Tuesday last these events, went downstairs and
wmaat robbery—^
"ALAN CONRAD."
serves among humbler mammals, 100 tiful shades, designs nuluhlf for all occacommenced
to
prepare
a
dinner
which
Miss
Audrey
Hallford,
daughter
of
*Tou*re not s o eraxy a s to be trying
sion* Sold direct from factory to customer,
She heard her father's motor enter years ought to be a very ordinary *g* Writ* Wood Jewelry Co., Loa Angeles, Cat
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Hallford, of this Alan knew he could not e a t Alan got
t a l a r o l r * m e In that—"
for a human being.
Where Is the
Vaara came a sound to them from place, w a s united in the bonds of holy up and moved about the rooms; he the drive and ran to him with the letCALIFORNIA ABALONE PKA.R.L aUTIVZS
mammal
which,
unless
its life Is cut •old direct from factory to customer*, IX.00.
ta*) b a n , a sound unmistakably denot- matrimony t o Mr. Robert 8pens, of went back and looked over the lists ter in her hand.
back If not eat'.nfted. Sales Manager,
"He's written to you, then?" he said, dhort by accident or disease, falls t* Money
i n g t o m e presence- Spearman Jerked Bscanaba. AH wish t h e young couple and clippings once more; then he
141 8. Lo« Angelee St., Loa Angeles. Call
live to an age five times a s great a*
moved about again. H o w strange a at sight of i t
awddonly u p ; Alan, going t o the door well."
the
time it took to reach maturity? A
picture
of
his
father
did
these
things
"Yes."
He read s o o t h e r :
a a * looking into t h e hall, s a w Wassafairly
careful survey of the field aa>
"I had a note from him this after"Born t o Mr. and Mrs. H a l Trench, call up to him t When he bad thought
The Xadiaa a r i d e n t l j had raswers
"Nowhere."
Indeed, t h e rati*
Mads tot ALL cam. Sen* for
t e tha bona* some time before; a daughter, Saturday afternoon last. of Benjamin Corvet before, It hsd been noon at the office, asking m e to hold
•tats N i n e sad Y e w of ess, *•? e e
of
total
life
to
maturity
is more likely
aa
Sherrlll
had
described
him,
purin
abeyance
for
the
time
being
the
Miss
Vera
Arabella
French,
at
h
e
r
arToUFofdTov tad back eeitsia * • * •
1 *aaa brlaataf ta Alan now the
to be six, seven or eight, than five,
COMrOIT AUTO T0» COHPUR
i t a walah h e had settled. E e rival weighed seven and one-half sued by some thought h e could not trust that Ben had left m e and returnconquer, seeking relief in study, in cor- ing t h e key of the house to me for But man, whose maturity cannot bf
MIS
"
ameaaad t o b a r e boas standing in the pounds.
placed at less than 20 or 22, think* h*
respondence
with
*dontlflc
sodetlea,
safekeeping."
'lawl ter some data, listening; but he
This clipping waa dated. In BenjaIs doing well when he passe* three"Has he already g o n e r
on cheapest gasoline or half ksroeeae ualnf ear IS*
i*aaat ta now, looking InqTilringiy fror
min Corvet's hand, "gtmrgmuu Bay, in anything which could eagros* him
mrbBietor. inersaeet power i stylos for sol **o*er*j
score
and
ten,
and
only
o
n
e
out
of
and
abut
out
memory.
B
a
t
now
he
- I suppose s o ; I don't know."
•me) t o the other e f
Wis., Aug. l f l i . " Alan pat It aside
attach yourself- Honey baefc geanffjaejug JM>g
"We must find e a t " S h e caught up many thousand*
la awwlldenaaat and am*** and took must think of him, a o t merely a* one
trying
to
forget;
what
had
thwarted
aad beam* to p a t thorn on. \ ooe
a t agaia the shoot* ha ar*t had)
• L A N D O F T H E DRUM."
DOAN'SVKV
Western Canada
Offers Health and Wealth
Fonts Rim 34 Mile. P«r GetikMi
1
* V* i^i&rv&t.iV'.* .
, ••
;
' •W.sWf'* * ***?..*• t«*"- <V>».
.**•.. -..4^-^^¾.^^.¾^¾¾ ->UK-'»
Tl-Hf • llTiflllfM.tfi^nTt^riittllW,
j*, "(„' W>„
.vl-Vki*'.^'',
1',
T7^
»
...4
t
rr7^
1
* --*j^-"Trwy^
- ^
>
!$-V
f
/
PINCKNEY DISPATCH
1
BLACKNEY IN PINCKNEY
William W. Blackney, of Flint, eun(ttdate for the Republican Congressiona l nomination from the sixth district,
<m the opening leg of his speaking
t o o r inaugurated with a big political
Jn&ss meeting in Flint Thursday evening, at which he addressed 3000 persons, was given an enthusiastic reception Saturday by the citizens of
Livingston- County. During his tour
. v Of the county Mr. Blackney delivered
Bice addresses, being greeted by
:V*|wgf audiences at every point.
£ig>e:*king in Cohoctah, Fowlerville,
t eB& Iosco, the Genesee County candidate delivered stirring addresses in
Which he outlined the political issues
of the day; placing special emphasis
OH the transportation problem which
~fc menacing the United States and offered the development of that great
natural waterway, the Great Lakes
and St. Lawrence River as a solution
t o that problem.
*'Thc completion of this
project
Would be the greatest boon that can
b e granted to the farmers and people
Of the middle west of which Michigan
If a part," Mr. Blackney declared.
•There is a population of over forty
million people in the 18 states directly
affected by such an improvement and
to the manufacturers and farmers of
this area, the developmeut of this waterway would mean direct communication with the markets and distributing
tenters of the world.
"At present, in many instances, for
every three carloads of grain shipped
to an eastern port, two oS them are
taken to defray the cost of transportation while the farmer receives the
proceeds from the third. This* excessive transportation cost is due largely
to the cost of lighterage and terminal
charges.
"With the development of the Great
Lakes and St. Lawrence River, lighterage and terminal charges weuld be almost entirely eliminated with a saving in transportation cost estimated on
alone, at $.10 a bushel. This amount
saved the farmer would amount to
many millions more than the $250,000,000 required to finance the project.
"The power that can be developed
from the rapids of the St. Lawrence
River is estimated at four miliionss of
horse power, with a cash power of
$60,000,000 a year—a sum sufficient to
keep up the interest on a bond issue
with which to finance the project and
to establish a sinking fund with which
to retire the bonds.
"if 1 am stmt to Congress I pledge
myself to make, a careful study of
tins proposition which 1 feel i» of
vital importance not only to our own
district and state but to the entire
middle west."
in closiug the speaker said, "1 believe congress to be the greatest deliberative body in the world and as a
legislatve group without equal. Yet
1 believe that congress lias gradually
lost that direct contact with the people
necessary to real representation and
that is why i have entered this race.
1 did not come before the electorate
of this district at the urgent request
oi my friends, the hackneyed political
reason being used by many candidates
but because 1 feel that it is time for
Congress to get back to the people and
because, if us the people's choice, 1
shall endeavor to establish direct representation to the people of this district iu the Halls of Congress."
Says Uncle Ebcn.
"Dtr's a heap o' gratitude," said
Uncle Eben, "dat ddh't never g\t
proper expression, fob de reason dat
fullness of de heart is mighty liable
to deprive a man of de power of
gpeech-makln'."
FRED J, TEEPLE
Candidate for the Nomination of
t.
:-?-?.
§.
1 SHERIFF
LIVINGSTON COUNTY
Your Support at the Primaries
Sept 12 for the Customary
Second Term Will Be
Greatly Appreciated
HAMBONE'S MEDITATIONS
YASSVH, MB. EN'l>fc toss
ALLU2. WIPES wiD ONE
ttOTIitR*- HE 'VtDES KB
6RUB Wl» MB EM AM
'VlDES fAAH TROUBLES
Wlt> HIM!
Owr**U
STYLEPLUS
CLOTHES
UrMcOum
THE DRUG MAN
l-'i!
Jl Triumph, for Value
I
are universally equipping with Firestone Cords.
This steadily increasing public preference is proof of the xecognition by
car owners of the greater values offered by Firestone. It is a tribute to
Firestone men—all stockholders in the
company—all actuated by the operating principle of Most Miles per Dollar.
There are many reasons for the high
quality of Fireston* tires but chief
among the special manufacturing processes are double gum-dipping, thus
eliminating internal friction by insulating each cord strand, and air-bag cure,
insuring a well-balanced and perfectly
shaped product
The high average performance of
Firestone Cords is without equal in the
annals of tire making and is reflected
by the general tendency to specify
Firestone for hard service. Taxicab
and bus lines, buying tires by the mile,
Don't speculate in tires—you will
find the right combination of price and
quality in Firestone. Come in and let
us tell you about the service these
Cords are giving other car-owners
whom you know.
N the past two months Firestone
has built and marketed more tires
than in any similar period in its history.
V <!
[(
•>
ircston
GUM-DIPPED CORDS
^ ^ - ^ S o / t f bu—
R. DAY BIRD
W. H. MEYER
*
Now in the
NEW STORE
AS WE WISH TQ MAKE ROOM FOR FALL AND WINTER GOODS
WE WILL CLOSE OUT THE FOLLOWING
1 Two Burner Wickless Vapor Oil Heater
3 Wood Frame Miller Bean Harvesters at
2 Iron Frame Miller Bean Harvesters at
.
1 Large Alaska Refrigerator 150 tb Ice Capacity
1 Five Burner Cabinet Detroit Star Vapor Oil Cooker
1 Three Burner Cabinet Detroit Star Vapor Oil Cooker
1 Three Burner New Perfection Vapor Oil Cooker^
*
31 Three Burner Widdess Vapor Oil Heaters
Tceple
$5.00 each
$10.00 each
$12.00 each
$30.00
$36.00
$19.00
$19.00
$7.00 each
Hardware
One day there came into our midst
(as often happens so)
A friendly face, new to our town—
the Drug Man, as you -know.
He freshened up the store e t once
and made it up to date;
He tried to be obliging from early
dawn till late.
He served the folks most gladly to
fountain pens or pills;
He labored to destroy our germs and
aches and ills.
His efforts soon were noticed extending through the town,
And for all general uplift wc marked
the druggist down.
And so one day the outcome was
plainly to be seen—Our Sunday School needs workers with
minds both brisk and keen.
The Superintendent's office seemed
waiting for this man,
And so upon those duties he graciously
began.
He introduced new methods, he organized the men,
*
The Reds and Blues held contests, he
labored h;ird and then—
He took a mean advantage of other
local boys,
And stole one of our fairest girls without much fuss or noise,
However, we forgave him; his helpmeet she became,
And in the Federated Church they entered on life's game.
Together gave their service, in music,
class work, all,
Until to other fields of work, they're
answering the call.
Regretful, yet with kindly wishes for
success,
Wc speed them on their journey and
wish them happiness.
We trust that though their paths in
life lead far and far away,
If through the winding valley, if East
or West they stray—
If on fame's towering summits, or sunlit mountain peaks
They'll carry our good wishes-—both
these departing "Weeks."
We know they'll not be idle, we know
they'll find their work,
And when the call to service comes,
they'll not be folks to shirk.
So though we lose in Pinckney, the
Cause still needs their aid,
And be it pills or Sunday School, into
that work they'll wade.
Now just to show our feeling and
grateful thanks tonight
We offer this slight token, in remembrance true and bright.
And when far away from Pinckney,
In their busy happy life,
We'll remember most sincerely
Mr. Floyd Weeks and wife.
—CLELLA MYRTLE F I S H
Only an Amateur.
Personally we have to be egotistical,
but whetj It takes a stranger only an
hour to teli us his troubles we class
him as an amateur In misery.—Galveston News.
Time to Think About
Fall Clothes
Indian Summer is just around
the corner, crisp days will
soon be hers. It's time to look
over the new Fall styles, they
are new and different.
You will be correctly dressed
in Styleplus Clothes, the models are.shaped to the waist or
loose; two, three or three button. Let us show you these
styles.
$25 to $35
W. J. DANCER & CO.r
Stockbrid&e,
1*1 :ch.
1:
J A C K S O N C O U N T Y FAIR
THE FAIR THAT GIVES YOU MORE FOR YOUR MONEY
THAN ANY FAIR IN MICHIGAN
6 Day»—Monday to Saturday; 5 Night*—Monday, Tuesday .Wednesday , Thursday, Friday
350,000 Feet of Exhibition Space in Good Buildings, Filled to the Doors.
Twenty Thousand Exhibits Competing for Prizes
One Hundred Fifty Thousand People in Attendance Daily
Best Attractions and Shows Seen at Any fair in the State
Monday and Saturday 4 Fast Running Races (Derby Days)
Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday—4 Trotting and Pacing Races
* FIFTEEN BIG FREE ACTS IN FRONT GRAND STAND
AFTERNOON AND EVENING
Special Features Each Evening Amission 35 cent*—Grand Stand 25 cento
Sand Your Entry Blanks in Early
h
*