Fifty More Men Leave Next Week John Matrick Gets Life Prison Term

Transcription

Fifty More Men Leave Next Week John Matrick Gets Life Prison Term
THE CORUNMA NEWS
Continuing THE NEW LOTHROP NEWS
HE LENNON NEWS
I.
5SH
ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR
Fifty More Men
Leave Next Week
CORUNNA, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY,
DY IS BROUGHT
HOME
c
* » » » » * < < J
THURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1943
AH) FOR THE U.'sToT
I ^ W M « * < W W
^'"^
VOLUME 58, NUMBER 12
John Matrick Gets
Life Prison Term
FRIDAY AFTERNOON
CLUB
The body of Staff Srgt. Ernest
A very pleasing presentation by
Michael Breier, 23, of New Lothrop,
, representatives of the Social Serwho lost his life on January 18 in
' vice Club was the little play "A Pair
a crash of an Army bomber over
of Hands" given by the group on
southern Arizona arrived in Durand
j Friday Afternoon of last week in SEEMS UNCONCERNED AS LONG
SEVERAL MARRIED MEN IN
Friday, accompanied by a military
j Extension Hail, for the pleasure of
TERM IS GIVEN HIM
escort
i
the Friday Afternoon Club. The
NEXT WEEK'S GROUP
Military funeral services were i
| hostesses for the occasion were Mrs.
held
on
Saturday
morning
a
t
9
j E. R- Hancock and Mrs. Fred Hassel' j J o h n Matrick, aged 36 years, forAmong the fifty
draftees anj back, with the dramatic committee ! m e r t y o f Detroit, but of recent
nounced by t h e Draft Board %o o'clock from St. Michael Catholic
of the club—Mrs. Geo, Webb and months employed on a farm east of
leave Shiawassee county on Harsh. Church in Maple Grove of which
Mrs. Win; Jenney—sponsoring t h e Owosso was sentenced by Judge
30. are several married men, with no I Srgt. Brier was a member. The Rev.
program of the afternoon.
children. They will leave Owosso FT. A. O. Rosier officiated. The rites
Collins, in the circuit court Saturday
The play " A Pair of Hands" is to life imprisonment, following his
for Kalamazoo On. Tuesday, March were in charge of t h e Saginaw
30, by bus, tat six o'clock fast time, Ameican Legion. Interment was
noteworthy in that it has been chos- ; l e a d i n e ^ ^ t o the charge of robmade in St. MItehael cemetery.
or 5 o'clock Central time.
en by clubs i nmany cities through- j ^ ^ unarmed. I t was Matrices
The yomtg man was born in Maple
out the state, as a medium of ex-!• f o n r t J l felony, and Judge Collins had
The following are caHleds—
Grove Township, the son of Michael
pression of a great patriotic ser.ti-} n o other alternative but to impose
and Lteura Breier on January 18,
ment. I t is a s t o r $ o f contnast be-1 t h e , j ^ U B t e i l M .
From Owosso: Roy J . Jakeway, 1328. H e graduated from St. Mitween
the woman: who recognizes
Matrkk had pleaded guilty some
Melvin J . Criner, Archie Horton Jr., chael high school and enlisted in the
her
responsibility
m
all
things
pert
i
m
e ae0f
a T j d j u d g e Collins remindWilliam A- Graff* Karl A. Tjthman, service int August, '.1941. He was
taining
to
the
welfare
of
her
count
^ n e cOU !d withdraw that
e<J
n
i
m
enter/ Donald C. Wrightwww mff stationed a t the Airplane Mechanics
try,
and
the
woma
who
still,
in
the
^
wished, and stand trial,
D
p
l
e
a
n
e
Andrew G. Rekhert, Donald J . Be- School Sheppherd Fields Tex. H e
ye*
©a
thd
midst
of
war,
washes
t
o
go
on
a
s
^
^ opportunity of showH e ai&0
ardalee, Morel Carperf^rrJ Donald graduated from there and also from
the receat
U. a
by Trailer y S b i S
******"'"'
" O.
" drive. Stor>
usual
A
good
moral
is
presented,
j
possibly
he was not the man
n ? tnat
C. Wright, Eal Carpenter, George the Boeing Flying Fortress School, |
V
however,
in
the
warning
over
of
the
j
t
e
d
pre\iouslv,
but he de-.
conv c
XJrick, Claude N. Newport, Leonard Seattle, Wash He was signed up at j.
"butterflies"
to
a
more
serwus
outj
]
^
change
his
plea,
c ined
F.
Putnman,
Donald H. Baker, Seattle as an aerial g-unner and later
look.
Presenting
the
charming
little
!
x h e fellow had been arrested a
Clarence Burton, Frank L. Herrick, graduated from Wendoner Field,
:
week
I
shall
be
in
my
law
offices
were
*«n
j
,
,
-.
.
—
™play
were—Mrs.
La
Verne
Duncan,'
f
pW w-p»»sk azo in a erocerv east of
John L. Johnson.
Utah, on December 11, 1942. He r e ns
to
u
upiMrsl
E
p
Mre
John. A. MalachowskL Max R. ceived his wings and became staff
Reed, Denial W. Campbell, John sergeant.
bW
to mc^^nLTZX?
? i Ut'y md M l a " C h M t e r W a I k e r > wMt, »t ISO and escaped. One of the
O. Whiteley, Bernard D. Minnick,
He was last stationed
at the •Davis*
Kenneth M. Delong, Reuben E ,
- V fl R B A t w
patriotic ceremonial was c?ar- p o r t e d certain circumstances to the
*
m.
® y t n € ft™* you read this column
Olsen, Junior M. Warner, Cecil Monthan Air Base, Tucson, Anz. The t h e Legislature will have adjlurned
v . u . UKAUJN
ried out by Mrs. Alice Knoll a n d offi cers , and that he had worked on
Lindbnrg Jr.. George R, Wilkinson, ill-fated B-24 Army Bomber from a m l w i l l g0 o n record ^ b e i n g the
V
—
i M r s ' Holland Cook, and the regular a d a i r > ' farm. He was arrested that
Leo A. Chubb, Gerald Hildebrant, this field crashed with Srgt. Breier shortest session since 1865. During
business routine, in charge of the n jght by an Owosso police officer.
Albert W. Kienatske, James W. Pot- and three other officers Sind seven j t n e iBst f e w vcete t n e legislators
J president, Mrs. Wm. Huff followed He afterwards satd that he was
ter, Clinton W Simmons, Harvery enlisted men going to their death. j have been working long hours and j
j This included a report ofthenomm- ,¾^^¾ when he committed the holdC. Losey C. Losey, William H. HarrSurviving besides the parents, are overtime in order to give proper conj atign committee by Mrs. W. R. Cha- u p .
ison, William F . Dclcamp Jr., Rob- two brothers, Arthur of Pontiac and j sideration to all its poplems. They
I pell who presented t|ie following
Two we**s **o Matrick escaped
ert L. Zach&ra, Donald G.Mead, Meletus 6t New Lothrop; four sis- have done so cheerfully on a $3.00
r of new
officers:
The usual fine meeting of the •' r ^ *
Presiednt, ftom the county jail by tearing a
Thomas J . SHngerland, Brace C. tcrs, Mrs. Bernice Sumpte, Mont- per day salary without complaints or
t x m r t Gontt9
South
Venice
Farmers
Club
was
t
h
a
t
'
„
?
l
vice
president, bole in the steel wall of the cell
Gorte, Raymond A. Signs, George A. erey Cahf., Mrs. LaVina Dunlap of | regrets. They realize in so doing that
Mrs
Jame
held
last
Thursday—an
all
day
meetj
»
Qnayte;
secretary,
Mrs. block, and worming himself through
Marble, William H. Hall, Harold G. New Lothrop and Kathelea and Bet- those in the service cf the armed fork; tr
Wrer
Mra
H olA
in*
in
the
home
of
Mr.
nd
Mrs.
Geo
j
«'
«
£
°
°
*
*
»
*
small opening, then going down
Herbert.
ty Lou a t home and the grandfather ; ces a r e encountering f a r greater Luehenbili. Here representatives of I "** "" report was accepted and the
through
the cellar and out the grade
From Durand; Clare G. BuDock, Mihael Breier Sr.
hardships. In the three terms which ten cl^b families tat down to a co- f t , n * m n M M W v o *« c*s* for the nom.
He
was captured later in west
door
Robert J . Corwin, Robert J . Bedell,
I have attended, this, session, to my operative dinner a t one o'clock. Fol Ineefl.
Owosso, as he and his wife and child
Henry R. Tanks Jr., Edwin S Mahas been
orderly and
) mind,
-««.—f»i
rt k .the
. l w »most
M ««{«,.« in +»«J lowing dinner, in the absence of the I , ^ ^ " e v members were added to w e „ j preparing to go back to De
comber, Donald E. Onyon, Junior
!
succesi.ful.
It
has
fceen
unique
in_two j p r e g i d e n t a n d ^ ^ p r e 8 i d e n t w ^ \ the club' r o l l j ^ t h i s time, A sum of t ^ . f r o w w h e r e they c a ^ e .
, „
successjui. »t n u m e n unique 11
tat-- ~^ *jfci*
Spaulding, Glenn E, Wiggins, Steve
H a
ed and no new taxation has b e e n ^ !
^ <*»«* the meeting t o order | ^ n e y _ w a s ^ d o n a t c d ^ o Uie.Red I
Benko,
and a report of the recent
and
"America the Beautiful" was cCross
From Corunna: Thomas A. Trimm,
*i~»
elebratk,n
Seventy seven members and acted.
sung.
For
the
devotional
service!
° * Gentleman's Evening
Of course, one reason for the short
Cecil Hard, Clarence A. Rogers, Car* friends of the Married P*ople*s Class
gi
n b yMw
C A
Mrs. Geo. Martin rrtul the 121st [ ' ?
* - ' V**™*
son C. Bentley, Dale E. Sherman, of the First Methodist church of Co- session is the fact that another will Psalb,
Itcir
the
Lord's
Prayer
in
uni«on
|
.
*
^
,
^ ^ ° 1
interest were
Robert E. Brown Richard D. Perry, runna. gathered in the social rooms be called next January, in the mean- following
1
11
j K *® °y Mrs, L. A. Burhans, and
Delbert E . Harris, Ernest E. Steet, .
»,,,
. ^ , i
^ . i time, stud v commissions and research
{ An interesting group of program I ^ " J l l ? ^ ^ ™* ^ J & S ' ^ l
Duane L. Kennedy
last^Fnday
nigh^for
ft/tMfJPUtjr.
The tables, where a delicious I e x p e r U ^ , , i n v e s t i R a t e a f l f | ^ ^ ^ numbers followed: Mrs. Bert Potter P 0 * " * « * C by ^ r s . Joh n Vant^mp J
From Vernon: Shurley G. BarThe above ckass si* the First
I n C0T, !usi
for governmental rechicken dinner was served, were gay commendations
* clever original M t t h o d i s t c h u r c h
forms to be adopted, or at least plac- presented two recitations — "The 'V e r e c o m< s °nt
low, Theron A. Pratt.
ed
*
P°
by the dramatic !
^ 0 ° ° ^ held their
with the decorations of St. Patrick, ed before that session. This is the Business
Man" and Officially.
From Ovid: Emerson J, Stead.
March meeting on last Thursday
Comm,tt
«*» *™ ™"? by »"• to the [with their teacher—Mrs. Lloyd
From Lennon: Robert H. Casaon, and following dinner the proirram of proper method of procedure. Govern, Spring." To the question "Why Fool • tune of
"Till We Meet Again.'
the evening was opened with Geo. ment is a science" and an intricate with Gardens?" the topic assigned;
Ira W. Merrill.
| Blakely. Here the meeting was
Bliss
a
t
the
piano.
one. Much study, care and thought j to Mrs. Luchenbill. She cleverly pre—
y
—
'opened by the class president, Mrs.
From Perry: Charles B. Learh,
1
The
following numbers »were si'Duld be given before changes or! scnted the reverse side of the picF. J. Aimendinger with sinjriiiK, and
Robert J . Lewis, Virgil E. Warren.
additions are adopted.
I ture and proved definitely the
Scripture reading and comments by
From Bancroft: Edward D. Edge- greatly enjoyed by all:
A humorous dialogue by Mr. and
The pension bill for state employ- } necessity of the family garden to
Miss Hatiie Lyon. The roil call reworth, Max E. Nimphie, Howard S.
Mrs. Herbert Kribs^ a . vocal trio ees recommended by t h e State's preserve health and economy and to
sponse were Scripture verses on
Shelp.
; "Kindness."
From Byron: Jack D. Anderson. number by Rev. and Mrs. Lloyd streamlined Civil Service Commiss- correct a threatened food shortage.
The
timely
query
"How
Can
the
i
ion.which
passed
the
Senate,
did
not
Blakely
and
daughter
Elsaleen
called
From Morrice: Keith W. Foumier.
i Among the reports was one from
Farmers
meet
Jpresent
day
demands
emerge
from
the
House
committee.
"Grumbles";
a
reading
"Tony
the
From Shaftsburg: Frederick Farr.
r
At a meeting held in Owosso on j the visiting ^committee, which r e figured we i o|- infcrt | .<y»d production^ {without
Front New Lothrop: Dewain E. Nazarene" by Mrs. James Reeser; Some of the members
hm
sufficient
and
efficient
help"
was
ably
Monday
night, when John .D. Mc- ported ten sick calls made during the
several readings by Herbert Kribs j wouldn't J»y **»
without new taxKoan, Donald R. Lucas.
nd
O T t
8 discussed by Ambert Weller. He al- Gill is of Detroit, executive secretary month. The program which followed
frnd
the
reading
of
portions
of
letters
;
«
•
*
<?*«.
»
«
^
^
*****
^
s
j
"
Fro Henderson: William H. Chant,
U
from soldier boys by Rev. Blakelv, ! ^ ^ ° * b e r s ^
^ ^
. t h e so read a n interesting editorial on ; of the Michigan War Sslvage enm- was in charge of Mrs. Nettie Kraft.
Lyman J. Telfer.
(Indestructible).
Eddie' mittee, w»s present and spoke, the Mrs. Kraft opened
L_ber program with
Preceding the program the scripture state employe^ should have pensions, Oaptain
Scattered: From Ann Arbor: Her- lesson was read by Mrs. John Gur- I s 0 ' t o ° ' s h o u l d * ? " ^ mercl^nts Richenbacker, which was a fine tri- imnortance of salvage in the war ef- S,oemf~* S e e t h | a t YV e ^ N o t
k
etc
man H. Ernest, Robert L. Lemmon;
.
«
. v
»
* J o«^ y*8* an <l attoneys too^nd bute to this daring and honest Amer- fort was the topic of discussion. The Toubled' 1 and verses concerning the
Swartz Creek, Charels T. Fairbanks; ney and prayer offered by Rev. j
^
. ^ , . ^ ^ ^ d A J e p ican who dares to voice his honest meeting was attended by workers in second Psalm.
mayhe
Lansing, Henry C. Faust; Ohio, Ken- Blakely.
j..
the salvage drives from marry parts
all, what's fair for the goose is fair convictions.
The following numbers were also
neth A. TTiatacher; Alma, Ralph G.
for the gander. And. of course, if wG
Earl Baumgardher was in charge of the county, and was most suc- much enjoyed.
Detwiler; Testis, Jesus Espinoza; Dei all have pensions we would only be of the question box; from which six ; cessfal in point of interest displayed,
-VA reading, "Daily Good Practice
troit, Harold C. Grey; Flint, Bern* paying our own and . might as well questions On farm problems emerged
The new drive is scheduled to start For Me," by Mrs. Frank Foster; a
ard J . Whitney; Ypsilanti, Charles
| not have any and pay ourselves and and were freely discussed.
i on April 5, and continue for a week, poem "Fully Trusting" by Miss Mary
W. Wright; Florida, Robert K. Brad- Randolph Field Postman
[ save the overhead of collection and
The closing song was *"Blest Be . or longer,
Lyons; readings,
The Gate of
bury; Fowlerville, William G. ForI administration.
the Tie that Binds" before adjourn- | It hardly needs to be impressed Prayer" and "A Prayer Answering
Kept
Busy
by
Soldiers
rester.
Governor Kelly and the members ment was taken until the April upon the minds of the people how God" by Mrs. Blakely; reading, "The
Every time another man takes his
place in Uncle Sam's armed forces of the Legislature wish more time to i m e e t | n ^ w hich w i l * be held in the ; important the job of salvage is in Man by the Road," by Miss Hattie
the postmen of the nation heave a study the soldiers' bonus problem. | e v c n i n 2 | our nation's present need. Since Lyons; and also a reading, "How the
sigh and feel an additional twinge This will be taken up the next session ' '
i much of the heavy salvage is found Lord Sustains," by Mrs. Allmendinin their overloaded arches.
and this promise must not be forgoti in the farming areas, the drive will ger.
For the average soldier writes and ten.
i be concentrated there. The meeting
Sixteen members jand friends of receives three times as many letThe program closed with singing
i of Monday night stressed its importI recieve a large number of tele"The
Old Rugged Cross" Mrs, Blakethe Modern Priscella Club were de- ters a s he did in civilian life. Auj ance and outlined the plan for the
ly
accompanying
and after the benelightfully entertained on last Friday thority for that statement is Post- phone calls condemning me for vot- j
I drive, and pot the county organizadiction
by
the
president
adjourned
evening,, with Miss Bess Garland as master Fred A. Benedict of Ran- ing for the capital punishment bill. I
| tion started.
j
dolph
Field,
Texas.
In
the
past
j
I
knew
this
bill
would
not
pass
when
j
to
meet
in
April
with
Mrs.
AJImentheir hostess—for dinner jat the
Corunna people and Red Cross
year,
he
says,
the
per
capita
voli
voted
for
it,
so
mavbe
it
would
have
Joesph
Mulhall,
county
salvage-'
:
dinger.
Roger's Restaurant, and contract
of mail at the West Pomt of . b e e n smart politics to have voted a- heads in the city in particular, can chairman, presided, (md named tlw ]
bridge in Miss Carland's home. For ume
be proud of the fact that V70, as a
the Air has doubled.
f gainst it, but somehow I just don't community, have already passed our following county committee, who
dinner, all were seated at a long taFree
has encour, Tmail,
„ .of
. . course,
,
.
[like to play the game that way. Red Cross quota, with a number of met on Tuesday night and arranged
ble, beautiful with spring motifs,
details.: William Morrice of Mor-!
the central point a bowl of dafl'o- aged Joe Soldier's correspondence I r h a v e b f j e n , n b w enforcement
t< J 0
people yet to contribute.
; vice, chairn^an of the Board of Sir '
production, and ID many instances ,
t 0 bel!evethat anyone w h o with
dills.
y
The
chairman
for
Corunna,
Mrs.
pervisorsr George Getman, former,
afoi.ethou?ht
murders
in ;
In contract a t Miss Carland's has promoted the use of air mad to j m a / i c o
Chas.
Carland,
and
treasurer,
Mrs.
the
CTie-and-only.
He
uses
the
mon-!
,
,
_
,
,
,
,
7
.
,
.
Owosso
township supervisor; Law-j
home; where four tables were in ey saved on ordinary mail to J J o l d bUl 1, o o d shoul <* b f P u ) , , n P™°*'! Thomas Jones this week announce,
rence Woodhams, Harold Kline, J o . ! Mrs. Geo. Robinson was hostess
play, Miss Jennie Westbrook was the streamline his correspondence with i f o r a ^ w years, fed and kept m a !
place a t
tote
seph
Whalen and Ray Spence.
on last Thursday for a meeting of
winner of the high score .award, the eirl he left behind
!
?
expense and thsn let " ^ *7UO.uo has already been con
Kenneth F. Bums of Detroit, state the Baptist Missionary Society when
A i r m a S ^ quite the style with the - t to probably do the same thing ^ ^ - o u r q u o t , being $040.00
Mrs. E. W, Lewis, second high, rind
over
The
interesting, how> *>th express appreciation of salvage chairman, accompanied Mc- the singing of "He Leadeth Me"
Mrs. Joseph Collins, low score play- men at Randolph, according to Post-i ev r •t *o* «h. e aft.wan
r
thls fact
j opened the devotional service. Mrs.
master Benedict. A year ago 150 | « »
the debates on this •
with thanks to district Gillis and spoke briefly.
l
a
John McCallum read the Scripture
letters in tht air mail bundle was a question. One member of the Hoase **>***** ™ the community ^onera ly
lesson—St.
John 1:1-14 and led in
good average; now a full pouch is i talked long and against the bill on J * - '-»—
-Vthe
prayer
thoughts.
Mrs. Wm. WoodA Grand Trunk Western freight dispatched. As a matter of fact, '
theory thatit would cost the state i
.,,
-»_
house
and
Mrs.
Gaylord
Kimble al>»
train—made up mostly of tank cars post office business has picked up j too much moneyto buy a n electric j
ler in prayer.
filled with fuel oil,, was derailed a t to such an extent at the West Point! chair. We simplycouldn't afford to !
Morrice near the station of the vill- of the Air that the office now op- j do it.
Ole E. Price was the guest of) Mrs. Bruce Morris was i n charge
age on last Saturday morning. Sev- erates on a 24-hour basis. In addi- j April 5 J, is spring election. EvOf
our
son,
Doyle,
who
was
killed
honor
on Sunday last, when his son. of the business meeting which foleral of the cars tipped over and the tion to sending mail out twice daily cry i?ood citizen should go t 0 the0 n e v e a r a
and
vote.
We
owe
it
to
the
j
*
*°<
°?
M.-.irch
25,
1942.
!
I.eRoy
Pvico, and wife, entertained lowed and later reviewed "Witnessditches along the tracks were filled by bus, the office uses thrc^ army j pools
0
in
the
armed
forces,
to
o
u
r
^
^
took
him
home—
i in their home o n the occasion of his , ing To the Light" a study in c-vanwith the precious iluid. The derail- trucks to make mail connections \ boys
i birthday anniversary. In the Pri^e j geiism. Various chapters of the book
j s e l v c s a n d t o 0 U r c h n d r e n t 0 d o s 0 . j It was his will.
ing wpas caused by an axle break- with four daily trains
a
ft
A l ! o w m et 0 s t a t p t h a t r ha
!
J home at 203 McArthur St., a fp.m- were reviewed by others present.
l
i
i
S
r
t
L
?
f
l
i
-?°
»
i
v
e
enBut
in
our
hearts
he
liveth
still
ing on one of the cars, letting the m
soldier'ss events-of- the-day," j • d W r i t any soldier
.
.
fc
Sinrore
] ily dinner was served at two o'clock
truck down so it'ripped up ties and Postmaster Benedict says.
The work period of the group folthe citizens of Shiawassee In heart and mind,
( with
j in the afternoon to 20 relatives, with lowed anjjl fonsisited of
spread the rails. The engine and
rolling
j County during this session of the Beautiful memories he left behind.) a delightful soda! afternoon fol- bandages and making bibs. Refreshcaboose remained on the track, and
TK. \r»„, 4 0 l l
TI-T*....
Legislature through the courtesy
MR. AND MRS. HOMER KNIGHT .lowing. Many birthday
remem- ments wore served by the hostess
no one was injured.
Tht News for Better Job Printing 0 f t h e Corunna News. After this j Lennon Mich.
branccs were received by Mr. Price assisted by Mrs. B. M. Fell.
WEEKLY LETTER FROM
REP. BRAUN
of J 2 J E w
? \
- - ^ - ^ ^ - ^ °* £ £ £ ^ t o £i£St£«-«
SOUTH VENICE FARMERS
MARRDDFOLKS CUSS j ^ p ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ i ^ a
IN BIS NAME
COUNTY SCRAP DRIVE TO
OPEN SOON
i
MODERN PRISCH1AS
RED CROSS QUOTA
PASSED
BAPTIST SOCIAL 4INI0N
IN MEMORY
HONORING BIRTHDAY
WUattjou Buy WPJt
WAR
%
'
BOMB : S
Our military forces must depen i
Leonora
unon aerial photographs for an scon her
curate
mapping of enemy territory.
put her .d.cvk \.\ the enci \ ', 1-.: r*.jov
tii
en
ii^r
I
^°
e
aerial camera is a vital nefacing • the- cvor so that * ••
j.cossity
for our scout observation
mother coins in ?h<? wou' ' h-\>e to
cross the vvho!3 i'^om' ur... .' Leo- J planes. These cameras cost up to
nora's stern executive eye t • #st to *V00 each and will make excellent
her. From movies and picture: in the i-.c-tiaes from tremendous heights.
newspapers Leonora had go'.-*?n a
good idea of how the desk of a busy
woman of ailairs should look.
With an important scowl, Leoro-'
picked up a sh^et.cf paper. Now t. 2
was two'people—herself, the bui /
woman, end her own stenographer.
"Mij-s Simpkins. take a letter-to the
Secretary of the Treasury, will you?"
she murmured under her breath.
"Yes,
immediatel y , " she murm u r e d back at
herself.
Leonora cleared
her- throat and
looked at the ceilA poor map may mean the difing for i n s p i r a tion. Miss Simp- ference between victory and defeat.
kins bent over the So help your Boys towards victory
T*\>
s h e e t of p a p e r with your purchase of War Bonds.
hanging
on the words about to fall. Join the Payroll Savings Plan at
* ; Dear Mr. Mo.genthau," — "Got your office or factory. Let's ***ep
that?" — "Yes, m a d a m , "
that ten percent.**
"I am — ahem — thirteen years
U.S. Tmimry P&artm**t
old and anxious to be of all possible
service to the country at this time,
ahem!
"I earn a weekly income.of from
NOTICE OF HEARING CLAIMS
$1.37 to $2.12 by helping with the
housework and by shovelling snow.
BEFORE COURT
1 ma at present in possession of one
War Savings Bond and a m buying
State of Micbgan—The Probate
stamps weekly. I want to become a Court for the County of Shiawassee.
member of the 10 percent Club. I
In the matter of the estate of
feel it to be — ahem — not only m y
duty, but m y privilege' ("How do AdeUa Reynolds, incompetent. File
you.
spell privilege?" asked Miss No. 13159.
Simpkins. "Don't bother m e with
Notice i s hereby given that more
these details,'* said Leonora)—my
than
t w o months from this date have
privilege as ah American to- invest
at tea^ terTpercent of "my income in | been allowed for creditors to preWar Bonds.
sent their claims {against said inYours truly."
competent to said Court f o r exam**Get that off at once, Miss Simp- ination and adjustment, aikd that all
kins," said Leonora. "Yes, Ma'am!
You certainly are an important creditors o f said incompetent axe
woman, m a ' a m , " bald Miss Simp- required to present their claims in
kins.
duplicate—one t o said Court* a t
(Letter from an actual communi- the Probate Office, in the City o f
cation in the files of the Treasury Corunna in said County a n d one t o
Department.)
V. S. Tr*as*rj Departm€*t
the Fiduciary of said Estate, on or
before the 14th <$ay of June A. D,
11943, and that said claims will b e
r Meats
CJ.-.-r
should play an I h e a t d b y ^° ***** o n M o r t d * y > t b e
at
o i June A
im^'M-i
e m e a t diet be- | 1 4 t h ^
* D* 1 9 4 3 '
n
causo
i* as sources of I ™« o'clock in the forenoon* Cenmii.t
ns.
The butch-j tral War Time.
erin.ii
>od time to use ' Dated March 19, A. D. 1943.
thct.c
ats freely and ! Fiduciary: Thomas Wilcox, Route
ther 1 and pork that J N o . 1 Owosso, Michigan,
can i'<
e armed forces. [ ROY 0 . MATTHEWS, Judge of
Liver
valuable a s a ;
focci t
ause it contains Probate.
By Janice .Richardson, Probate
• lar.'v'
iron, some copply of vitamins 1 Registrar.
per. .
A V:
i rank next to
livt r
and are a good
PROBATE ORDER
sot I
v, B, and G.
i
•
BY CENE AL! -. M AN
Kociati'i
"You
" s t jrr
it' ^ r .??, ;
Who sa. » it- Roosevelt. S ••!'••>•••• ; y ila:-" (-••
gressman Wi. »;'it.
Guess again. The words anp-^athissprihg i . a r.>•••.s^:v <-r a d v e n t
ment authorized 1 \d' »-Ad for by th
British government i.ir^ueh it^ , , f '
istry of Agriculture. The /message
addressed to the-women of England
and the copy reasoned tht mothers
assisted by older children, must grow
the vegetables thnt are vita! to.-'
your children's health—especially in
winter. J"
Othefwise the
British
messa^p
added, "if
you don't, they (the
children) may go short," Plain, simple language; right to the point; no
beating around the bush. Ij» otherwords, i f yotrr kids g o hungry next
winter for lack of health important
vegetables, don't blame the Prime
Minister, or the.House of Common*,
o r ths fanner. Just blame yourself!
v v
•
& h&w—be sure to make periodic
ions . . . lubricate regularly . , .
ires properly inflated and, above
:•<. our factory-trained service man
our John Deere tractor and equip,i thorough check-over. It will come
•to you just about like new with
y of power and pep for many addi; hours of hard work. Remember,
e, are days of equipment shortage.
; v goods are hard to get. What you have
•; ust be made to last.
,
Come in the next time you're in town.
Talk with our service man about this
complete overhaul service. You'll be
pleased with the completeness... the good
work . . . the results you get. Don't deby.
aak us about this service today.
• * » ; * $ ' .
•2T-*
"^;T
*-:7C ..'?
PAiR
ON
^,-y{
Z
/:*.-1
PARTS
0<^€4^4€-€?^^
- Victory Garden Week is being oh- >
served in Michiganthis week,
(
Michigan is iio island!; w e a r e n e t j
20 miles from e n e m y g u n s ; Nazi J
bombing planes do not f l y over D e - i
roit o r ' S a u l t Ste. Marie or Kalama- j
* ° B u t like the English are b e i n i r i P " ^ " • • * * ' ^ J " * *•» • « * * * *
told plainly
by their government I " S ^ J ? * ? - 1 ! ° ? " ! :
Here you have the true makings
"you must grow your own**, Mich*si
a corn beH revolt.
igan tittzens are becoming iiicreThe
hig cities, too, are not only
asingly aware of the fact t h a t ©ur
worried
about food. They are very
home front
is being endangered
much
afermed.
'
just as much by a threatened food
A
potato
shortage
and black markshortage as by espionage or absentets share attention of New York
eeism.
Recognition o f the food shortage City newspapers. Out at Sacretnento
prompted Governor Harry F. Kelly California's Governor Earl Warren
to divert his enefgies during the fin- j announces tht plans were afoot for
! a meeting soon of the governors of
al weeks of the 1943 legislative
ion at Lansing to the multiple prob- « k v e n Western states to "discuss
lem of food on the farm and food in J Western food and manpower shortthe cities. Accompanied by six ag- ages" and agree on getting facts dirricultural experts, Kelly traveled to srectly . before Presiuend Roosevelt
who always insists when he votes at
ergovernors. Result: Echoes o f the
Hyde Park that he is a farmer by
DesMoiner, to confer" with seven othoccupation.
governors conference reached WashEven if Congress acts to defer
ington. The United States Senate
"experenced" farm labor, Michigan
(with both Michigan senators votexperts are doubtful that the 1943
irg in ^he affirmative) approved
crops (should the weather again be
deferment for expeiier-ced farm labfavorable)
can be harvested with*
or.
out resort to civilian assistance.
v v v
Here aresoihe proposed aids *•
Yes, we have your Hardware heeds,
whatever they may be, and always give
the best of service and a quality that is
the best.
You are sure to find -what you may
need—Plumbing and Supplies, Water Systems. Will be glad to figure with you on
anything you need.
S u a e of Michigan — The Probate
Planting of thousands of Victory
At
the
DeaMoines conference
Covrt for the County of Shiawassee.
$
Gardens.
As the British would say,
were
the
following
advisors
t
o
the
At a session of the Probate Court
"youmust grow your own."
' for the Caunty of SWawaasee, held governor:
Home cannings on a scalegreater
Charles
Figy,
commissioner
of
agt a t the Probate Office in the City of
riculture;
C.L.
Brody,. director, than anything Michigan housewives
; Corunna, on the 18th day of March
Michigan Farm Bui^au; Wim. G. have ever attempted.
(ECTOR 4 j in the year one thousand nine hun- Senator
Elmer R. Porter, chairman
Civilian farm corps consisting o f
dred and forty-three.
of the senate agriculture committ men, women and high school student*
Present'Roy D. Matthews, Judge ee; Rep. Floyd E. Town, chairman, for emergency' harvest service.
U D C * S*rric*
of Probate.
.house agfriVullAJre committee: and 1
Furloughs for men in military
In
the
matter
of
the
estate
of
j
leader
of
countv
agriculture
agents.
training
camps who have had e x GAINES
Jennie Prior, mentally incompetent c v
Ballard, Michigan State college perience on the.farni.
(now deceased). Bion Hewitt, guarAs any, of the above men will tell
Governor
Kelly isn't the first
dian of said estate, having rendered ' y o u , Michigan made a leading cont- Michigan governor from Detroit to
his final account to this Court.
j ritution to the governors conference. make history on the food front.
EIB
It is ordered, that the 13th day of 1 For many days in advance the exHazcn Pingree, governor in the
April next, at nine o'clock in the J perts had pooled their ideas while late nineties, was dubbed "Potato
tmry Medicia*
C o e w w , Mich. forenoon, Centj/'l War Time, at said in a huddle with Governor Kelly. Pingree" while mayor of Detroit be~
Probate Office be appointed for ex- | The Michigan delegation arrived at cause he crusaded for potato gardaminging ;and allowing said account, the corn-belt capital with a definite ens.
together with all former accounts plan of action.
Folks made fun of Pingree. But
v v v
they woa't poke fun at Kelly if he
rendered by the said guardian.
fights the Washington bureaucrats
And i t is further .ordered, that t*
It is no secret that Governor KelE, D. D. S.
copy of this order be published three ly at first hadsome misgivings ab- doggedly for positive relief. 7 E v e n a
r
tlwws BMg.
consecutive weeks previous to said out Ihe DeMoines trip. Originally nickname of "Kicking Kelly* would"
it
day of hearing, in the Corunna he did not intend to go. Buras the n't raise a ripple. No, siree!
Mkhigaa
News, a newspaper printed and cir- fact-finders brought reports to his
culating in said County of Shiawas desk of the critical food problem
see.
everywhere, Kelly changodhis mind.
-*
ROY D. MATTHEWS. J u d g e ' o f And when the conferees from eight
Probate.
states assembled in DesMoines and
By Jjinice Richardson, Registrar began to c r v on each other's shoulders, announcing a crisis which had
of Probate.
NEER
been heralded in every newspaper
'
V
a Specialty
for weeks, Kelly proposed a resolutORDER
OF
PUBLICATION
ion
which
determine 1 ultimately
S F 2-1
the success of t>e day'> meetijis.
Stae of Michigan—The Probate
. F, D. 1
j In brief, he suggested that the exCourt for the County of Shiawassee.
perts pool their ideas th'-ough .one
- • mi4>
At a session of the Probate Court
representative for
each state and
for said County, held at the Probate
nnd that the governors ther: draft
Office, in the ciy of Corunna, on
Retired machinist b a c k .
the set of final recommendation*
•Tuesday, the "6th day of March, in
Here is their program:
In harness puts 20% /
ihe year of one thousand nine hunj
1.
Agriculture should be recognizdred and, forty-three.
•Y
0^\n War Bonds
Present, Roy D. Matthews, Judge ed by the government a* es-jential
•+*&'
, war industry.
i-.f Probate.
2. Selective Service should grant
I n the matter of the estate of
Oscar used to be a first-class madeferment
to "all experienced labor chinist. Five years »30 he retired to
Mattie J. Brand*, Dec'd. File No.
f essential to farm production."
live out the rest of his life on a pen...*****,,...-•
• 3. The War Production Board sion.
OH reading and filing the petition should release at once ail r/ve.^eoi. j
The other morning he showed up
of Myvtio B. Van Tifflin, legatee, stocks, of farm
machinery in rho f e^ain at his old plant, which now
praying that tjie estate be reopened, hands of
dealers
or distributors, j rnakes war equipment, and asked
:ir,fi '.'.',i>J- administration with the willManufacturers should he pive n per- j tor his old job back. When payday
crime, he signed up with the Payroll
aiircoxi-d of said estate may be grant- miVsic^
to
comple'i • 'mwhinery ! Suvinf.s Plan to put 20'r of his pay
ed t.o K. K. Vincent, or some other from existing: stocks of supplift•; on j in \V;:r Bonds.
.suitable person.
hand.
1
Seems Oscar's boy was on Bataan.
It is ordered, that the 12th day of 1. Abolish the present
allocation'
The Most You Can Save
April next, at nine o'clock in the red-tape whereby much machinery
Is the L e a s t Y o u C a a
forenoon, Central War Time,
at ip sent to areas where it is now adnaid Probate Office, be assigned for apted for use and whereby endless
With people like Oscar making real
nearing said petition.
delays handicap farmers who apply sacrifices to help win the war, is it
too much for you to put aside a s Little
And it is further ordered, that a for repair parts.
a s 10% of your pay for War Bonds?
copy of this order be published three
Herbert Hoover sounded the key- Sign up for at least 10% at your plac*
consecutive weeks previous to said note at DcsMoincs when he declared of business today 1
d;\y of hearing in the Corunna News that the "agricultural situation is in
a newspape y printed and circulating crisis" and that "unless we have
in said County of Shifvrnfflee.
more manpower and more machineROY D. MATTHEWS,
ry, the food production cannot be
Judge of Probate.
maintained."
-VBy Janice Richardson, Probate
From what the Michigan delegation
Register.
The News foj- Better Printing.
had found, Hoover's conclusion was
Lennon Hardware Co,
X
GILBERT
1
iSERDET
*-
IIIIIMHI
>o*eo«*+*#*««
The Wod&a News Seen Through
THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR
|
AM Iniermthmd
Dmdy
Newtptper
h TtmhbA—Cmntmnin—Umtwucd—IW
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her wbh tfa> W n t l j MijfriiK Sccdoo, fili^»
Ideal Nempaper for the Ham*.
The Chractan Science Pubfishmg Society
One. Norway Sextet, Boston, Massachusetts
Price #12.00 Yearly, or ¢1.00 a Month.
Sacurday Issue, including Magazine Section, $2.60 a Y e s a
Introductory Offer, 6 Issue* 25 Cents.
Name—*.
«
PUNCHES CLOCK
AGAIN...FOR BOY
IN JAP PRISON
SAMPLE COPY O N REQUEST
if
KRIBS' FUNERAL
:•, HOME ,
LADY ASSISTANT
A Completely Equipped Funer**1
Home
Phone 6.
Corunna Avenue-Ca
ia
W*Ve P l e d g e d t o Service
^
FOR THE DURATION;
at YOUR TRUCKS!
~. --.— fe
UNCLE SAM CSCES
VOI 10:
1 AvetdOvafioadla*.
2 Kaap Tees Tracks
In Oaed Ropatr.
3 . watt* Yeav Lwwt4» Wale*
S.Mva
wSlan
EatMam a t i n *
FOR VICTMY!
We Have \Cesn Appointed an
Official Station ot The U.S.
Truck Conservation Corps
O) Uncle Sam urges every truck
operator in America to sign the
pledge and display the emblem of
the U. S* Track Conservation
Corps. Drive in here for specialized
truck service that will help von
. . . a n d keep
yemrtruda roUmg/Oorcombi'
nation 6i skilled
and complete
equipment
means more
is*fr*• ^ I ' C ^ -
Lennon Implement Co,
Hardware and Implements
hi
Auto Repairing
i
JJXJ
Remember that our shop is completely
i
equipped for the handling of any Tractor
and Auto work of any sort—nothing too
I
difficult—and we stand back of every job
5 in every way. Yes, our** is always die
5 perfect job.
t
JACK MCDOWELL
Standard Oil Service
Lennon, Mich.
e»
I
LENNON
torn where I sit.. *
«
LENNON LOCALS
Lewis Davenport has been quite
ill this week.
Ray Jamad left on Monda y to
be inducted into the army.
Harry Harmer was in Corur vi on
a business errand W ednesday.
Pvt. Eddte Hyman, of Foit Custer,
was |at home over the week end.
Supervisor and Mrs. B. H. Kingsbury were in Corunna Saturday.
Miss Margaret Ridley, of Durand*
spent the week end with the O'Hara
family.
—
Mrs. Hc/ier Knight and her mother, Mrs. Chas. Ray, were in Flint
Tuesday.
Pvt. Chas. Hyman, of Camp Shelby
Miss., spent a ten day furlough with
his wife here.
Mrs. George O'Hara is recovering
from a severe (attack of laryngtis and
infected Trachea. Mr. and Mr£. Jerry Hayward, of
Iftnt, were guests on Sunday of Mr.
hud Mrs. Jack McDowell.
Robt. Caisson and Ira Merrill are
two Lennon young men soon to be
inducted into the army.
Mr. and Mrs, Chas. Kxrby spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Henry
S t John and family, of Pon tiac.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Edwards, of
Owosso, were guests in the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Knight, on Sunday.
Mw. L J Kingsbury was removed
to her home Saturday, from Memorial hospital, where she underwent an
operation.
Miss Luella Long has returned
home from her recent trip to Virgin'Jt, where she visited friends for
a few* days.
The Red Cross will meet at the
home of Mrs. Leo Leneschmidt on
Wednesday. March 31, from 1:30 to
4:30 fast time.
Mr. and- Mrs. Maurice Duby, of
Ferton., were. Sunday guests in ths
home of her brother, Lamont Tiffany, and family.
. Ernest Ganssley. who has been
working in the northern part of the
state daring the winter months,
has returned borne.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. White and
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Ganssley were
truest* Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. G.
C. Kerrigan, of Saginaw .
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Little and
family were at Breckenridge, recently, called there by the d<-tth of Mrs.
Justin Little, Bernard Little's mother.
AMATEUR MINSTRELS
iy Joe Marsh
Guess Who? is the only w;i y you
will know who the characters are
that are representing the Ministrel
Show at Lennon, Friday and Saturday, Aprfl second *and third at 8
o'clock E.S.T., at the Methodist
Community Hall.
The show is being sponsored by j
the Susan.ne Wesley division of t h e ]
Women's Society of Christian Service of the Methodist Church and '
will include members of the other
three circles of the society.
'
Adults can attend for twenty-five j
cents and children ten.
Sam A b e m e t h y always said:
"Curiosity may kill a cat - but
I'm no cat." Which is Sam's way
of saying that when he's curious
about something he goes out
and gets the facts.
Seems our government feels
the same way. After hearing rumors about our soldiers drinking too much -government people went after the facts. They
got the evidence on what our
boys drink . . . ana don't drink.
The government found oat
oar A m y ' s the best behaved in
How Powhattan County
Got Name From Indians
French and Indian is Virginia's
Powhattan county—French in its
early settlement and Indian in its
name. Neither name has anything
to do with that French and Indianwar in which George Washington
won those figurative spurs which led
to his choice as commander in chief
of the Continental armies and to his
eventual title of Father of His
Country. The French settlers were Huguenot refugees from religious persecution, for whom special arrangements
in the New World were made by
their Britannic majesties William
and Mary in 1699, writes Elwood
Street in Jt\e Richmond Times-Dispatch. These early French settlers
are memorialized in place* names
and still persisting family names
and in the romantic name given to
Virginia Route 44, which runs across
the northern part of the county, the
Huguenot Trail.
The Indian name was a product
of the Revolution. The county was
organized b y the general assembly
in 1771. Before the Revolution counties had largely been named after
British royalty, nobility or places.
The Revolution blotted out the desire for such signs of allegiance to
the mother country. Powhattan was
the chief of the Powhattan Confederacy and the Indian who made the
most powerful impression upon the
first Jamestown colonists and their
historians.
•Most BetutifaF Title
Given Corsica by Greeks
Ac. 54 of a Series
history. >f;>re'n half of Vm drink
beer—nothing sirty;i^ny. And th*t
government found that Kelliaf
&2 beer in Army ^amps is or.,»
reason why our Army is so temperate.
From where I sit, there isrvt
much cause to worry about our
men in the Army. Looks like
they can take care o' themselves
-and take care o' the Nazis and
the Japs, too.
£ce$tGAj£
Copyright, 1943, Brewing hdtutry Foundation
s
4
I"
1
I
Deep-Chilled SHARES
WILL KEEP YOUR PLOW AT
PEAK PERFORMANCE ALWAYS
»
•
#
XT m*YOttr ptow jottag... do good work in aU tough
Corsica, fortified French island, is
- V
J ^ s o i l conditions—be assured of dean plowing^***
a Mediterranean stepping stone on
j m f e r John Deera-Syrscase U**p*ChitUd Shares on your
an imaginary line drawn from
Cr***jf>5 Its!*' tc Hi-"rtc Ty?!i£ --"70
J o h n Deere>Syfa£nse P l m :
Sergt Bernard Little, of Buckley miles to the south. Oval in shape,
With an inferior "bargain" share on your plow, you're
Field, Denver, Colo., and Harold Lit- and about one-third as large as Verbound to get poor work. Instead, insist on a ftmame
tle, of Quanset Point, Rhode Island, mont, Corsica is only 50 miles from
Syracuse
share—one chat will outlast two ordinary shares
were recent visitors in the home of Italy, 105 miles from France. Italy's
island
of
Sardinia
is
just
seven
miles
—ooe that is made of the hardest metal used in plow
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Little.
to the south, across the Strait of
construction.
The dance sponsored by the "Len- Bonifacio. A backbone of granite
Remember, both point and cutting edge arc deepnon Victory Club" at the Rex Post mountains, the highest 8,600 feet, dichilled on gfawn** John Deerc-Syracuse snares. We
hall last Saturday evening was enjoy- vides the island, the western side
me type for your plow.
ed by a very nice crowd. The next sloping sharply to the sea, the eastparty will be held on the evening of ern easing gently into coastal plains
April 3. ^eryone
is extended a cor- and swamps. Malaria is a scourge
dial inyita\>ion to be present, and to of this marshy region. The western
are indented with bays, sevbring tW.r friends. Admission, 60 shores
eral giving safe anchorage to coastcents per couple.
ing vessels. Much of the island is
Last Thursday evening Mrs. Zoe heavily forested. There are numer- JOHN DEERE DEALER
LENNON. MKH.
Taylor and Mrs. Phuletta Root join- ous streams rising in the highlands,
but none is navigable.. To the old]
ed with Mrs Harvey Hubbard in ent- Greeks,
Corsica was "Kalliste," the
ertaining at her home in honor of most beautiful. To many a tourist
Mrs, Hinspeter, nee Laura Hudson the sweet scent of Vhe raaquis shrub
a recent bride. A very pleasant is the most memorable essence of
evening w^s enjoyed by all of the life in Corsica.
ladies pre sent, and the young bride
was presented with a number of
lovely and useful gifts.
REX POST
Fertilizer
Dear Customer:
Present indications are that there will be ample
fertiliser of some kind this spring, but dae to
war demands for Chemical Nitrogen, the supply of fertilizer containing Nitrogen will be
limited.
x
You must m&ke application for your requirements. See me at once. — This is important.
Yours, for a VICTOR CROP.
j^
:
'« w*
Distributor of
Royster Field Tested Fertilizers.
LET THE NEWS HANDLE THAT
JOB PRINTING
The Red Cross meeting was held
last Wednesday in the home of Mrs.
St. John, with 18 members present.
Mrs. St. John gave the report on the
accomplished. Officers were elected
the splendid work thftt has been
as follows: Chairman, Mrs. Knight;
vice chairman, Mrs. Leneschmidt;
secretary, Mrs. Bruce Ruby; treasurer, Mrs. W Brooks. The afternoon
vfa, spent in sewing blocks for the
third afiga n and making "housewives" for kits for the soldiers. The
next meeting will be heid on Wednesday, in the home of Mrs. Leneschmidt.
^#^-5
MEET THE MAN WHO HELPED
MAKE MICHIGAN HIGHWAYS GREAT
LENNON SCHOOLS
Walsh Bean and
Grain Co.
Phone 16
•-4L*
Lennon, Mich.
£ 1 BiUf BIACON
&i*yM647'economy
COAL
*
rl
mw
\
The Lennon schools have some
scrap that they would like to have
someone who has a truck, move to
Flint, Owosso or Durand.
The Lennon 4-H boys will have
an exhibit some time in April, to
show what they have made in their
work-shop. The exhibit will be at
the school house.
Some t'me ago w hen we had in
air raid alarm, Children went to t;ie
basement and played games. We
ripped nut p:\per hearts behind our
backs. Billy Root and Pedro Chavey had the best heats.
We also
ninde tvords out of the word Washington, and Forest Merrill and Agnes Kncora >?ot the most words.
R^.y and Jay Marble havp returned to school, after having the whooping cough.
Mrs. Smith, county school commissioner, visited our school one
day last week
P
N
I't
LLOYD E. -I::?, j-rt? rM State Kkghwa* Commissioner, has com* up through the ranks of a
highway department that has built for M 1:1.ifan the best road system in the Natior.
As an on-the-job highway engineer a;
.i
key administrative official. Reid has v
:d
on every phase of the ten-year program *Udt
has given Michigan motorists 5,M* miles of
new roads—made the Siate second to none in
quantity and quality of farm-to-market, recreational and industrial highways — and at
less cost to taxpayers fft«» in «ity prerbm*
period.
ffeM Knows the Job!
Your best assurance of well - maintained
streets and highways now and well-laid plans
for the ones to be built when the peace is won
u to continue Reid as State Highway Com
nccrs wi;i* y?ao of rc:»d building **:(: erience
can W counted on to continue the tradition of
good roads in Mkhif&n.
If you believe in fioc' roads aa« U yoa
believe in ?apperti»K the conssracOv* 'joticy
which has brought tfood r—i» :o HicLfrap.
then '••-•*.- April 3 1c cr>ntsn** Keid. Suite High-
I
I
ae
Asks That W o o ^ Should
Stop Losing Tr.-ir Glove*
Yo:!:- gloves, ha/.cteag, your urabreHa—and other accessories "like
thece are not the most imoortant
items of your wardrobe1 but they deserve extra care these <'jys. Clothing specialists suggest, that the?
habit of losing gloves an.! umbrella
i s a good one for America" women
to break. Buy a glove-holder to attach to your pocketbook if you are
inclined to lose jour giove.s, • .• >:ew
a name tape on the inside se;;:n.
Take a tip from the sales person
and put your gloves on just as she
tries them on you: Ease fingers on
first; them thumb and palm. Tu: n
rings so the settings are towai-A
palm of your hand. The best way
to take most gloves off is to loosen
each fingertip, turn the cuff back
over the fingers and draw . t h e
gloves off. Suede gloves are an exception; try to work them off easily
without turning back the cuff or pulling the fingertips.
After you take off a pair of gloves,
pull them gently into shape, blow
into the fingers, and lay them in
tissue paper in a flat box.,
Don't let your gloves get too dirty
before you clean them.
Watch for rips in your gloves and
mend them promptly. Always us*
Cotton thread in sewing leather. Silk
thread will cut the leather and pull
out.
TheCoronnaNews
LOU N. SHEARDY, PuMi*i e
Entered a* Seeos4 Class matter at the
Post OfiK-cr at Corucna, Michigan, onaer
the Act of fcureh S, 187».
NEW LOTHROP
By Mrs. Blanche LeRoy
.
Frank Birchmeier is much unp'rovfu l oin his recent illness.
Mr. and Mrs. John Kuchar attendi a farewell partv for Cari Malik
at Owosso, ??nday night.
Rev. C. B. Windland, evangelist
.,,,,;....
the special meetings
t" -o'lsjh and
including
Sunday,
M . v;-;'i ':•
\
A0WTOHAIWCAIS
Wilbur Hawkins, Jr., Was a very
tree . a c\7ell party lat the home of
his
parents last Friday evening,
previous „o his departure for army
training1.
Corp. Robert Arthur Brown, son
of Mrs, Irene Frown, of this city-—
i. d one of those famous four Brown i
be., s, 'is now stationed at Tinker
PieU, Okla v and i* •» member of the !
quaitmnaster, conna ly at this new-!
est estiHishrnnn* ox the Air Service |
Comma: <l for the maintenance and;
repair oi' aire; aft and the training;
of airt^po: groups.
j
Recently filir* a petiton in Circuit
Court asking for a separation of his 1
land from the city proper, was Ray
Cornell, whose property lies at the
west limit* of -Corunna, on the south
side of M-71. Mr. Cor>eTl is filing
the petition under a !.;w enacted by
the legislature four years ago, ^nd
under which a good deal of acreage
lias been separated from the city.
A 20x30 foot bain and an adjacent chicken house on the tenant
farm owned by Or. G. L. Cnamer of
Owosso, south of Burton was destroyed by fire on Sunday, and two
valuable registered tSurnsey cows
s.n u a number of chickens also burned. The tenjant on the farm is Kenneth Waite and it is thot that defective electric wiring- was the cause
of the firc-
.Mexico Become* America's Supplier
Current imports of graphite to the
United States are double those of
four years ago. From Mexico alone
came 22,500 tons in 1S41. Graphite
mining in the Guaymas district oi
Sonora, 200 miles south of the Arizona border, has been rapidly developed. Transportation, not production, is the current bottleneck of
Mexico's graphite trade with the
United States.
Sizable graphite deposits are
available in Alabama, Texas, New
York, Montana, California, and Nevada, in addition to Pennsylvania.
Several of these deposits have been
worked and can be made to produce a&ain. Three new mills have
been authorized for construction in
central Alabama, largest source -of
American production in the early
years of this century.
Announcing that we baVe just installed equipment in keeping with the times., and are ready at
all times with a new service truck and equipment to
handle any job.
T
X
Revolution in 131*
I'ts. I'cvard V^'!oy left this week
Celts, Romans and Moors, one aftto j . i r r.o; ' . l>aad PPC. Howard
er another, had their day in what is
*
MalL.
• : :J is stationed jftt Nashnow Portugal, leaving mementos in
ville, 'i^nn.
castles, customs and costumes. Hunt
Miss Arline Cramer of Rochester
ing Moors was an old custom back
who has been guest of her sister,
in 1095 when Henry of Burgundy
In Electric work we have an experienced man to
moved in to take a bit of land given
Mrs. Wilbur Houghteling*, has rehim by a royal relative. He deturned noem.
handle anything along this line. We always have a
clared an open season on the infidel
'Homer Hess, who has been very
invaders, beat them in many battles,
good stock of Electric Motors of various sizes, and do
ill with near pentrmonia is much imhung'captured
shields
on
his
family
proved at fiie home of m s parents,
any special work needed on Motors, such as re-windtree as coats of arms. By the sword
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hess.
his son, Alfonso Henriques, freed the
Joe Nakacky, Donald Lucas and
ing, etc.
country from Spain, became its first
Duane Koan. are among* New Lothking, Alfonso I. The monarchy perrop boys who are to leave next
sisted until 1910 when revolution
r
Will always be glad to call and give estimates. *
I&diftY Pars s Fear That
Tuesday for induction in Hie armed
ousted the royal family. A republic
I
William
(BUI)
Bernat,
son
of
Mrs.
was established in 1911.
•:•
Bombs Will Scare Vulture* forces.
Corporal Edward Havlrk, son of Julia Bernat, a graduate fcsst June
Parsis of India fear bombs OE
Mr. and Mrs. John HavEfc i s sta- of C o r o n a High School, and e n Bombay, where most of the sect
Watcsatsuk
tioned
at L^ugtlin Field, Delrio, rolled a t Albion last fiall, has been
Jive, for one unusual reason—beinducted
into
the
Navy,
in
which
he
The
"Watchman
of the Sunrise
cause they might frighten the big Texas. He is a brother o f H i s . John
Kuchar.
j
enlisted.
Bfli
for
the
i*st
year
had
Trail,"
of
Mattituck
on
Long Island,
but timid vultures that play an imhas
ceased
to
watch,
according
to a
Theodore Snide <rf Saginaw, who been a helper around the N e w of•portaot role in their custom oi
notice
from
the
post
office
departvpniBtttt Micsi.
Eaaf McNeil Street
has occupied the former Robert Har- fie*, am* *fc« - become an excsflent
apposing of their de$d.
ment.
Its
loss
from
the
list
of
N
e
w
In the roofless circular "Towers mon home succeeds Itffe BOlbrough linotype operator: "BUST is surely
iCf Silence/' which are surrounded as lineman f orthe Shiawassee and *» aM around ^ood fellow, whom we York rural weeklies i s probably another war casualty, a s a result of
Phone 1444-Green
,by flower gardens, shrubs and state- Genesee Mutual Telephone a t N e w shall certainly miss.
rising
costs
of
supplies,
lack
of
laly cypresses, tne Parsis deposit their Lothrop and Lennon.
Menu era and officers of the Co* bor; and loss of advertising. *rhe
dead. They believe that fire, earth
Mr.s Clare Vernon bad charge of
,or water should not be defiled so the missionary program given at the ranna Chapter, No. 200. <>. E. S., "Watchman" was started when Lord
Byron w a s fighting for Greece; when
the dead are exposed to the vulNazarene church. The subject "lie- will on Tuesday March 30 sponsor a Daniel Webster was thrilling the
tures. "
view of Native Workers" was dis- pay to p»ay party in Extension hall, country with his oratory; and J a m e s
The Parsis <Parsees) are a comcussed by Mrs. Prank Beardslee, «*«** '** n***1^ as for^r tables are Fesimore Cooper was starting his
iparatively small but prosperous and
expected t o be in play. It is planned "Leatherstocking" tales. Well past
progressive sect of India, says the Mrs. Adrfen Smith and Mrs. Mat- that there will be ? major prize, and
the century mark, its first issue was
Kational Geographic society. There thew Roach.
in 1824; its suspension leaves an*
a
door
prize.
Mrs,
Harold
Young,
Steve Hajeck, who recently enare less than 150,000 of '>em.
other
New York town without a
They are among the rr.. st enlight- tered the selective service w a s hon- and Mrs.. Geo. Webb, matron and
newspaper.
ened of the natives, active in the de- ored at a party given at the Birch- associate matron of Corunna Chap, —.
^y—
velopment of air service and water meier hall, New Lothrop. He was ac- ter, are heading the event.
power, operating large commercial companied to Detroit by his sister,
Recent Justice Court decisions in
Two important items have reenterprises and most of the cotton Mrs. Michael Chemeler and brother
Corunna.are:
mills in Bombay.
They include Aanthony Hajeck and Mrs. Hhjeck, cently appeared in the press a s
Charles Turck, 19 of Corunna
• o m e of the wealthiest men of India. where he left for Port Sheridan, Army releases—one is, that i t is
planned to intern many prisoners | paid a fine of $10 and costs of $ 1 0
Parsis have built bridges and resGreat Lakes Training Base.
REPUBLICAN CANDIDATES
«
from the EttTopefeth battle fronts a t j Monday after pleading guilty to a
ervoirs, founded and maintained
The
residence
of
Matthew
Roach
charge
of
being
drunk
and
disorderly
Fort Caster. Another item fs, that
hospitals and otiier charitable insti'»
AT THE SPRING ELECTION
tutions, dramatic organizations, col- was damaked by fire Sunday morn- Capt. Bayard J- Alp*, company com- Saturday night.
ing, when a spark from U match ig- mander at Fort Custer, terms 69
Vernon Adams, 29, of
Owosso
leges an:j schools.
,
a lac*? curtain. Mr. Roach, American-born Japanese, soldiers, pleaded not guilty to a similar
British manners and customs have nited
been adopted by the sect, more than who was alone at the time, the other trained there one year for aervice. charge and will have a trial on
by othor nat.ves. of India. When »nembers of the t i m i l y being'"'at as "model s o l d i e r . " Not one of March n.
the Par.';. $ sj^ak of "goiiig home" church carried his infant grandson
James R. Williams, 1J9, paid a fine
t! <*:Y\ hit* committed the smallest inthey refer to Kngiand, In London to safety and with Ihe help of Keith
of
$10 and costs of five for speeding.
there aiv enough of them to support Rose, a neighbor extinguished the fraction of military discipline, durwrir.sivip a t Gold cr Green. < f j , e after it had bmned the window ing training.
a' place
frames' vind some of the furnishings.
Celebrating the fourth anniversThe
damapc
is
covered
by
insurance.
ary
of t V Volunteer Special Services, the Shiawassee Chapter of the
The .
:sh channel i^ijnid of
American Red Cross is holding toLark. .¾ 'i i.;les off t! j Frenc'i
day and tomorrow—Thursday and
couM at i :>iF mik'3 from Prig land.
Friday, "Open House." The public is
It is ov' r u.a:e miles long and •
invited to visit the Chapter headmtie iv .( ;i h:iif H'ide. with Xi miles
quarters in t'l'to- !>egio» Home on
Arrangements
have
been
made
to
of Co;i. i. . >.ky and rough, backed
either
of these days between the
by cl lT
ne of which rise J00 fed administer the qualifying tests for
hours
of
1 to 4 p. m. and from 7 to
but ol
s<.;i, with m.my smug- the Army Jand Navy College Train9
p.
m.
The
purpose of this "Open
glers «
~ The upland isTcacht'O ing Program at New Lothrop High
House"
is
to
show the publie the
17 sin
• •? cliff-v.:i!!i u harbor School between 9 and 11 a. m., on
thiu
progress made in the Volunteer Ser.:. ; el 450 (eet long. The Friday, Aprs! 2.
CHARLES M ZIECLER
DR. EUGENE B. ELLIOTT
tide :
:i.-s drops 4¾.feet, leav:
Vhe purpose of the V-12 program vices of the local Red Cross Chapter.
Two of the l*a: r.-r . rndidaUs at the neer to deputy itate highway coming t
r dry. The shilling tax is to produce Naval Officers. High
V—
April 5th cleciu. . •:. rry the hope* of
mitsior.-r. Dr. Eugene B. Elliott,
on. i
;i;aiual visitors normal- school seniors high school graduates,
_y
:
the Republican I'aiiy to Continue th* right, is a candidate far re-election «a
i government and pubVl
sweeping sU:e-wide gains registered Superintendent of Public Instrucand college graduates who appear
lie
jlemented by a small
SWEET
CLOVERSEED
last
November. Charles M. Ztegter, tion. A graduate of the University cf
to have potentialities for ultimate
lar
-r tax. The 40 farms
left, is the candidate for Stat* High- Miclucu with the degree of Doctur
June
Cloverseed,
Sweet
Cloverpro.
in the Elizabethan selection as officers will, be chosen seed and Timothy Seed. Ernest
way Conumasioi>er. He graduated in of PbuoBophy, Dr. Elliott was first
civil engineering from th« University appointed in 1935 «0 fill a vacancy
ChL;
zss from father to old^ for college training. The plan con- Ableson, four miles north and one
of
Michigan, end served in the state
templates
that
this
college
training
es\
.annit be divided. The
west o f Lennon.
Atghway department far 13 ywan. ad- in 4tne office be now oecuniea, and « s t
CO.
i farmers are of gran- will be carried on while the men are
^ " "" thrice-elected to tb«
vancing from assistnM. diva^OB
ortlTKp
ite
on the island. They on active duty, in uniform, receiving WCTU
and vegetables and pay, and under general military disgt
_ l
nous
Guernsey cattle. cipline.
«i
te
^onomize pasture. The
The purpose of the Army Specialfis
J motorized.
•*t-1 -UL*
i peace the bank was ized Training Program is to train,
' a week. Parliament at the collegiate level, men in techOF
To the qualified electors of the
m
lool hcus'?. where Eng- nical and p?;pfessionial skills required
by
the
Army.
Engineers
of
all
City
of Corunna in Shiawassee
3U
lodern French,, were
types, doctors^ linguists, physicists. County State of Michigan;—
ta
mathematicians and students of forNotice is hereby given that an eleceign areas are needed i nlarge num.
tion
will be held in the City
of
1M'J\S, and the Army has established
> UTsat She r»'rc:<
Corunna,
County
of
Shiawassee
has gotten aroiyxd that this program in those colleges and Mich, on Monday April 5th. 1943
is the "idoji" average universities where such training can
from 7 o'clock forenoon, until fl
of
itstanding' typic.it stars be.*t hv given.
o'clock in the afternoon Central WaT
oi
?., siu: hu.s lK*..-ii iiootlcd
Time for the purpose of electing
o switt:h her njnitr from
by
the
following officers;—
!
-v0 grv'.vc-^p ^ri.;i:ies of
£J
Two
Justices
of
the
Supreme:
The iiiuvif ti'>\ino\\ ijta:',
fe
Court.
I
w
SHROPSHIRE RAMS
>as b<'f<>m<.'. pr n'Ucaliy
A Concrete paved barnyard is a big
Two
p
e
g
e
n
t
s
of
the
University
Y
' 'Where Friend* Meet"
aid to dairymen producing high
.e object oi" i'J'j.t physReg.
Shroph-ire
yearling
Rams
for
of
Michigan.
quality
milk.
Fall,
winter,
spring
k
cnt by millions oi ft?*tvand summer it helps keep cows out
Superintendent
of
Public Inin
J wanting to (ju.--j.sure as sale. Sired by Gibson 28-R-9i01590015,
P
i
k
e
s
reasonable.
One
mile
of
mud, dust,filth—cutsdown work
si
struction.
•s, wear what sin: wuars
of cleaning cows before milking. A
at
t she doc-.-,. Tiit'.-.o are north and 2 1^2 east of St. Johns,
Member of the State Board of
big factor now that farm help is
th
iments thu-y are tacking
Education.
E.
L.
TOLLES
it
SONS
short £sd every effort is bciogmsde
aI
* shower-rootit s-ak's:
Two
Members
of
the State
to increase milk production.
:;
H
;et, 5 4 inciiefv, weigh'.,
Board of Agriculture.
When cows wade through mud
l
-U
bust ?A /i uvc!s;';>; w-ii.st.
State . Highway
Commissioner
they
waste energy needed for pro24
ips, .'>5 inchc.i; f-'-'ngUi of
(to fill vacancy term ending June
ducing milk. Owners say a paved
le
30 '45
bamyaid soon pays for itself by
2 Miles Eaat of OWOMO on M-21 ^^""T.
helping produce more and better
County School Commissioner
quality
milk,
City Mayor
is for Election O.Ticiab
"S|
Pascecoupon on peony postal and
City'
Clerk
21S South Shiawassee Street
ma;l today for free instructions for
Minn., rwis adopted deCity Treasurer
pavirg your barnyard or building
lation:; on the eligibility
ta
A plrtce for everyone
.Justice
of
the
Peace
of.cer durable, thrifty, sanitary
officials, The j»peoiiicahi
Three
Supervisors
structures wivh concrete.
maxinimn age limit of
ti
Meet Your Friends at The Quaker
R. n. .in-:'• F. E. HAIGHT, Pastors
Three
Aldermen
two orYici.ihj s >r\'ing in
e:
/oting place it: thev live
ir
P0KTIAND CEMINT ASSOCIATION
SiMiday School, 10 a. m.
There will a!so.„be submitted to
» bjild>n<» or are r^atod,
4>Ids Tov. er BliS-^Laasits, Mica.
Preaching, 11 a. m. and 8 p. m.
the voters, two proposals for amende iippl.ta'iU to furnish
S«R4 hiitroctioat lor P**i&* «J*irr bar**
Praise Service, 7 p. m.
ments to the Constition.
. ..
ymrA wita cvacrtc—wo rtmfercing ttttl
r-'ference^
and
1 a;.i
Piayt-r Meeting, Tharsday, 7:30
ntedtd.
Mo. 1 provides for the election of
medical examma'tioti.?. p. m.
Alta "b?w to M M " booklets oa imcertain
township
officers
for
two
on offiqial also, must atprovements check «4:
C Mai; house
Q Dairy bam floor
Any sick or needinp spiritual l«dp yenrs, instead of one.
t a mark of 7S in » civil
It
P M u o r t pit
• PooJtn boas* Boo?
No.
2
—
To
validate
certain
alienaminatioii desiftnod for call at 216 S. Shiawassee St., or
s
O Gru*rr
D Wcter tasks, troafta
le. Au.;:)i'itrnc;ils ara Phone 816. We are jeuming unte ations or mortgages of homestead
t:
A^offt^- _ , ^ - _ . _ - . . » - v - . . - - - - ^ - - - . • • * - ding to par.y tiftiiiaiiviR the place of which the Lord said, I lands after a lapse of 25 years.
r
StT€ttot XR A?o.
•» suflicient eiigibhrs; i! will give it jsmt cetne thou with us
a
I . C. HAYNBS
C*f
8Ht<
ithout ru^srd to party.
1;
and we will de thee geed.
%M.
0'
C ^ Clerk
...
1 . . ,
•
M
*•. -.
Electric Work
i
•
•
•
'
„
, *
V..
ft^Ti/
QUALIFYING TESTS
Cleaner Cows
-Less Later
NOTICE OF ELECTION
' w
urn
CffNCRfTE
J PAVED.
1ARNYARD
FREE SIETH09IST CHURCH
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
T
THE QUAKER
f
^^;*+t^&«^>3^
LET THE NEWS HANDLE THAT %
JOB PRINTING
. J
l»iilM^«W,
Mrs. W. B. Jacobs and Miss Naomi Serr are enjoying a trip to Florida.
The Michigan Rural T e t h e r ' s A s sociation i& meeting in East Lansing
on Friday of this week, March 26.
Circuit Judge Joseph Collins was
the guest speaker at a regular meeting of the Perry Lion's ClOb, held
at the Speedway Cafe in that village, at 6:45 o'clock on Tuesday evening of this week.
Mrs. Ray Gellatly will be hostess
today (Thursday) for a
regular
Confer with our officers about your
meeting of the Past Matron's Club
CREDIT NfcEDa—This bank is ready
of Corunna Chapter No. 200 O. E.
S. A .subscription dinner will be
to consider any sound plans for utilizing
served
at the Rogers Restaurant.
its credit resources in your business—
Corunna
Extension
Club
will
whether your requirements are large or
meet
at
1:30
o'clock
on
Friday
af- }
small.
ternoon in the home of Mrs. William
Huff. Members are lasked to bring
their dress patterns, shrunken and
pressed materials, and .sewing equip- {
ment.
Ho^r m a n v grown-ups know this:
In saluting the flag
all teachers
have the pupils keep the right hand
over the heart instead of extending
the arm.
This is .according to a
'Congressional resdwuOT adcpt rt d
in December.
Mrs. 'Gayford Kimble will be hostess on Friday afternoon for a meet- ,
ing of the W.C.T.U. with Mrs. R. B.
Haight in charge of the program.
The meeting will convene a t t w o
o'clock, and important business i s
announced for the afternoon.
The Rural school spring Music
,
v
*r~- ^
'"i'«
~
^ ^ T* ; Festival, which rljj been an outwlL^JSTM
r * * 8 - ° f M a c k * • standing affair tf school activitfe.
s ^ L t t W 5 S f S I " A f ? 2 f ° r f O T « » ****** *** * • • • c e n s e * *
a m«etimj o f the Friday Afternoon f o r the seson. The songs which* the
J V * ^ : . 1 V***r
^ ^ - ^rrt=« schools ^ v e p r e p a i d will be p h >
OLD CORUNNA
STATE BANK
O
•4
ori
ii
o
Corunna Free
Methodist Church
"DESIRES TO SERVE YOU"
R E V . R . R. a n d F . E . H A I G H T , P a s t o r s
216 S. SHIAWASSEE ST.
THONE NO. a l t
D O N ' T be careless w i t h
clothes in these times when
all materials, men, and machine* are n e e d e d . T a k e
extra care a n d get l o n g e r
wear from your, c l o t h e s . . .
we'll help y o u !
Quality Cleaning
Man's wit or cone
quality dcaacd
OSBORN
CLEANERS
Sunday School
...
... .
Preaching Service . . .
Praise Service
. . . .
Pieaohing^ Service (Eve: ;>g)
Prayer Meeting (Thursday)
***** Earl Sander^ east of Conuv-&,£.
***
***
***Yalo
K
e
r
b
y
,
o
f
T
e
e
u
m
^
M
i l i t a r y f u n c i ^ aerviees were
A regular meeting of t h e W. R.
seh
sisters,
have
gone
to
Huntington,
^
e
l
d
a t M a p ! e G r o v ^ Saturday f o r
C. is being held today (Thursday)
y
i n Extension hatt.
I c ^ L - T ^
, » * ^ " " ' " ^ i S e n j t Michael Brier, of New Lothof t h e i r father, J. E. Bias.
^
^
^ ^ in «n Army bomber
Stodfcnta from this area in Mfch„ . * , „ / n ™ « - / n . «^i *• T*••••'-; i V »"
M l
North Woodworth a t West McAr* * n S t a t e College jare a t home for j t r o ^ V J ^ ^ 5 5 1 * Chapel o f De- c ^ f c i n Arizona, oh January
18,
6
thur
streets, Corunna.
p i w J * * ^ Hf??*
gneats in the The body was only recently recovt h e spring vacation.
4831
Lloyd
M. Blakely, minister, 2 2 9
The Michigan Raral T e a c h e r ' s ! * ?
^°°
«*"*> * * • G o o d a H | € r e < j a i 0 B g . ^ ¾ those of 11 other
West Corunna avenue.
^aoeiation T ^ 3 £
£ ^ 2
o n ^ ^ o t l ^ T S 5 ™ *
" j - * *
You are cordijally invited to serT * S *
*n l*ri«Uy of this, week
i u b ^ ^ T ^ ^
^v,
' T** ^
"**«
***** M u 5 f c
March 2 « t h
n,
* Matthews and
Shirley; Festival, which has been an out- vices next Sunday.
10 :*0 Junior church. Three comMrs. Lettie Terry of Owosso, w a s ~ ? * « ° , **}tolt;
J**?"* '.£™*» «* l a n d i n g affair in school activities
the Emile Rigoulet's in their farm for pome years, has been cancelled petent persons will conduct a serin the home of Mrs. Archie Steward
home, have returned to their home. for this season. The songs which j vice for your children under twelve.
while convalescing from an illness,
Louis Matthews is a nephew o f Mrs. the schools have prepared will be
10:30,, morning worship. "My
has rcttUTKrd t o her home.
Rigoulet
presented
a
t
the
Commencement
I
Gross,"
is the sermon theme.
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Gartung of ;
Colin Berry was one of the draft- .^rogTarn
I 11:45, session o f the
church
Lansing and son Robert of Dertoit.
ees t o leave Owosso, Tuesday after
T
h
e
.
e
is
such
a
serious
shortage
J
school
with
classes
for
persons
of all
were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
.noon
to
be
inducted
into
the
Army,
of
professional
?he*p
,shearers
this:;
^
a
g
8
>
Holland Cook of Macfc St., West.
'Colin is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ar- \ springs, that young men, as well as j ^ : 3 0 the four Fellowship Groups
V
C,ub
*field
w - its
, 5 ?last
! ! 1 meeting
! 2 - C ^ of 2the^ season
| j*f£ £ " fcnr w d ' one of Corunn^s
older ones, are being sought by the m e e t f o r t h € i r Devotional period.
^
ine D o y a
state
for training in this work. The
-on Monday afternoon of this week i ~
. /
/
't j T o u ^ , g e t h e , p f r o m t h < J ^tfce,..
A n
shortage
of
shearers
of
course,
is
™ the home o f Mrs. Geo. Martin.
**»*
^ « ^ ^ 4 , a highly r e - ,
.
. _
mgs.
lua
.nam Xq
pasns^
f
7:30, evening worship. "Victory
Albert Scarlett of Owosso entered ^
f ™
° ^ ° ^ «** ° " *J
industries
h 1
w „.
_.
„
.
,
,
,
i
Over
Success" will be the sermon
v
t
"Ford Hospital the first of the week I *
Sunday morning whjle seated ; "The
^ ! . Durand
„""^
Cride of
Kings;
»• ,.
„,„
^
• -«. ^
- A
, . . . . .«,
. IT _ T . subject; ubnn5r your ^sitors
and
f o r a f e w days' treatment. Mrs. | a t t h e breakfast table, having lived -Daughters
will sponsor a post-Easter , . *
'
^
a
h,s
,fe 1
the h o m e on
Scarlett accompanied him to De- "
'
"
WoodUwn
!Avt>
troit
- *h*™ h* was b o m to Joseph « r t ^ c t o n ^ n n i <:», m tne Mign
Wednesday evening at 7:30 is al**"""
j ;
'
Schoo auditorium m that city. The ways the time for the prayer meet. Mrs. Goldie Wells of Durand left » f J**™™•
A"gu». He had ^
High ; ing service; pet into the habit of a t bwly
qf.th< Senlor
L*t Sunday- foi-Cn.cago. and was in- » PO«r ^ a l t h for the past four
.
^
£
^.
,
<;1
b
ia|
included
tending this helpful service. Commit
ducted on Monday ftiorninjr into the \ J™™.
j a , ^ ^ ^ f or t h o b a l l
! the Memory Verses announced.
W.A.A.C. ar.a ;tssi K ned to Fort Ogle-'
Word has been received' by Mr. j Hattie C. Sherman-;-wife'-of Harold
-thorpe, Ga.
and Mrs W. A. Darling of Perrs', j . Sherman, and « former resident
Little Miss' Nancy Ann Buckelew,
Of i n k i e s t is the followling: Last : ^^ tiwir >on Lieut. Victor Dariing 0 f siii.awuss<'«v.County, died in her i
daughter
of Mi. and Mrs. Pat Buckweek's stamp sales in rural schools— ' has b«>i'n advanced in the U. S. Army home in Dearborn lust Sunday after
a
month's
illness.
She
was
the
forj
a
day
Bennington, Xo. 1, $25;
Knagg's to Captain of his company. Captain
( e e W ( W S nine years old one
nier
Hattie
('.
Knapp
of
Ovid,
daugh-'i
}
t
week.
'and.
celebrated
the
ear v
as
Bridge, $i5."i>'; KaV.y $12.50-; ETv- i Darling-is a t Camp Joe T. Robinson,
eleth 1 1 1 . 7 0 ; Carland,
9 5 8 . 2 0 ; j Ark. Ht« j» ^ graduate of the Perry ter., of the Jate Willis and Clara day by Entertaining several young
Brown » 1 6 . 3 0 ; Whahburn, $ 4 ; Le- j High School and Michigan State Col- Knapp of that village.
! friends for dinner in the home of her
land, | 6 5 . 1 0 ; Waiters, $ 5 7 . 5 0 ; Doyle I lege and w a s associated with the
Veteran Supervisor- HarodI Dun- grandparents. She was nicely
re9 1 5 . 3 0 ; Sherman $ 4 . 4 0 ; | Spragu^. 'Darling & Sons H a r d ^ r e Store in ham of Fairfield township, at a re- \ membered with birthday gifts by her
^23.40; Corroi-an $11.40.
j Pony before entering Army sevice. cent Democratic caucus, announced friends.
that he would not accept re-nominI ation for that office, and accordingWOOL PACKAGING
l y Amby Gould, nominated to he^d
the Republican ticke t from
the
An adeuaqte supply of burlap and
•f
township will be unopposed.
paper bags will
be available for
packaging
the
nation's
1943 wool
j Robert Jenney, who has suffered
clip
according
to
the
U.
S. depart' a long illness
from an accident
ment
of
Agriculture.
The
wool conwherein his arm was broken and
t
ainers
include
a
half
million
used
badly cut—a number of weeks ago,
burlapbags,
600,000
new
paper
has been under treatment at the U.
of M. hospital, and was brought to mesh bags and enough new burlaP
his home here last Sunday. He will to make an estimted 400,000 bags.
10:00
11:60
7:00
3:00
CORDNAN METBOttSr
The telephone lines in this community are
today humming with great activity. New
peaks in telephone traffic are being recorded
each month.
It is quite obvious that the availability of
service on a party telephone line depends upon
the neighborly co-operation of everyone e« the
liae.
C .¾
8It
7 J 3 0 P.
M.
•wre may obtain mercy, and find Grace to help in time o f need,
. M
[OEM
Use Your Full
Sugar Ration
Tour government expects and lias mad* ptovisian lor you to uaeyour full sugar allotment
Families need the energy provided by sugar.
So bay and then use all of the Michigan
Made Pun Sugar—the Sucrose Energy Food
—that your ration stamps permit.
Miction Mod* p
U r A K
8
y
#
A
R
The
£ & J » fc, Ed0*L A. Qamm^acL Monday antf WMoMdar 20
&**T,—m*. rztmd Michfrm Smli*Mmtmntrk
[OX
Be a
Good Telephone
Neighb or
Do
M.
M.
M.
H.
Let ua therefore come boldly unto the Throne of Grace, that
i ,— — v
XOE30E
A.
A.
Pt
P.
PLEASE ACCEPT THIS SUGGESTION:
Be a Good Telephone Neighbor—Limit party
line conversations to a reasonable length—Remember that brief calls mean more calls per
luie . . . both for others and for you!
Union Telephone
Company
return to the hospital later for further treatment and observation.
The many friends of Charles and
Frank McCollough, sons of Mr. and
Mrs. Harold McCoullough, will be
Corner of Corunna Avenue and
glad to he*u- that both are well.
Charles is in Africa where he has Woodworth Street,
been engaged in work at hcadqu'-irServices
•i J\ , t\ t\
k i r
c c i >i i i l L t v l i v i L ' l ^ u i m . i i v » t u i . L i ^»A«*V
Biole School
iU
it>u A
5i \ ^^
he is well, and that fr.H the boys dre Worship Service
'.11:30 AM *
well cared for, but looking forward Young People s meeting
6:30 PM
to the day wher^ victory will bring Gospe: S e n i e e
7:30 PM
Prayer and Bible Study at Parsonage
them home agttin.
Thursday
7:30 PM
Arthur E. Hageh of Owosso, until June 1942, assistant director of Come and Hear God's Word.
Rev. John McCallum
- ^ , the stiate ffas tax division, has bet>i
Pastor
%F | appointed secretary of the State Tax
Commission at Lansing, assuming
his duties at once. The commission is
! headed by Louis NimA, former'st-ite
W.P.A. director. Since Juno 1942.
Mr. Hagen has been in Washington
as administrative officer of the prison
TRY A TELFEX
industry branch of the irovernment High Grade Hearing Aid—Contains
divison of the \*.~a.r production board. Vacuum Tubes jurt like a Radio
BAPTIST CHURCH
Do
no
Do
Hard of Hearing?
Better Footwear at all times priced within
the reach of the thrifty buyer, who
wishes quality and style.
|
3^
Contaet
Mrs. Sarah P^rances Purdy, Uged
S5, of Owosso dief! in her home* and
MA1.LERY DRUGS
Prazer St., that city, on last Sunday
Coruann, Michigan
evening of heart trouble iand com]>!ieations. ^1rs. Purdy was a nicm!>or of the Corunna Avenue Methodist Church, and active in the work
of the church until health failed. She
wtis the organizer of the Kamest
Workers Class which she served as
president and in the Woemn's Society of Christian Sen - ice. She was a Feeding Milk Free, and Batter S*wie
member of the Colfax
Rcbekahs,
Price as Fat to Producer*
Abigail Chjiptev Eastern Star, and
Cooper Lodge Auxiliary, which she
served as treasurer fo five years.
Sha is survived by the husband, one
daughter, two grandsons and several
sisters.
hootwear
$
.
ALBERT BOURSMITH
Opposite Court House
_
_
_
_
.
_
.
.
Corunna, Mich.
.
Paying 50c for
Butter Fat
OWOSSO DAIRY
ll»W.E*ckan«e
•n
V
LET THE NEWS HANDLE YOUR <f ,
,«
. JOB PRINTING
_ -jfjS
^ • • m 71¾
ORDER OF PUBLICATION.
STAffE OP MICHIGAN—In the
CiiruirC^urt for the .County of
Shiawassee— I n Chancery.
Jess H. Wagner and Vada F
Wagner, his wife,, and Clare Borton
and Maybefle Borton, his wife,
Plaintiffs,
vs,
James Scougale, Chas. S. Kimheriy, Fhnk
Scoagale, Sophronia
Wright,
Monroe
L.
Scougale,
Blanche Scougale, EtHel Scou*ile,
James A. Young, Ebenezer C. Kiwr
Wrlv, Alfred C. Kimberly, Hiram
G. Ssorris, James Campbell, Robert
G. Maxwell Walter S. Downing,
Julia Wallace, and First. National
Bank of Durand, and their unknown
heirs, devisees, legatees and assigns,
Defendants
At a session of said Court held at
the Court House in the City of Corunna, Michigan, in said County,, on
the 6th day of January, A.D. li»43.
Present: Honorable Joseph H.
Collins, Circuit JudgeOn reading and filing the Bill of
Complaint in said cause, and the
affidavit of Michael Carland attached therto, from which it satisfactorily appears to the Court that
the Defendants above named, or
their unknown heirs, devisees legatees and assigns, are proper and
necessary parties defendant in the
above entitled cause.
SCHEDULE "A
ANNUM. TAX SALE
S T A T E OF MICHIGAN, County of
WaSSOe,
Shia-
SS.
T h e Circuit C o u r t f o r t h e Co/antr o f S h i a w a s s e e in C h a n c e r y .
In t h e m a t t e r of t h e p e t i t i o n of V e r n o n
T. B r o w s , A u d i t o r General of t h e S t a t e of
M i c h i g a n , tor a n d in behalf o f s a i d S t a t e
for t h e s a l * of c e r t a i n l a n d * tor t a x e s a s sessed t hereon.
TAXES OF tfrtO AND
PRIOR YEARS
NEW HAVEN TOWNSHIP
Nown 8 North, Range 3 East
Lot
Sec.
ANTRIM
TOWNSHIP
Town. 5 N. Range 3 E.
Description
or P a r c e l
Lot
On reading- a n d fii'njr t h e p e t i t i o n o f the
Auditor G e n e r a ] o f t h e S t a t e o f M i c h i g a n
praying for a d e e r * * i n f a v o r of t h e s t a t e
ot M i c h i g a n a g a i n s t Mich parcel o f land
therein d e s c r i b e d , f«r t h e a m o u n t * t h e r e i n
j>pedfjed, c l a i m e d t o he 3 u e for taxes', i n t e r e s t a n d c h a r g e * on e a c h s u c h p a r c e l of
land, a n d t h a t s u c h l a n d s b e sold f o r t h t
amount.-* s o c l a i m e d b y t h e S t a t e o f M i c h iijan.
f»
Blk.
Years
Taxea A
Int'st A
Charges
Blk.
Years
T»»«*s t
Int'st *
Charges
Acre*
Commencing at NE corner of WW of NCW ;
t h e n c e S o u t h 21» f e e t . W e s t 2 1 7 feet.
S o u t h 20« feet. W e s t » 5 « f e e t , No-»b
28¾ f e e t , E a s t 5 4 0 f e e t , N o r t h 2 4 « f e e t .
E a s t tt f e e t t o b e g .
SI
2-26
1S46
10.27
OWOSSO T O W N S H I P
Town. 7 N. Range 2 E,
:ik.
Years
Taxes f
Int'st I
Charge
CITY OF
•Lot
Acres
S e c ,WOODHULL TOWNSHIP
T o w n 5 N , Rmng* i £
N E Vi e x c e p t c o m . a t i n t e r , of E and W H
l i n e a n d N'ly l i n e o f M . U . R . rt.-of-w,ay,
281 ft. W of c e n t e r of S e c t i o n N 5 4 ' E
alo'fig N line of M U R 7 2 « f t . N W
W
3 1 4 . * ft. S 4 1 * W 2t»0 f t . S 2 0 s W 5 1 8
ft. t o betf., e x c e p t M . U . R . r t . - o f - w a y .
34
1*7.32
1940
44.85
Blk.
Acres
owossa
Years
Taxes #
I n t ' s t «V
Charva*
C o m . o n t h e N l i n e o f R e s . N o . 2—Iftft f t ,
W f r o m t h e W line o f M i c h i g a n A v e . r
t h e n c e . W a l o n g t h e N line of R e s . N o .
2 to a p o i n t 56 f t . E. of t h o W l i n e o f
s a i d R e s . : t h e n c e S par'l. w i t h t h e W
l i n e o f s a i d R e s . t o t h e S o u t h linw o f s a i d
Rtra.r t h e n c e , E*!y a l o n g t h e S line o f
s a i d R e s . t o a p o i n t 3 1 5 . 1 7 3 ft. W f r o m
t h « W l i n e ot M i c h i g a n . A v e . ; t h e n c e , B
o n a s t r a i g h t line 2 0 4 . 6 ft. t o a p o i n t
47 ft. N a t r i g h t a n g l e s t o t h e S l i n e o f
iiri R e s . ; ;.her.ee, on a
straight ' line
J 11.61 f t . t o a p o i n t o n t h * W tine, o f
Michigan A v e n u e 25 ft. South from t h e
N l i n e of R e s e r v e N o . 2 : t h e n c e , N a l o n g
t h e W l i a e o f M i c h i g a n 23 f t - t i j e n e e ,
W ' l y a l o n g t h e K l i n e o f SH'I>1 R e s e r r e
1 0 0 f t , t o trie p o i n t of b<v. A l s o a t r i a n g u l a r p i e c e o f land l y i n g N of R e s . N o .
2 description a s follows: Com. a t a point
o n t h e S line o f H o w a r d S t r e e t aa i t n o w
e x i s t s , 100 ft. W from t h e W lino o f
M i c h i g a n A v e n u e ; thenc*?. W e s t a l o n g a n d
o n t h e S o u t h line of H o w a r d S t , 3 5 5 . 6 6
f t t o t h e E a s t line of S S h i a w a s s e e S t . ;
t h e n c e , E'ly a l o n g and on ho N line o f
R e s . N o . 2 t o a "point 1 0 0 ft. W ' l y a t
right angles from the W e s t line of Michigan A v e n u e ; thence, North to t o e point
of beg.
1940
S40.80 1
* V'LLAGE OF VERNON
C o m a* en t i n * 8 3 . 3 8 rod* W e s t ot S B e o r n o r
TOWNSHIr* S NORTH. RANGE 4 EAST
of S e c ; West 2.»« ehains. North 8 . 5 7 ¼
W e s t *4 ot 8 ½ of N W frl \k. e x c e p t t h a t
chains, East 2 . M chains. South t o beg.
Original Plat
part W e s t of L o o k i n g G l a s s Riv. a n d e x c .
12
1
1*40
12.99
18.34
1940
15
G . T . R . E . r i g h t - o f - w a y and e x c e p t a s t r i p T h a t rwrt of N o r t h 10 A c r e * o f W-W o f L o t 7
o f land 100 f e e t w i d e on N o r t h s a i d of
W W o f N E W , S o u t h of M. U . K. R.
railroad 4
42
194»
So
6
1940
lS.Oe A p i e c e of land in t h e N E W o f S e e . 7 —
14.72
C o m . at t h e i n t e r s e c t i o n of S W ' l y l i n e of
C o m m e n c i n g a t i n t e r s e c t i o n oi W e s t S e c N W W of N W W . . e x c e p t 8.R.
G.T.R.R. r / w a n d c e n t e r l i n e o f h i g h w a y
tion line and a n g . h w y . N o r t h 1 W deg. T
7
17
1949
14.64
on N l i n e of said d e c c . ; t h e n c e S E ' l y a l o n g
E a . t 4 W c h a i n s . S o u t h 8 3 d o g . , Kitst
W W of S E W
S W ' l y l i n e o f s a i d r"/w 6 r d s . ; t h e n c e ,
4.53 c h a i n * . S o u t h 44 d e g . , W e s t «-S9
28
&0
1940
23.79 !
S W ' l y a t right a n g l e s t o r / 4 r d s . N W ' l y
c h a i n s t o beg.
par'l t o R. K. t o c e n t e r of h i g h w a y , a n d E
J5
1.2
1931 1»82
BENNINGTON
TOWNSHIP
It is orders?! t h a t said p e t i t i o n w i l l be
to beg.
'.
1940
3.49
1940
72.72
b r o u g h t on f o r h e a r i n g and d e c r e e a t th'r
Town. 6 N. Range 2 E.
H. J . VanAJcea's F i r s t A d d i t i o n
lUeffer's Unrecorded p l a t
April t e r m of t h i s C o u r t , t o b e held a t Co- E a . t 12 a c r e s of S o u t h 4« A c r e s o f N E W C o m m e n c i n g 4 ¼ c h a i n s W e s t
S
1940
10.27
and
7 ½ L o t s 7-9
riinna in t h e C o u n t y o f S h i a w a s s e e , S t a t e
1940
1.66
9
12
1930
c h a i n s N o r t h of S H p o s t • t h e n c e N o r t h L o t s 1 0 - 1 1 8
of M i c h i g a n , o n t h e 1 2 t h d a y of April A. 13.
1932
112 f*«*. W e s t 66 f e e t . S o u t h 112 f e e t . L o t s 7. 9, 10, 11
1943, a t t h e o p e n i n g of t h e Court o n that
3
1940
26.92
1940
12.19
East to beg.
day, and t h a t a l l p e r s o n s i n t e r e s t e d in s u c h S'.*, of S W o f N E W , b e i n g 40 rods w i d e on
Carl C. W u l i f ' s A d d i t i o n
14
1940
£.46
lands o r a n y p a r t thereof, de.iiring t o c o n M. L. Stewart and Co's Second Add.
2
IU*
1.27
hwy. East s i d e and 48 rods long E a s t and Commencing 7 W chains North
and
2 W Lot 38
t e s t t h e lien c l a i m e d t h e r e o n b y t h e S t a t e
7
Lots 26-27 3
1»40
1.51 Lot a
1940
2.14
West
9
12
1931
4.69
c
h
a
i
n
s
W
e
s
t
of
S
W
p
o
s
t
;
t
h
e
n
c
e
N
o
r
t
h
of M i c h i g a n , f o r *nch t a x e s , i n t e r e s t a n d W W o f S E W a n d E a s t 20 A c r e s o f S W W
7
2940
2.14
J. W. Yerk- Addition
'
Lot
9
132
f
e
e
t
.
W
e
s
t
66
f
e
e
t
,
S
o
u
t
h
132
f
e
e
t
.
e l m n r e s , o r a n y p a r t t h r e o / , s h a l l a p p e a r in
7
194t>
2.141
Lots S and 6
I Lot 10
14
100
1940
4.71
East to beg.
said C o u r t , a n d file w i t h t h e clerk t h e r e o f
7
1940
2.14
L o t 11
6
1930 1981
S W frl W b e i n g l o t s 3 h ) h d 4 o f Gov,
U1*40
2.4.S
t h e i r o b j o e t i o t i s t h e r e t o on o r b e f o r e t h e
7
1940
2.14
- 1940
2 5 . 3 3 L o t 12
Sur.
19
94.C5~
1940
SO. 84 C o m m e n c i n g 4.5 c h a i n s W e s t
and
2.6
f i r s t d a y of t h e t e r m of t h i s C o u r t a b o v e
16
1940
8.27
W W of W W Of S W W
c h a i n s N o r t h o f S . W p o s t ; t h e n c e N o r t h L o t s 6 a n d 7, and W e s t 17 f e e t Of L o t 8 L o t 1
m e n t i o n e d , and t h a t in d e f a u l t t h e r e o f t h e
16
1940
28.1»
Lot 10
1933
* 23
40
194«
18.67
2 cbainfl. W e s t . 1 c h a i n . S o u t h 2 c h a i n s ,
s a m e w i l l . b e t a k e n a s confessed and a de1940
24.60
20
! Lot 1
- 6
1929 1931
JSast t o b e g
c r e e will be t a k e n a n d e n t e r e d a s p r a y e d C o m m e n c i n g a t * p o i n t tT r o d s E a s t of
1940
2.14.'
20
Lot 7
1933
S o u t h W p o s t o f S e c . 2 1 ; thene*> N o r t h 8 0
14
1940
8.68
for in s a i d p e t i t i o n . A n d it i s f a r t h e r o r 1940
2.14
2ft
1985
148.83 Lot 8
r o d s . W e s t SO r o d s . S o u t h 8 0 r o d s . E a s t
PERRY TOWNSHIP
dered t h a t in p u r s u a n c e " o f s a i d d e e r e * t h e
1940
2.14
Lot 9
20
W e s t 7.r« Acres of E a s t 52.66 A c r e * of W W of L e t 8, and L o t 4
l a n d s d e s c r i b e d in s a i d p e t i t i o n f o r w b i e h - SO r o d s t o bete.
1940
2.14.
2»
8
1940
1.27 L o t 10
2*
IS
1934 193S
N o r t h frl W o f N E frl W
a d e c r e e of s a l e s h a l l b e m a d e , will b e s o l d
1940
10.07
Lot 1
SS
1940
19.42
1
7.6«
1»40
4.48
for t h e s e v e r a l t a x e s , i n t e r e s t s a d c h a r g e s
1940
.2.14
Lot 2
88
t h e r e o n a s d e t e r m i n e d " b y s u c h d e c r e e , o n T h a t p a r t o f W W o f S E W E a s t o f h i g h - E 5 A c r e s of S E W o f N W W a n d W S
CITY O F OWOSSO
194T
2.14
Lot 8
83
w a y u d £ t t o f S E W exe<-pt N W
of
Acres of S W W of N E /ri W
t h e f i r s t T u e s d a y in M a y t h e r e a f t e r , b e Original Plat ,
1»40
2.14
Lot 4
83
S E W of S E W
6
10
1940
4.48
g i n n i n g a t 10 o ' c l o c k a. m. ©B s a i d d a y , * *
1940
2.14
Lot 6
88
I
I
M
1
9
4
0
1
6
A
3
S
W
frl
W
2.14^
Lot 6
88
1940:
And it further ar gearing that omna yt hbe e d na ey c eosrs a dr ya y st o s uc bo smepqlueet ne t t ht he e rseatloe aoaf C » » a « . ,jif a t N E c o r n e r of E W o f E W
7
93.20
194«
SS.SO S o u t h 1 1 1 ' . 9 " o f L o t a 1 , 2
3
1
1
9
3
0
1
9
3
5
j
•
a
.
L
.
S
t
e
w
a
r
t
C
o
.
'
s
Tkiral
A
d
d
.
o
f
S
E
W
.
W
e
s
t
8
r
o
d
s
.
S
o
u
t
h
2
0
r
o
d
s
S
W
o
f
N
W
W
o
f
S
W
W
after diligent search and inquiry it s a i d bunds a n d o f e a c h a n d e v e r y p a r r e l
J*40
950.49 Lot 8
2.0S
1940
East 8 rods. N o r t h 2 0 rods t o b e g i n . i n g
5
15
20
194«
7.97
thereof, a t t h e o f f i c e o f t h e C o u n t y T r e a s cannot be ascertained, and it is not urer, o r a t s u e a c o n v e n i e n t p l a c e a s s h a l l
1940
•.42
32
1
1940
« . 3 1 C o m . 3 2 r d s . » W f t . S o f E W p o s t . S 57 J . H . Calkhs'* StaVaMaioit * f ft**. N o . 7 a a d L o t
ft
5
t h a t part o f MiH R a c o cittsatad E o f W a AdditMfk
r d s . 1« f t . W 9 r d s N 57 r d s / 1 3 f t . E ft
known whether cr not said defen- h e s e l e c t e d b y h i m a t t h e c o u n t y s e a t o f W e s t SO A c r e s o f S K o f N E W
t s r S t r e e t a a d W o f W a s h i n g t o n S t r e e t W W o f L o t a 1, Z
8*
6«
194«
91.0«
rds. to bee.
h e C o u n t y of S h i a w a s s e e . S t a t e o t M i c h dants are livirs or dead, or where tigan
1
1949
1S.97
; a n d t h a t t h e s a l e t h e n a n d t h e r e m a d e E a s t 1$ A c r e s r-f N o r t h 4 0 A c r e s o f E W
22
1.5
1940
14.02 Coin. 110.75 ft. W of S W c o m e r of M a m
a n d Ball S t a . , W 2 2 f t , S t o W a t e r S t . L o t 6
of S W W
tt
15
1940
1
1949
S.17
9 .8« W W of N W W except com. at S W corner
any of them may reside if living, will fee a public s a l e , a n d e a c h p a r c e l d e SE'ly along W a t e r S t . t o a point 110.75 L o t 14
VILLAGE OF »ENNTNCTON
1
1949
23.97
scribed i n t h e d e c r e e s h a l l b e s e p a r a t e l y
of N W W. t h e s e * E 8 rds., N 8 rds., W
and, Sf 'sad, whether they have per- exposed,
f t . W o f W l i n e o f B a l l S t . . N t o Main L o t 1 4
t
1949
2.1*
RENNINCTON TOWNSHIP
tot s a l e f o r t h e t o t a l t a x e s , i n t e r 8 rds.. S H rds„ t o beg.
S t . t o b e g . L o t *B" '
1940
121.39 Lot 1
9
1992
O r i f M Plat
sonal representatives or heirs liv- e s t and c h a r g e s , a n d t h « 'sale s h a l l b e m a d e
it
74.6
1940
98.07
ount
1944»
4.74
W 6 7 A c r e s o f 8 W W e x c e p t c o m . a t N W C o m . 1 8 2 , 7 5 f t . W of S W c o r n e r of M a i n
ing-, or wnei? they or some of them ct oh a rtgheed paegras ionns t p sany ci nhg p a rt cheel , afnudl l a cac m
a n d Ball S t s . , W 2 2 f t . S t o W a t e r S t . ,
epting L o t s ' 1 and t
Park HBi Addition
c o r n e r of S W W , t h e n c e , E I S r d s . 12 f t .
SE'ly along Water St. t o a point 182.75 Lot 112
may reside, and further, -that the a c o h v e r a n c e o f th> s m a l l e s t u n d i v i d e d f e e
-X
194«
1.63
1949
2,19
S » 2 rds 3 W f t W 1 3 r d s . 1 2 f t ; t h e n c e .
f t . W of l i n e o f B a l l ' S t . N t o M a i n S t . L o t 1 2 7
s i m p l e i n t e r e s t t h e r e i n : o r . if n o p e r s o n
BURNS TOWNSHIP
1940
44.0«
N 32 r d s . . S W f t . t o p l a c e o f b e g .
present whereabouts of said defen- "will
t o beg. Lot " B "
1940
5S.74 L o t 1 8 2
T»ny 'he- tax^-s and c h a r g e s ...and t a k e
19S4 1 9 3 5
2.39
29
64.24
1940
4S7.S1
Town. 5 N. Range 4 E.
dants are unknown, and.'that the
Lot
18
1 »40
91.65 Lot 183
1932 1935
36.40
R
U
S
H
T
O
W
N
S
H
I
P
of I?ss t h a n t h e e n t i r e .there* W W o f N E W o f N E W
Lot 7
13
1940
141.SO L o t
is*
1832 19S5
45.27
names' of the- persons vsbo are inclu- s .o-v-yar-co
6 . 5 3 N vW o f N W o f S W W a n d N W o f N W S o u t h 32 ft. o f W 1 / S o f L o t 1
26
20
1940
t'v--t t h - - v h s l e p a r c e l shall b e o f f e r e d
,
P e r k i n ' s Addttio**
*
nf
S
E
W
:
a
l
s
o
c
o
m
.
i
n
S
W
c
o
m
e
r
ofded therein without being named,
r-s-cf:! of 'and c a n n o t b e S o u t h p a r t o f W W of N W W
•H.
2
2
19ST0
1
9
3
2
243*96
L
o
t
3
2
1940
2.58
N W of N W of S W W ; thence, 8 2 »
29
30
1931 1938
:r.t.*r-/* rr.d c h a r g e s , s u c h
j L o t 10
t
1940
2.5S
r o d s , E . .20 r o d s . N 2 0 r o d s , a n d W 2 0 S 3 2 f t . 8 " o f W 1 / 3 o f L o t 1
blit who ~s~e • o'T.bracecr therein un- f'.,'',..;''.">..,'*"
69.21
-'3?-? rv-'-r for t h e t i m e b e 22
1938 1985
Stafford. Gardner and Trankle Central
rods t o bog.
der the^ title of urrkno'wn heirs, de- •••--,-^.> ^.
r-*r••**;— -,',:*<v--e'Ting d a y , o r
1»40
881.28
Addition
38
«2.40
1940
67.01
•
:'
'»-=""-.V.e
r
e
o
f
f
w
e
d
,
Com. at - N W c o m e r of Lot D. thence, Lot 44
1940
yisees,. lcjr?.tee- F.:id ."assigns, cannot '.';•"•'-.'"' 1,
78>;*
CALEDONIA TOWNSHIP
VILLAGE OF HENDERSON
i s-vv-«•'•, \ o.*."«. or d a r i n g
SK'ly a l o n g N ' l y l i n e o f W a t e r S t . 7 9 , 1 L o t 1 0 8
1940
23.«7
Original Plat
be ascertained after diligent starch .,-,^ VI;,, "<
, „ , . ..^-,^ - h^> =,;)rj fQr
the
Town. 7 N. Range 3 E.
f t . ; t h e n c e . N E ' l y a t rijrht a n g l e s t o W a - L o t 1 2 6
19^0
4S.5S
Lot 4
17
19<0
9.96
r
. **j? ."*>--••> T r e a s u r e r
ter St. 60 ft.; t h e n c e , N W ' l y . a l o n g N'ly Lot 127
1940
i
SCIOTA T O W N S H I P
Hne o f Lot D 2 5 . 1 f t . t o S l i n e o f Corn- L o t 12S
194«
t;U Si:m-.» ir. '.'?. • r.V.:-.? of t h e C o m m e » c i n g a t S E c o m e r o? W e s t Tl.fi« T t a * P* 1 * o f S E W o f S E W l y h i g S o f
9. S t
s t o c k S t , W 81 f t . t o b e g .
M a p l e R i d j e Park Re-Stib, L i T . of K e y t e ' *
A
c
r
e
s
o
f
S
W
f
r
l
.
*A.
W
e
s
t
16
r
o
^
s
,
N
o
r
t
a
I
JH.C.R.R.
r
i
g
h
t
o
f
w
a
y
On motion of Michael Garland, j ^ ¾ ^ ^ ih„ H o r j
'i If. Ci"!^';. Cir1949
136.95
Addition
1
1.S9
2 0 r o d s . E a s t 16 r o d s , a n d S o u t h 2 0 r o d s „ „ . , ,
. '*' ,, 1 Z 5
*'*«
C L . G o o d h u e S u b . D t v . of O n t l o t 2
L o 3, 4
one of the Attorneys for Plair.tffs, | cm jr'udire. aM the joa! i)r.,sr.H C i r c u i t
4
1940
to b e e i n n i n g
| S W W of S W W
L o t s h. &
4
1940
3.2 T
1 1 . 8 2 N */i of L o t 8
it is ordered that said defendants [ ^ % ^ 5 ^ 4 % ¾ ^ 7 ** F ! r s t d a y
7
1940
».44
"
<°
"4°
B
S
.
7
2
.
L
o
t
ir,
B
1940
5
1&40
12.14
s
29
C
o
m
m
e
n
c
i
n
g
a
t
S
W
c
o
r
n
e
r
o
f
E
a
i
t
8
0
A
c
r
e
s
o
f
E
W
o
f
S
W
W
Circuit
J
u
d
g
e
.
d
e
v
i
s
e
e
s
!
'
J
O
S
*
:
P
H
K.
COLLINS,
and their unknown heirs,
2*.l*WLot 27
C
1940
5
1940
12.14
27
20
1940
3.51 L o t 10
A c r e * o f S W W . E a s t 10 » o d s . N o r t h 1 6
Lot 8 2
G- L . W r i r h t A d d i t i e .
7
1940
*.7T
E a * t W o f N W W. N E W o f S W W N o f
legatees and assigns,, cause t h e i l C-'STintcTsif^vd
r
o
d
s
,
W
e
s
t
1
0
r
o
d
s
a
n
d
S
o
u
t
h
16
r
o
d
s
S K K R M A N E . W E L C H , Clerk.
! Lots 71, 2 2 . 23
Looking Glass Rirer. W W o f S E W N Lot 5. except N 40 ft,
t
o
b
e
g
7
1
1
9
4
0
2.4K
appearance to be entered in this
46.31 '
2
1540
10
1927
85.«*
a n d E o f Lookiug; G l a s s R i ^ e r
S W W of N E W
cause within three mooths from the
34
15S
1940
3 0 . 9 5 C o m . o n S E c o r b e r o f O u t l o t 1, N 1 2 8 f t . L o t 21 a n d S H o f L o t 2 2
1«
*9
1»40
32.20
W 4 rds.. S 128 ft. E. to be*.
I
10
1929 1932
C o m m e n c i n g 5 0 . S r o d s S o u t h and £ r o d s S W W. e x c e p t 2 5 r o d s E a s t and W e s t b y
date of this order, and in default
' 1940
127.^8 !
10^2:
1949
8 2 r o d s , N o r t h a n d S o u t h Tn N W c o r n e r
E
a
s
t
of
N
W
p
o
s
t
.
E
a
s
t
1
4
.
0
8
r
o
d
s
.
S
o
u
t
h
t n o r - M f that
w M Riil « f r o m n l f t i n t
S T A T E O F M I C H 1 G A X — I n tb,> Ci-trwH
H . N . a n d S . A . WilBaas** S w 4 - D i - / . erf O w t - N % o f L o t 2 2 a n d L e t 2 9
of SW W o f S W W
4 4 . 7 5 d * g . . W e s t 7 . f r o d * . W e s t Zft.04
l e t a « f A . L . a n d B . O . WBttaaa'a A d d R x x i
19
1929 1912
tnereof tnat said uiu oi uorapiamc r o u r t f o r tfce C o u n t y of Shiawassee, in
»6
1S5
1927
r>ds. N o r t h 6 . 1 2 r o d s t o b e g .
W 1 4 f t . of L o t 5 s a d E 2« f t . of L o t C
1932T
194«
192»
be taken as confessed by the said chancery.
1»
1
1940
21.42
4
1949
4.68
19X1
'r-r *r, w* , - , ^ , s ^ m h «tid 2 r o d s
defendants, their unknown heirs,) In t h ? Mtttv o f t n e J>^lim rf V e M w n
E 2 2 ft. of N ^ of Lot 3
1932
SSI.74
•Eaiit '>* K^rth *'. "p--*t. E a s t 2 9 . 0 4 r o d s .
^9
l*<o
IJ4J,
devisees, legatees and assigns.
{ J. Brown. Auditor General of t h e S U t e of
W l R t a n ' a a a d L y w s a Addftio-i
S ^ u h 44 d e g . 4Z\ V.'est mlmm Shim. R i v e r E a s t W o f S W W
It is further ordered, that within M-teMgap. for *nd h beimjf of said state.
<T PL L y w ' s A d d f t J t n
44.25 L o t S
tft
M
1
9
4
«
4.2
r
o
d
s
.
W
e
s
t
2
*
1
9
rod*.
N
o
r
t
h
1
.
9
1
4
1
*
4
9
1
0
.
0
7
. ^
.
• ; . . • • « - . - ™
' o r t h e s a l e of certain lands for t a x e s a s E a s t Mr o f L o t 1 «sad W c a t to o f L o t £
rods t o beg.
SHIAWASSEE TOWNSHIP
Lota « and 4. except K I S ft. of Lot 4
forty days the Plaintiffs cause a aesaed theron.
2
1932
Und. W o f West oart of S E W of S W W
4
1
9
4
«
5
»
3
8
t
»
.5
m
«
X.01
copy of this Order to be published j
1949
39.49
1«
28
1980
1 2 . 8 8 E 4 5 f t . o f W i 7 f t . o f L o t 1. Blfc. C
C o m m e n c i n g a t N W c o m e r o f ftwtion zft:
n
in the Corunna News, a newspaper! J **>«• circuit court for the Conwy of
A b o C o m , 4 2 f t . E ' l y o f N W c o r n e r L o t 1, W V> o f L o t 4
t h e n c e S o u t h XI roo>, E a s t It r o d s 1 4 W e s t f a r t o f S E W o f S W W
2
1949
40.74
1« 4 «
i*8t
lo.ft*
f e e t . N « H h t o S e c t i o n Un#. W e s t a l o n g
N ' l y t o a a t r i p of h t c d 4 0 f t . w i d e lyJntf
print***, published and circulated i n |Sh»^**«> •» Cha^cry:
C o m . 4 0 r d s S and ftftft.C f t . E o f N W c o r .
A . Crwwfaed' aAAdttt*^
S e c t i o n lint? t o b e g .
S o f B l k . 4 s a m e A d d i t i o n : t h e n c e . E'ly
o f E W o f N E W : t h e n c e . S 30Z f t . . E 2 4 4
s a i d COUnty. s u c h p n b l i c a t i o n t o b e
V t r » - n J , B r o w n , A u d i t o r General o f t h e
20
S
1931 193S
4ft f t . ; t h e n c e . S l y t o S K n e o f L o t 1. L o t s 1. 2 . 3 , 1 2 , I I , 14 a n d W V» o f L o t e .
ft.. N 1 M f t . . W 5 * f t , . N 1 7 0 ft., t h e n c e
4 a n d 11 &
1949
97.95*
B l k . S, s a i d a d d i t i o n : t h e n c e W ' l y 4& f t , j
.
l»4ft
78.«
continued therein once in each week stat^
of
Michigan,
respectfully
shows
unto
W 185.4 * . t o b e g
F o r e s t Paw* A d d i t i o n
' C o m m e n c i n g 46.K r o d s W e s t of 8 E e a r n e r
to bee. Section I f
1940
3 4 . « 9 , Lot 2 9
the Court:
St
1940
8 01
for six weeks in succession194»
1.2T
of Section. North t dec.. East 67.44 rods.
A . L . a a d ft. O. W t U a a a ' s A d d i r i o a
' L o t BO
Com.
4 9 9 . 2 f t . 8 o f N W Cor. o f E W «* L o u 4 , 5 14
N
o
r
t
h
5
0
d
e
c
.
17
m
i
n
.
.
W
e
s
t
7
«
r
o
d
s
.
1932
18.49
1940
94.12
JOSEPH H. COLLINS,
|
1.
T h a t h e (it t h e A u d i t o r G e n e r a l o f
N E W * t h e n c e . S 2 1 7 . 8 f t . . E 2 9 7 f t . N Ix»ts ti. 7 ? 4
N o H h 42 d e s . SO min„. W e s t 14.74 r o d s .
G r a n d V i e w AddHtr-a
1940
230.07 Lot 29
Stat«» of M i c h i g a n a n d m a k e s and f i l e s
2 1 7 . 8 f t . : t h e n c e . W e s t 2 9 7 f t . t o b*rr. L o t 1 2
Circuit Judge. I th>N o r t h 4 d e g . 1 7 m i o . . W e s t 18.52 r o d s .
1949
2,14
14
1 9 8 3 193&
186.52 Lot 27
<hi* petition under, }>y v i r t u e of and pur*
23
1940
7.18 E 3 8 ft. of N Mr o f L o t 4
s o u t h 85 d e g . 2 9 mfn. e W e s t 9.38 r o d s .
1040
2.14
Countersigned:
' Miant to tli*> p r o v l a i o n s of Act N o . 2 0 « o f
S o u t h 1 d e « . 4ft m m . . W e s t 74.B4 r o d s . C o m . 41 r d s 12 f t . E of W W p o - t • t h e n c e .
lx>t 67 a n d S ?. of Lot 6 8 1 9 4 0
2.0fV
IS
1
9
4
0
8
0
*
1
j
t.hi"
ri»hh>
A
r
t
s
of
1
*:»*!,
e-i
a
m
e
n
d
e
d
,
a
n
d
SHERMAN E. WELCH,
E a s t 121 f e e t , S o u t h SOfl f e e t . E a s t t o
E 4 0 r d s . N 1 6 0 r d s , W 40 r d s . S 1 6 0 W 4 rds of L o t $
L o t S5
i»40
2.14
• A c t Nn 126 of th<; Public Act of 1 9 8 3 . an
hen.
32
9.17
1940
5.93
rds to beg.
Clerk of the Circuit Court.
20
1940
1 2 7 . 8 8 L o : 1T2
l»4ft
j.i«
I smcn<1<Mi;
26
40
1940
1 4 . 2 8 C o m . 1J8 ft. S of N W c o r n e r L o t 7 Blk. I'of 1 7 3
C o m m e n c i n g 66.52 rods W e s t of SE cor1940
2.1«
I
n e r of S e c t i o n . N o r t h 3 0 0 f e e t . E a s t 121 W W of N W W of S W W
2 0 ; t h e n c e . S 109 1 ¾ f t . t o c t r . lino of JL. S t r u b e r * . S u b . D i v . of O u t l e t I S a n d p a r t
TAKE NOTICE, That this suit,
25
20
1940
20.S4
f e e t , S c u t h SCB f e e t , W e s t t o b e g i n n i n g !
' Comstrj'-V D r a i n * t h e n c e , N K ' l y t o E line
• t 1 2 of J e a a e t t H . Kel|ey*a Addittoa.
i
2.
Thai Srhodr/le A. aimoxr^i h»r«'to is
22
.8S
1940
4 . 2 9 C o m . 118ft ft. S o f EW p o u t ; theni* e S Tflfl
o f Lot 7. N 78 tt. t o a p o i n t 118 ft. S.
N te<ot W SO ft. .^f Ixrt 8
22.18
th
ft.
E
I
f
t
f
t
f
t
.
.
N
2
3
1
ft
and
S
8
8
W
"
o f S W W of S W fr 1W t y i n g
or N E c o r n e r of L o t 7. B l k . 2 0 . W t o
1
1940
in which tho foregoinpr Order was " >** r-puni, r--uitwl by the art fir*t AllS ohuatth part
Earn t o h-«_
•
of Shia. Riv.
b
e
*
.
2
0
1
9
4
0
1
0
9
.
7
6
j_,__
^
j.
,
,
.
,brought
- h o v f tnfnti«n" 'i R T H contain* the oi'-c^ipL i
duly
made,
involves
and, is
26
7.01
1940
8 . 2 3 W 4 9 f t . o f E 147 f t . o f N 100 f t . of Lot
Assessor'- Plat No. $
23
11.17
1940
I «.71
t»f »11 Inntlx in t h e aforcnaift c r m n t v
C o m . at NK c o r n e r o f S E W : t h e n c e . W 2 8
to quiet title to the following des- (ion
18
23
1940
3 0 . 4 7 N 36 ft. of Lot 6
ii'xin whii-h taxt-s, w h i c h , w e r e a s s e s s e d f«*r W W of N W frl W and all t h a t part of W W
r d s . . S 3 2 r d s . E S t r d s . N 3 2 rds t o h e * . L o t 7
o f S W W l y i n g N o r t h o f c e n t e r of h i g h
2.14'
29
1940
45.2»
5
1940
cribed pieces or parcels of land sit- th«- >*>.irs irv-r,tinner! t h e r f i n . hav«> rt-mained
34
5.*
1940
5.16 R
way
26
76
48.24
1940
2.14
5
1940
N . s a d S . A W i l l i a m ' s S u b . - D i - m . of Lot 6
i;r.::31.1 fnr more t h a n on« year a f t e r
ibtty
uated and being in the City of Du- w e r e rett'rned a s d e l i n q u e n t , th,» de»crsp- N E W of N E W
I
5
1940
35.20O u t l e t 3 of A* L . a n d B . O. W i l l i a m ' s Lot 7
1940
23.99
W 50 ft. 3" of Lot 7
V E N ' C E TO'VV-JHIP
rand. County of
Shiawassee and tiiin of «'! laniiH in r,£ul c o u n t y h e r e t o f o r e N W W of N27W W 4 0
Addition.
42.01
12.60
1940
hi<! 'iff ir. thi' r^smc of t h e S t » t * an<1 thun
C o m . at i n t e r a c t i o n o f M - 2 1 * n ^ D""-»•"<• B l o c k 1
1
1 930
State of Michigan, and described as hoU\ and iijv«>n w h i c h tax*?!* which w e r e aft29
40
1931
23.97"
nnd S a g i n a w Road t h e n c e . S o u t h 2 0 8 . 0 7
Lot
2
17
1940
1934 1935
72.56
follows, to-wit.:
, giith
>i€»--ffl,4nd!t
sutiKtMpient
hich
ft. E . « 0 8 . 0 7 ft.. N R08.07 f t . a n d W
w,r<, so]il 1f>
t o thv
t h e s t»x
u t ^ for
h 4 t e w_
A
.
L
.
W
i
l
l
i
a
m
'
s
S
e
c
o
n
d
A
d
d
i
t
i
o
n
Assessor's
P
l
a
t
N
o
.
4
All t h a t part of E W of S E W l y i n g S o u t h
21.49
2 0 8 . 0 7 ff. to heir .
L o t r i v e ( 5 ) a n d t h e N o r t h S i x t y - zuained unpaid f o r m o r e t h a n o n e y e a r a f t e r
Lot 1 1 1
i9«o
o f DGR A MRR and all t h a t part o r E W
22
1
1*40
18.30 Lot o
2.14
10
1940
1h
we rf
1 1
A
s
s
e
s
s
o
r
'
s
P
l
a
t
N
o
.
5
ot N E W l y i n g S o u t h of R H .
3.47'
eight (68) feet and eight (8) inches' . ** . . ^"^T* " . ^ ^ V " " * ' ' *
C o m . 4 r d s W o f N E c o r n e r o f W H o f I^ot 7
10
1940
2.14 L o t 3
3
1940
25
78
1940
43:24
N E V i • t h e n c e W 72 f t . S 8 r d s . E 7 2 f t . j f^*
|
7 r
/^ c,,
/-4
.
w,,
, _
d e s c r i p t i o n of all l a n d s in s a i d c o u n t y w h i c h
10
1940
2.U
y,^v
9u K. B a r n * Addition.
G e o . T . Ahrey*s W o o d l a w a P a r * A d d .
10
2.14 i W ' i o f L o t 3 . e x c e p t 3 t « f t . ax d E 9 fxw
I*Ttobe*2S,
I»4»
S.I7 ' L O J 9
1940
0 1 L O t b l X {b)r
i n B i O C k T e n ( 1 0 ) ' a r e delinquent for a n y i n s t a l l m e n t of t a x e s
Bik
KZid r
10
2.14
W
%
ot
S
W
t
*
e
x
c
e
p
t
W
1
#
A
c
r
#
»
o
f
S
W
L
o
t
1
0
1949
e de . p r o v i s i o n of t h e act l a s t a b o v e L o t s 4 7 - 4 8
4>f A s s e s s o r ' s P l a t N p . 1 o f t h e V i l * m e-n t i o nt h
10
2.14 ' o f S « 2 f6 t .
*A ot S W H a n d e x c e p t c o m . a t S E cor* IA*
11
1949
£S
1940
£61
lage, now City of Durand, Shiawas_, . _.
1940
92.5S19
rter o f Whi o f S W U ; t h e n c e . N 1 7 4 9 f t . . L o t 1 2
1949
2.14
2
1
*
2
2
3. That extended separately In said L o t s
10
W
5
5
8
f
t
,
.
S
t
o
S
e
c
.
L
i
n
e
V.
t
o
b
o
g
.
L
o
t
1
3
L
«
t
"
7
1
9
4
0
98.991940
see County, Michigan, except the
2.14
29
194«
d.OS
19
•«
47.6
1940
1 7 . 6 8 L o t 14
A . B . Cfcipsnan's A d d i t i o n
1940
N o r t h o n e " h u n d r e d a n d t w e n t V - t W O sl ac nh de d
2.14
41-42
-ft'*'
s u lteh e raegi an i n cs to n teaai cnhe d d ae srcer i p( tai)o n t hof
e t os at ai dl i L o t s
10
Lot 15
L o t 92
1S4©
37.851940
2.1* Lot
11
2.01
(122) f e e t of said Lot Five ( 5 ) .
41
1949
1940
e.7r
a m o u n t o f detincjuent t a x e - upon s a i d d e - 1
10
Tjttm
Lot 19
A . Crawford's Addition
1940
2.14 L o t 5
VH-LACE O F LENNON
3
48-49
9
1940
12.«3>
»<jripion
f
o
r
t
h
e
n
o
n
p
a
y
m
e
n
t
of
w
h
i
c
h
t
h
e
1
I*
**
19
Lot IT
1940
*An»i
" ""
2.14
O
r
i
g
i
n
a
l
P
l
a
t
2.51
1940
Geo. T* Aerey's Woedtown Paak Add.
s a m e m a y l a w f u l l y K* sold at. th*» n e x t a n - j
10
U<"
1949
2.14
1540
A » 0 . i;»-i.The North One hundred twenty- nual
_ tax
_ •sftt''. ( h i inf.erest c o m p u t e d t h e r e - L o t s 1 & 2 43
«*Tf',!»>"
L
o
t
I
1940
9
2.14
^f"aTain St; f r o m S W c o m e r B l o c k 3 :
L o t s 3 0 . 3 1 , 32
L
o
t
2
0
t W O f e e t o f L o t F i v e ( 5 ) , i n B l o c k on a s p r o v i d e d b y iiiw to^ t h e " t \ n i day" o f
1940
19
2.14
t h e n c e N E ' l y 35 f t - SE'ly 70 ft.. S W ' l y
33
1
9
4
9
1.12:
Lot 21
CALfcDONIA T O W N S H I P
T e n f l O ^ o f 4its PJ»OT'« P l v t K « . 1
1**7. n e x t e n s u i n g , ( c ) a c o l l e c t i o n f e e o f
1940
19
2.14 Lots S3. 8 4 . 35
35 ft. tlr-nee N. W l y t o h«*.
L
o
t
2
2
Ansa* Gowld A a w s N o . I
10
2.14
, . - ! ; * . „
^ 8 e s s c r S f l a t " O - l . f 6 , i r ^ r C e n t a n d (d) 8 1 . 0 0 for e x p e n s e s .
1940
3
J940
S.61
1940
9.12:
Lot 2 3
10
2.14 Lota 3 6 , 37,9 33S
1940
O f t h e V i l l a g e , n O W C i t y , O f D U - , 1 all in a c c o r d a n c e witjh t h e p r o v i s i o n s o f t h e L o t s 1 ft 2 : L o t s 1 2 t o 17 i n c L : L o t 4 9 :
VFRNON TOWNSHIP
a c t first a b o v e m e n t i o n e d ; ^ ^ ^
L o t s 7 0 t o 7S i n e l . ; N o t 7 5 - L o t s 8 1 t o A r"^eo1 1>0 *t. wi^*> » 1 ™ " t*"" N r»M* a*>d L o t 2 4
10
2.14
1940
rand. Michigan.
S3
194»
3.12:
83 inel.: L e t s 85 t o 88 inel.: Lots i o n
19
2.14
1940
ad join in tr t h e A . A . r i j r h t - o f - w a y a n d it* L o t 2 5
t o 102 inel.
1940
28.42
Dated: January 6, 1943.
10
2.14 L o t s 39. 4033
1940
e n t i r e lenirth a c r o s s S E U a n d 9 ¾
of , Lot 26
4.
T h a t all tf t h e a f o r e s a i d t a x e s . In1940
2.0«
Addition
10
2.14
1940
SE'A
8
19f0
2.54 ( Lot 27
PULVER, GARLAND and WYATT, t e r e s t and c h a r g e s a r e v a l i d , d e l i n q u e n t a n d N % o f NA%. Vo.f JLo ohta a 1o 0n,' s B1V.
S3
1940
1D.07
7
10
£1.14 Lot 48
1940
unpaid, and h n v e r e m a i n e d d e l i n q u e n t an**
C o m . in S E corner o f N W H o f N W W : L o t 28
1940
KiSTi
Attorneys for Plaintiffs,
10
1940
3.05
2.14 Lots 8. 9 34
1940
unpaid for sufficient t i m e t o a u t h o r i s e a n d
t h e n c e , N 107.76 ft. W e s t 200.65 ft. S Lot 30
34
1940
2.1«
10
2.14 Lot 21
1940
L o t 31
require, as p r o v i d e d by t h e f o r r - y o i n g a c t * ,
1 0 7 , 7 6 tt.. E 2 0 0 . 6 5 f t . t o b e « .
Business Address:
Lot 41
34
1940
2.141
10
3.27
1940
L
o
t
32
t h e s a l e of t h e a f o r e s a i d parcel* of l a n d
15
.50
1940
2.G1
FAIRFIELD TOWNSHIP
Lots 44. 45
203 Owosso Savings Bank BIdg.
10
4.40
1940
L
o
t
S3
a g a i n s t w h i c h t h e y w e r e a s s e s s e d and a r e
S 50 tt. ot S W U of N E %
34
1940
2:277
4.40
1040
Owosso, Michigan.
e x t e n d e d in said s c h e d u l e at t h e n e x t a n - C o m m e n c i n g 38 r o d s S o u t h of N E c o r n e r
11
16
1.51
1940
7.36 L o t 3
W
1
5
1
'
of
Lots
13
and
14
J.14
1
»40
L
o
t
6
r.usl tax r i l e f"* I h e n o r ' - m y n ^ n t t h e r e o f ,
11
A strip of land 50 ft. w i d » lyini? on N s i d e
o f Ser*ir>n; t h e n c e S o u t h 22 rod*
If
41
19 4 (P
r.5&!
2.14
1940
i rind that th<? said t a x c * . ir.ti'r^st. collectior.
11
o f and p s r - l l e l f* A . A . R . P . " - r o s s N W 1 * L o t 8
feet, n w i
10 r o d s . N o r t h 2'j rods ID i
A s s e s s o r ' s Flat Not. r
2.14
1M0
tt*c and e x p e n s e s
so exten.lod
in
e»\i
II
"S
*
1?40
4.18 L o t 9
f e e t . E a s t 10 r o d s t o bejr.
I
1940
8,47"
L o t 10
2.14 Lot 5
s c h e d u l e a g a i n s t e a c h parcel of land t h e r e 1940
11
4
1.4
1940
4.31 8 ½ of S W U o f NE*A
1
19<0>
13.32*
2.14 "Lot 28
in described c o n s t i t u t e a valid li>n u p o n N'% o f N E W
1940
11
olSWU
19
20
IflSO
1!?.B1 L o t 11
3
1940
32.7F
2.14 Lot 14
each of t h e said s e v e r n l pjtrct»ls of land d e 1940
11
23
20
1940
5.9S C o m . »t V F co"»*r o f V W > 4 of N W H : L o t ,12
Lot 15 \
3
1940
32,7 r
Lot I S
s c r i b e in said s c h e d u l e as therein B T 1 ^ ¼ of NW»A of S E ' A
1940
2.14
11
t h e n c e p o r t h 20 r d s . W e s t 8 r d s . . N 20
Lot 2
6
1940
94lS't
L
o
t
2
0
afrainst w h i c h e x t e n d w l in f n v o r of -^-2.14
1940
It
23
20
1940
5.95
rds, E a s t R rds t o b e * .
As-cssor*a Plat No. 3
L
o
t
2\
people of t h p S t a t e of M i c h i g a n , t h e p a y - E a s t part o f W W o f S E V l
2.1-t
1940
11
1<»»1
21
1
f t . of L o t 2 T
ORDER OF PUBLICATION
m e n t of whicn lien t h i s conrt m a y e n f o r c e
4.40 E 33 f t . of L o t 2 0 And W 51
1940
11
1335
36.96 Lot 22
l 9
25
24
1932
6.55
*.T , ,
*
*9
5.26
Lot 23
O i . i . ^ „ * T»r:„v.
.
FY»V
n
. I a> a preferred o> f i r s t claim upon s u c h S E ' / i of S E l 4
4.40
L
1940
II
N CO Acres "f W V 0* y p t/.
N % of L o t 2
Lot I
5.02
1940
25
40
1932
28
60
193* l o * *
btate of Michigan — The Probate ! a n ( j s by the sale thereof.
17.33
'.
• *
1040
50.8S
Lot 2
4.40 1940
131.10
1940
HAZELT0N TOWNSHIP
Court for the County of Shiawassee
Lot S
5
194X»
2 1^4;
4.40 L o t 4
1940
7
S o u t h 2 rod* o f N %
Lot 4
At a session of the Probate Court
4.40 L oCt se o .4 T . A b r e y ' a W o o t O a w n P a r k A d d !
1940
7
19
Wherefore your petitioner p r s y s :
1949
VERNON
TOWNSHIP
Lot 5
2.144.40 L o t 17
1940
7
N o r t h 2 rods of S l 4
for said County, held at the Probate
4
1949
Lot 9
Grand V i e w A d d i t i o n
1940
4
0
g
Lat9
S5t
s
6
s
?
S
i
9
19
8
«
7
2.14^
1 0 . 5 4 L o t 10
Office^ in the city of Corunna, on
L o t 76
15
*M0
1940
a. That within t h e t i m e provided by l a w S o u t h 2 rods o f W ^ of N W W
7
L o t 14
1940
O. H . O b e r t ' * A d d i t i o n
1940
Tuesday, the 23rd day of February t h i s court m a y d e t e r m i n e and d e c r e e t h a t
7
20
J-jJ Lpts 10, 11 12
12.35;
13.71 L o t 3
1940
I^>t 2 1
15
1940
t h e .aforesaid t a x e s , i n t e r e s t , c o l l e c t i o n f e e N o r t h 2 r o d - of W « t * i of S W > 4
9
L o t 13
in the year of one thousand nine and
1940
1940
c h a r g e s are valid and c o n s t i t u e a v a l i d
9
20
2.5
18.41
\- J * Lots 29, 80
1940
29.54L o t 14
2.14
194«
lien upon e a c h of t h e said neveral p a r c e l s Ea*.t 4S A^res Of W e s t 1 3 4 . 8 4 A c r e s o f
hundred and forty-three.
9
WOODHULL TOWNSHIP
15
L o t 1J5
1940
5
7.2K
1940
2.14
of laiid described in said s c h e d u l e a s t h e r e 9
o f S W frl
*
N E 1 4 of N W > 4
Lot SI
15
Lot 19
1940
Present, Roy D. Matthews, Judge in e x t e n d e d ;
39.782.14
1940
5 8 . 3 7 L o t 17
9
30
45
1940
8 1 . Rfi
1
40
1929 1932
Lots
5.
6
16
1940
85.00»
2.14
1940
9
of Probate.
C o m e n c i n v 26 rods 1 3 ½ f e e t W e s t of N E E a s t 36 A c r e * of N. 72 A c r e s of N W f r * e . L o t 18
2.14 Lot 1 and S 10 ft. of Lot 2
1940
9
J
c
o
r
n
e
r
of
S
e
c
.
S
3
:
t
h
e
n
c
e
S
o
u
t
h
7
r
o
d
s
.
IS
54
|
It
4
19
h.
That w i t h i n t h e t i m e provided b y
In the matter of the estate of Edt i o n a l /*
17
1940
19.1*
2.14
1940
9
W e s t 2 r o d s . N o r t h 7 r o d s - thence- K»«t
this court m a k e a final d e c r e e in f a t
«*
2.14 Lots 11 and
12
win McQueen, deceased. File No. law
1940
9
2
r
o
d
s
t
o
b
e
g
.
1
7
$** | 0
vor of t h e S t a t e of M i c h i g a n a ~ - ' - » t e a c h
I»S1 1932
40.4&
S o n ' h o n Ac '"? f r.'EVi o f S E H and 8 ¾
2.14 v t
Mm
9
1940
Lot 21
33
.09
1940
13302.
1.18
44
1932
parcel of said lands f o r t h e n*"-of *bf
2.14 Lots 43 and
9
1940
L
o
t
2
2
1
7
or SEtf l loo
VILLAGE O F LOTHROP
108.73
#
«'vc.ral a m o u n t s of t a x e s , i n t e r e s t , c o l l e e 1940
-940
23.67
2.34 --* ,.
9
1940
Lot 23
Oritinal Plat
t i r n f.-><> and e x p e n s e s , a s c o m p u t e d a n d
2.14 Lots 64 and 65
N E fractional *A
9
1940
1
I
^
t
2
4
On reading and filing the petition e x t e n d e d in said s c h e d u l e a g a i n s t t b e s v . ' V-rt'-iWOot's A d J " - 2.14
42.26 , L o t 25
»9.72
I7
19
9
149
1932
9
1940
r . .,
40
L o t s 4-5
i*
1940
I 1*.d&
2.14
9
of Mary Marguerita Gamer, praying eral parcels of land tRcrein cr>n;-'"*l;
S E 1 * of N W ' A
1940
1-ot ?S
Lets
41
and
42
1931
19SS
MIDDLEBI/RY TOWNSHIP
2.14
9
1 1,2S
1940
ft
40
1!>32
tha*. administration of said estate
1&
o ,„ „
, ,
1940
22S0S9
1940
W'.'v of NK f m c t i o n s l U s n d E 71.fi Acres | L c . :.,.
Town
7
N,
Range
1
E
c.
That
said
d
e
c
r
e
e
provide
t
h
a
t
in
d
e
nwt7 be granted to some suitable per2.14 N H o f L o t 2 7 . a n d I^,t 2S
9
1940
2.14
of
'
N
E
fractional
'
i
.
beir.T
lot*
'
"«d
2
i
L
u
i
'
)
10
A
o
r
e
part
frl.
2
5
fault of th<* p a y m e n t s<i ordered pf tho a?\H
13.4«
9
,1940
1940"
2.14 T ^
29
t fft32
son.
"• I Jjot 8 0
of Gov. S u r v e y . A l s o S E V« of N
SOS
-cvml
sum*
-"Omniited
and
extended J
9
2.14 L o t s 1 5 , 16. 17, 18. 19. 2 0
1940
r:
v,»:\.'*i
s
i
fi
i
m
.
S
7
f».in
g a i n s t said lands in said s c h e d u l e , t h e I 10 A c r e s off S o u t h end ot NNo r t h 32 Acres
!>
?.80\
It is ordered, that the 1st day of asnid
2.14
32
1940
1940
" •L
'3
several parcels of land, or auch inter*
r>r frl. Sec. 29 l i n e s t o run parallel East R 'A of N E V4 nnd S E Vi of N W
7.0
2.14
1940April next, at nine o'clock in the ."st thor<'in pa m s y bo nfc«;i<sary to ^atisfv
l T 9 . i t L*.
11
120'
1!>40
and West
2.14
194 0
T o w n s h i p 7 North, Ran^e 3 East
Lot »
2<H
10
N K ' 4 of N*' 1 '!
forenoon, at said Probate Office, be tho a m o u n t decreed a v i i n i t t h e sr»^r. shal 1
2.14
19411
10
Lot 3
3 910
6.21
Com.
90 r-U N and 3-1 rd.= . Kast o f W J
12
40
1^1
s e v e r a l l y ho .sold a s t h e law p r o v i d s o ;
2.14
1940
10
assigned f°r hearing saic] petition.
ConHiioncinti* nt N '-i po.«f. K.t.sJ 4ft rod*.
p
o
n
t
e s 4 r d s . 6 ft. W 8 rds., N 4 r d s . 6
1940
?:>.7 5 I,ot 4
2.14
1:»40
10
•if) ro*is. North t o Cr-,. ';> r?-- W of N W cor. of Lot 0 tVV. 7: Lot 5
S o u t h 20 rod*-.. We:
And it is further ordered, that a
ft., E S r d s . t o b ( T .
d.
That your p e t i t i o n e r m s v h.Tvo stic'rA
.
L_
W
i
l
l
i
a
m
s
'
s
A
d
d
i
t
i
o
n
l>e>T.
3-!
5
Hi If)
12.7;^
lfJ
• hnnc". ^' S Hs., P S rods, E S -els:
^
«
10'jn
23 67
C«w. i : o m a s S e c o n d A d d i t i o n
t*opy of this order be published three o t h r r ant! f u r t h e r relief in t h e ].n>mise-v
Mabbitt's Addition
'hence
V
«
rods
to
bejr.
x'> t o this court m a y x<-er.\ just, and ofiuit
-..-1 Corn. 94 r d - . N and 34 rds E of W W post
I^it
:
2
3
1
9
4
0
C
o
m
m
e
n
e
i
n
w
at
N
E
cornor
Blk.
2.
W
e
s
t
4-onsecntive wcoks previous to said aMo.
26
'1940
2.7<> L e t 1«
3.2 7
•'T>^
S - r u , . W s r d s , N 4 r d , . E 8 r t ! s \,\
•170 <V<t. S o u t h 1 2 0 f.-.:•. E a s t S25 f e e t .
i.V-n. nt th" i^teT^^et'«n of tho S line of
tiay of hearing in the Corunna News,
Wpf
, s
A . L. W i l l i a m ' s A d d i t i o n
S m i t h SO fe**t. F.ast 14S fe.>) and N o r t h
„
1940
70 0 9
"tlys .tnri W . See. line: thence. S 1106.6 WV& of L o t 13
t o l,er. :>
1940
* newspaper printed and circulating
And your p e t i t i o n e r will e v e r p r a y , etci
\.\2
.V,
7
.
><W
c
o r n e r of Sec. i n , s .s r d s . , K
•
•
•
•
F
374.5
ft..
N
1251.52
ft.
to
S.
line
4
7.6S
Lots 1(1. 20. ? 2 , 2 '
10
1910
.51 ft. N S rdrt.. tV t o h e p .
D a t e d : J a n u a r y 2 9 , 191S.
,.-'*»_7S -nd S W'ly alonw M-7S 378 ft
Sn said County of Shiawassee.
A
l194
! l f0
tosr» it>io
2 * . 2«
8.03
1940
M . L . S t e w a r t and Co's A d d i t i o n
t1A
to he,*, ?9
, 19.,
,
1 t
9 . r7•>
?
1
9
4
0
5
7.f.5
W
\i
of
W
*A
of
Lot
1¾
C
o
m. C
20 5
T.o!s
IP 3 ft 19-10
ROY D. MATTHEWS, Judge of
s.r.s E'3 or N W ' A
V R f l X O N .1. D R O W N ,
1C.73
E
VJ
of
W
Vo
f
L
o
t
15
1040
27.82
S e c v 1 9 , F 4 r r f s . f S 8 rii(,
4 rd.
N;
12,
I S . 25
80
W
Lots
5,
I
I
.
1949
34
A u d i ' o r f5en«>r^l of \hn « t « ( e of Mfchijfan
r
Probate.
t o b e g . 19
1939 1940
6
21.37
1940
73.8»
for and in b e h a l f ?Tf s a i d S t a t e .
By Janice
Register.
Richardson,
Fee.
A.;res
Probate
f
•***-»wjdfe3-' ~-*M>I»- a^>od ^
AMJAl TAX SM
i.>t
Klk.
Year*
Charge*
I nt's t «*
Taxes 6
Lot
Sec.
Year?
!T
Blk.
Taxes A
I n t ' s t ft
Charges
Acres
OWCSSO
IPZW^X'*
COMEfTO THE MAN ;
^^ilrMkNOV^'YOUR;
Com. a t a r >int S 4 1 * 1 4 ' K 1R3 f t . f r o m
N lin« of G r a n i Riv*r Road a n d N l i n e
7
'-•
•• W o f t . of L o t 2 1 .
of S * c . I.' -1.-' 4 6 ' - E 12S f t , . S 4 1 ° M '
' -'orrn-r <<f Mlk.
H f-0 f t . , ^ 4S^ <o' W 125 ft., N 4 1 ° 1 4 ' .
i.
' 'tlot 2'Com. SK c o r ->-'iW!i
I ' h r k ' , AH
•\*i* • * * :
;
:
W 5 0 f t . '..) »-:.r. <l.<»t !t'-H
• .-•••• . - i i . i l.s:k... 2;r:
7:-•'•
^, •* '>!*• VV' 110 f t . N
jr,
1^40
1C-93
!' fa*] w i t h 1:-;
It.
1*40
10.&9
'.
f>.-i?in»l P U t
p If. AND
Lota 1, 2 . S. aii'i N >St cf L"t 12
. ••••
*ii!K
.1.-..,--.:
[ '- A « a i t ion ,
5
;<>31
1-7.57
<•' v; lim- ,.f u:<P a r t of !,<>*!- 1 antl 2 C o m . at a pci:it 44
1 : 3 2 153-"
"••. "..i A v :r;:; .
ft. N o f SK f o r n r r "f » ^ t 2 - t h e n « , W
A.
t i . W lin"- •
1940
8 30
84 f t . : th'-sue N .27 ; t . ; t h e n c e , W 4 1
:•.,•••.. v r . i h i . ., ;
S » c o c 4 Additiott
/«..; thoiicc, hi 6 f t . ; thunce. E 125 f t . ;
<'• '.'i N liftr
it'
~
1940
6.81
t h e i w , S 33 f t . t o belt. .
ii. II. '.' 'ly. .'iir.s' R. I'
V.'f A d d i t i o n
S
~ MHO
1::
th.>r<v. N t o I'
1 an** L o t 13
39.91
1982
1!>
1940
1 1 . 6 3 S W corner of I<o 1 , ' t n d U t i.
Town-.! in 7 N o - l b , Ran
!;'s Third A d d i t i o n
8
1M31
C o r v C-;i..=r.' ft. S a r d 2 i*'
19*0
s.«e
•i• . :•: •<"••''.'.ri. (i . b 5 4 . 4 :
.'.'W'A S e c t i o n -.2 T. 6 N . .
45.07
11135
' ' • . « : Corn. Si,1.70. f t . C o m . « 5 f t . W o f Stf c o r n e r of L o t 2 . W
13
l <J •
. •: N'K'ly boun^ry line of
« 0 f t . N <4 f t . . ^ ¢ 0 ft. S 44 ft. t o
C o : : , a'-. SK >"orr.vP of. Lot 7*
}'!'/. from point whore th«>
bejfin a n J c i m . 44 f t . N of S W cor»<-r
1
;,•<.',;'.-.on. K 7 l i r • rds.; N
'"'-.•-i! R y . ir*tfr>rt-ti t h e N
o f L o t 2 N >7 f t . K 41 .".. S 2 7 ft. W
-1--1 'n3,- ?;ii .1 ail •!:',.; on, W 7 '
f said « « c t i * n ; t h e n e e ( N
41 f t . t o bi^;in.
b ••?,.
-2S
i<
" f t ., N K s 4 10' \^ !<>0 f t .
t,
K>34
Township 7 Ncrth, RBng '•J 233.:10 ft.- i o t h e N E ' l y
li<40
SO.52
COJII. 74 r . U . N a^.< l"S H-• 'J.' ::ai.i R y . - t h c : ! t * . S 5 3 ? W % o f S W \k o f S W »>4
X .-,1. ' "N" 10 r.ls., P 18 ril. . 1 R y . 120,10. ft, t o pla«e
25
194«
lft.43
1- rsis. U b ^ .
<•
1S40.
6 32
Lan.J bejrin a t a point in t h - mid'lle of
Y
»
f
"
D
'
of
D
u
r
a
n
d
L
o
a
d
IS
1934 V
<Jmnd fliver Road 4 0 5 f t . N W ' l y from a
'•'•••cond A d d i t i o n
C o ? . . S t r d i . N. a n ! 10 r
I>oii>t w h e r e ' t v - n-addlc of said road La
•?
0.:
•:
i
.iTii
\V<*t
I
S
ft,
o
f
L
o
t
1
7
j-.Ir:.. i .1 S . m m •
t- -(..
i . u c r s e c t r d b>- d l i n e o f S*«e. 2 0 - t h e n c e ,
•<
1940
.57.41
• *;..' W S rrts., N S r d s
N W 5 0 f t . a l o n r . t h e Un.c o f »ai<i r d . :
-..1.- 1 - - - ^ CoBipaay*s Third A d d i t i o n
'8 10 r d s . t o b e $ .
t h e n c e , S W t o a point on W line of. 9 E
• S
• i '•
1940
l.M
_ • . '
IS
19S4 1 9 ^
10.OS
H o f S E »4 1 3 9 f t . N of S line o i ' s w M
2'i
1940
43.54
S e c t i o n S o n maid W l i n e 10 f t . , E'ly, 4 7 1
L o i ^ s i a A* G o u l d ' * S u b . - D i v . >-. • ^-,-;;o-i 1
r
l?r> 1940
43.54
ft. t o beffia.
a a d 4 a n d Blk. 3 6 a n d o r t » ' ;. i.
,.-. - ; . ' ' O y t ' o t - p " o f D u r » a d L a a d
2ft
1021 1935
225.97
Lo<, '9, e x c e p t S 4 f t . : Out tot T
•."<™:;vv-.y*= Tliird A d d i t t o a
„
,.
."'
'P*'' •
*4.«* - i *44 ' ft. ->f L o t .'D™ 1 9 3 1
K ^ o f L o t 3 1 a n d S S<? ': ,-.' L o t 2 2
194»
18.S0
•'•><> •.-[ •* S:'- - D T . of L o t a J a n d K o f Durmad
Ov.'J.ot-\
1 9 3 1 If-'1S
-:v:; Cr - i p a n y ' a F o u r t h Additdoa
IV"!
41.0?
1940
22.2T
M . E . H o t m e a S u b . D i v . of l u c : 7 , S, 9 . *'•'••* 2. S 3
rJHTXr.d L a n d Cojupany** F i f t h A d d i t[a_n^f>
ion
En-:. 2 6 , OririBAl P l a t
Lot 4
4
1940
l*t *
1*40
41.80
C y n t s F a able'* AAtttkw
l*>t s
i»»o ir-s.!
l o t s 3, 4 2
18'7
«.M
L o t 1» 734,-,
« 2 6 7 Ij*ts S a n d 1 0
Synthetic mbber, plastics a n d
3
1912 1934
J. H." Laverock Sub.-Div. of Cutlot 5
1940
E K o f l o t 1 0 , cx««t>t K I ri-.' a-r.d 4 f t . '
wood
m a y seem to have little in
C. E . Der-.sisoa'a A ^ d i t j o a
of; N 1 6 ¾ f t . .
i ••
66.27
common,
yet the first two have corv3
8
.
2
3
Lot
.:
3
1
9
4
0
«fa!uMtt s S«b.»T»Tr. * f W ""z c! BIT*. 3 3 a^d"
4S-S4
Loi 5
3
1940
tributed to the last a t a tune when
E i - o f BUc. 3 4
E r r a n d L a n d CcTBpaay's F l r * t Aikfit»ia>
• S 3 4 ¾ f t . o f N 6 6 f t . of L»T 2 » , e x c e p t S
L o t ?.l
2
1940
» 1 . 3 2 treated wood is being called upon
1 » * o f W t t o f S , » 4 ' , i f t of N 6 « f t . 'I & u r a s d L a n d CoB>pany*a S e c o n d AdcKlioa increasingly. Synthetic rubber's con194P
1 3 6 . 9 5 N 20 f t . o f L o t i i , L o t s 1 3 , 14, I S . a n d
tribution was entirely accidental
CITY O F CORUNNA
j
S 5 f t . o f - L o t 1¾
<•• •
Ehiring the first World war two Aus*
Cary*« A d d i t i o n
i
15
1940
44.67
: S « » f t . o f E , H o f L o t ' l s n d Ka«t % o f W e a 132, f t . o f Otstlot - '' 1 9 4 0
75.43
,
trian
chemists, trying to find a satL o t s 2 aitd 3
^
f SubrJlvisioa o f OitTo* -'A" o f Dnxaw^ L a n d
isfactory
substitute for natural rubCompany** S e c o n d A A b ' ^ o »
2*.85 I
t o t 4. exeetit W U t ft.
ber, inadvertently included several
} Lot 2
6
1940
M.17
v
O i i x i n n l IrTkt ' . - • " " ._ „
T
J9<»
m
33.04
wood blocks in a batch being cooked
i E a s t T* o f L o t 1 5
W M ft. o f L o t 1
at
high pressures and temperatures.
3
1
9
4
0
2
1
.
2
T
*• '
1940
21.59
Aaseasor'a Flat N o . 1
Though there is no record of the suc" l ? * A i r A , l r * C * 8 * 1 * a " * HnrlbtirVs A d d i t i o n
B o m r v e . t atMl O u t l o t 1
1J»40
S3 0 4 i Lot »
' -*
» 4 0
2 7 . 3 » cess of the cook, the wood blocks
M i a Y « r d . b o u n d e d J* b y O u t t o t I . E b y < C o m . 4 0 f t . W o f N E c o r n e r L o t 3 . B l o c k
came out not crushed to shreds but
1 0 . Assessor"* F h U N o . 1 ; thence. S 10
B n A > S t r e e t . S b y Factory Y*rd. W b y j
!
rod?, W 50 f t , K 14) rda., E S « f t . t » compressed to a hard, dense mass.
S h i * Biv.
2
J«JI
19>40
6.22
*
. ,
'
1940
Sl.'fO V b e * .
Further experimentation
demohr
i. Coir,. 2 3 y d s . E o f S W c o r n e r o f S W *A
Xot« 7. *. ». W
*"
\
o f S e c . 2 2 : t h e n c e . 2? t o t i n e o f D M R y . , strated that, given sufficiently high
j
E a l o n e »*ia B n e o f S e c t i o n W t o b e * .
temperatures, dry wood could be
I
10*1
14.08
^fortfc I M f t . o f L o t C
1932
1
compressed, with no sign of rup194^
7 9 . j « j Com- 21-6 r d « . E o f S W c o r n e r o f SW **
<• mtnon t o S e c . I S . I S . 2 1 . 2 2 ; t h e n c e ,
ture, to a dense board two to three
S o a t h lt>0 ft. o f L o t C . e*e*r.t WVst 1 0 0 i
K t o l i n e o f D G M R y , . ft alonir aaid l i n e
f t . *xi4 &>.?t 5 0 f t . 3 9 3 0 1 5 3 2
times
a s heavy a s the original maof R y . ; t b u n c e , W t o b e * .
Robert MeLMSbttn*s Addition
terial
and
a s many times as strong.
X o t 13
1940
2
9
.
0
1
1925
10. J6
C. C B a t e * A d d i t i o n
3 . B- T h o * » » * DfvitioB
The new product, lignostone,
L o t e 1 . fi. » , g . • , 10
Lot 37
1 » «
«.1S
promptly found a number of uses
Remodeling Property
J. C . B r a n d ' s 5 M M * A d d i t i o n
4
1911 1 9 1 6
4
8
.
8
«
for
which hardness, density and
_
1040
17P.34 L<n 7
2
iolo
FHA
loans for remodeling to proT o w i u l l p 7 North of R i n g t 3 East
strength were needed.
A. W . P c n m t M ' i AddHioa
3.««
vide
government-approved
additionC o m . * t a p o i n t w h e r e l i n e of Core'foe'it S t . ! N o r t h 7 8 f t . o f L o t 1 8
1*4*
3.8C
With the spectacular advent of the al living quarters for war workers,
a i n t s f * « t S S _ 8 o t t t h liiie o f G. T . R v . r w : N o r t h 1 0 1 . 3 9 f t . o f L o t I t 1 5 4 6
t b e n e e v Nfcrjy o u ««ti<t Ihie t o E l i r c «r
plastics, the prediction was freely may be insured by FHA up to $5,000.
C E . DeawlooaTa A d d i t i o n
S « * i o o 2 8 : tberKi*. &6afh S O ' K 5 1 9 f*. I E a s t Vt of \*A 4
made that wood might soon dis- For a remodeling project WPB au1
3
.
2
2
On M M E a s t B n e ; theri<-p. S » S * "We*t i
1
1040
t o E K M o f C o n j s t o e k S t ; h »ncc. W o n1 WeOt Vt of L o t 4
appear from a great many of its thorization is necessary unless the
22.2
s a i d E H » » t o beir. berorr o - r t o f N K » 4 j
1
104«
traditional
uses and that the syn- cost is less than $200, and WPB prio* 8 2 ¼ 2 S
1940
4^,77 ;
.
VILLAGE O F LAtN<2SBU*G
thetic
material
Would take over com- ority assistance also is necessary
« 3 o « . « t • potttt w h e r r S e c t i o n tltte b e t w e e n
Weob'a Second Addition
13.8S
Bee. { 8 * o d 2 8 i n t e r s e c t * w i t h N'^rtb j L o t 9
pletely,
says
Technology
Review/ where the purchase of critical maZ
1940
15.73
L i s * o f A . A . R y . r / w ; ( k n e t , N o n S«t> i U
ID
2
1940
Some of the synthetic resins, how* terials is necessary for such ret w n l i n e 1 « ? f t . W t o S W c o r n e r o f l*rff*» W 4 of L o t 12.' »nd I^rt» 1 * . 14
, 7.54
k*JT» l o c o t w l N o f «aid r y . on S p a r t o f (
ever, were soon discovered to be modeling projects.
2
194«
211.62
E ** o f HKU. o f S e r . 2 » S 4!» f t , t o Ti , Lot* 3 , 4 3
1040
superior
adhesives, with the result
To qualify for a loan, a remodeltht* o f M U 4 r y . r / S'!y o n N* l i r e of said] N ' * of Lots H . 1 2
that
wood,
far from being supplant* ing project must be located in an
11.32
r / w t o bett.
t
3
1940
4.2R
2»
1940
r..n<» i W >i of L o t < ' •
1940
«?d, could be used for many pur- area where the housing situation for
C o m . a t 8 W c o r n e r o f !»r*«» bsrri N of A.A. : Corn. 2C t<\*. 1 ! f t . S in. N o f inter*ectinm
poses formerly denied it.
war workers is critical, and must be
r y . r / y o n R M«}«- -.' F. >i r.' N W ^ r>f
of N lino of N S t . a n d W line o f S e c .
2 1 ; t h - m - r F. 14 H " . , S 4 r d i . , W 14
Ser..,»*<. T . 1 N . . V. S K.: Thrtr-r S 4.'.
made
with a view to providing livfir.th'r L ce, N 4 rd*. t o rife*
"t •)>"fr, t o N l i n r o f toirt r TT; '.hence N W ' I y
ing accommodations for war work1940*
1 3 . US
or* H l i n e o f r . w ti> O^rhmn
CrcHtOriginal r i o t
t h m r t t o bee.
ers. Applicant for loan must certi4
194«
2^.Rfl
20
11)4«
t . 5 9 T.^1 4
fy to the bank or other private lend».
4.
*
L
o
t
*
1
.
2
V n t ( A c r e * of, E»»t 7 / 1 0 o f 2 0 A c r w .
ing
institution that for 60 days after
1*
1
9
4
0
23.*A
C n m . at t b f \ E rnrn<T o f W i/j o« N W
' i . S«"ction 2 1 ; th«fnce. S'l-f t ^ r a l l e ) t o L M ^ fi'-7. *\<-vr>t W 8 f t .
his
project
is completed he will give
18
1*40
4.2«
N tLtiA H ^4 line F7 rrvj.; W'ly 6 0 3 f t . N
ORDER
OF
PUBLICATION
first
call
for
occupancy to war workrt^-l p a r a l l e ! t o »d. N o r t h a n d S o u t h '•* T^.is i n . . i i
19
1940
14.0«
ers.
l i n * t o Worth L i n e of -<1. S e c t i o n K'ly
STATE OP MICHIGAN— The
o n S e e . l i n e t o b«-jt.
L..ts 1. 2, 3
21
*
194*
17.02
20
194»
1 0 . 0 7 Probate Court for the County of
K Vi o f S B H o f WW U
Ixit* 1. 2 . S. 4
Shiawassee.
|
22
20
1*40
42.20
30
1940
IS. 4«
At
a
session
of
the
Probate
Court
|
'•t'fim. a t a o o i n t 17 chnin» r.S Ik*. E o f S W
Woak's Addnion
coTT,eT o f S e c t i o n 2 2 a m ! 7 1 1 9 f t . N : N; 45 ft. of W 45 f t . of I , o t 1. and b e * , for said County, held at. the Probate [
thenre W 4 6 0 ft.. North 250 ft., East
at S W c o m e r of L o t 2 ; t h e n c e , f: 4 5 f t . ,
Office, in the city of C«runna, on
4h'i f l . . S o u t h 2 5 0 f t . t o b e g .
N 8 f t . , W 4 5 f t . S R f t . t o beg.
22
1*40
10.30
2
1940
12.4S Wednesday, the 17th day of FebI'mrt o f W Vi o f S W i* S e c t i o n 2 2 T . 7 N . Com. at S W c o r n e r L o t 7, E I TA.1 N 3
ruary in the year of one thousand t
R. 3 E . . C o m . a t a p o i n t 17 c h a i n * 5 9
rd*., W 1 r d . . S 3 rd»- t o be*.. L o t 8.
l i n k s T. o f S W e o r n e r o f »*id S e e t i o n
nine hundred and forty-three.
e*rrfct S 1 rd r . 8 8 f t . o f L o t 9
and 192 ft. 4 in. N ; thence. N » 2 « ft.
3
1940
13.4$
Present, Roy D. Matthews, Judge
8 m . W 4 5 0 f t . S 8 2 6 f t . 8" E . ISO f t .
VILLAGE OF BYRON
tu b e e 2 2
1940
31.00
of
Probate.
Original Plat
Lot
3
and
E
3
2
f
t
.
o
f
L
o
t
1
»
In
the matter of the estate of
Oricmal Plat
3
1*40
1 3 . 3 5 Fred Olmstead, deceased.
L o t S and >7 1 0 f t , o f L o t 9
S5.€7 Com. a t a point 2 0 f t , N of S E corner of
11
194»
Qti readng and filing' the petition
l^ot 3 : t h e n r e . W 6 2 f t . . S 12 f t . E « 2
L o t 9 a n d W e s t H o f L o t 10
ft.. N 12 f t . t o besr.
33.04
of Esther Olmstcad praying that adla
1940
15
1940
l*.lft
W e a t ^ o f L e e a. a n d L o t C
E ] t o f L o * 4, 5 a n d a s t r i p of land 2 ministraton of said estate may be
11.94
21
1940
rds- N u n d S b y 4 r d s E and W in S W granted to Victor Teichman or some
CO .52
Lot 9
21
1940
corner os" Lot_ 5 a n d a l l of "lot* 6 a'»d 7:. other suitable person.
Lota i i a n d 12
10.41
and
S'"'-3 of L o t H
21
19 40
. It is ordered, that the loth day of
63
1940
2.^2
"N 2 f t . o f W 8 « f t . of L o t 7
5..-51
TOWNSHIP S NORTH, RANCE 4 EAST
24
1S4D
March
next, a t nine o'clock in the
Cirri. «1 M poirst. 4 2 rrt». E o f N U r>0*t :
Xots 11-12
a t said Probate Office, he
ifci^nt•-. S 8 . 7 2 c h a i n s / W 6 r d s . N t o N forenoon,
;
42.20
sec. Mr.?. E 6 r d s . t o b*R.
j assigned for hearing said petition.
28
194»
I
5.*:*-I
t . E %t> r e1n9
t e4r0 of S«NT..
N
' S o u t h 9 0 f t12
. o f L o t s 1 1 - 1 2 1S40
w . at W23li p o s1.25
4 6 . 7 7 ! C oto
And it is further ordered, that a
c e n t e r ot h i g h f / a y . N W ' l y and S W ' l y
1940
S2.13 ;
"Lou 3 . 4 . 2 4
t o p l s c e of bejf.
copy
of this order be pubKshed thr«?e
X o t s 1 . 2 , 3 . 4 . 5 «,
»4
1940
2.8S
2S.09
S5
consecutive
weeks previous to said
1910
TvOt 10
3S
3 . 3 0 , Com. ftt S E c o r n e r of B l k . 6 3 , Villapf nf
B
y
r
o
n
,
E
16
r
d
s
.
,
N
t
o
S
e
c
.
I
™
,
W
t
o
day
of
hearing
in the Corunna News,
Lots 11-12
t h e E !in* of original p1*t a n d S t o h e c .
46.77 ;
194»
»7
a
newspaper
printed
and circulating
24
3
1940
3 25
Lotn U - 1 2
i
t
.
¢:/11/)
O
r
t
"
"-**••«*
-**
^
CI**-*»***»
<*#•*"*
j . L. R s b - r t s astd E . H. F i s h e r ' i Addition I I I Z^ciiU v ^ w * i v > v a . *^i*a«» ^» t**?*?'*-^-'
SS.OH :
4i
1 f« i »
1940
4.79
2.SO ; Lo'* 1. 2 2
Lot 6
42
1^140
ROY D. MATTHEWS, Judge of
6.S?> 1...1S 1, i. 3 . 4
1940
I^ots ' - Si 4 S
S
IfMO
9.^6 Probate.
VILLACP O F BANCROFT
By Janice Richardson,
Probate
VILLAGE OF PERRV
N. G. PhilH**' S»«hu D i v . o f Oiltlot N o . 1*
S 14 ft. of L o t 1 0
1940
3 . 7 9 Register.
T O W N S H n * S NORTH, RANGE 2 EAST
William M . W a r r e n ' * Addition
C o m . 1 2 ½ r d s . S o f S E c o r n e r o f Second
o r k s 1. 2. 3
r
.
and W a a h i n j - t o n S t . . E 6 2 rd*.. S 313.¾ W
Lot 2
Btk.' 4. *>xt»pt I.ot 1.
rd«., W 6 2 r d s . , N 3 1 ½ r d * t o beK\
Blk. 4
lUi
15
12
1940
ft.oo P!k. .". except I^itu 1, 2. 3. 4. S
BEFORE COURT
Corn. 3 3 0 f t . N of N W corner of W . N .
4.46
ir»4»
Oreen'« A d d i t i o n t o t h e V i l l a g e of Perry, Lots 4 and A
E . 1 3 2 f t . N 9 9 f t . . W 132 f t S 7 9 f t . t o
1934
l.M
5
State of Michigan. The Probate
1949
be*.
16
2.35
TOWNSHIP « NORTH. RANGE 3 EAST
Court
for the County of Shiawassee
W % of N E U
Com 3 3 ft. W of E ; i p o s t : t h e n c e . W 1 5 9
31.03
16
g0
1940
In
the
Matter of the Estate of
ft
S 2 4 3 f t . . E 1*9 ft. anrl N 2 4 3 f t . t o
J . C. Brand'* Addition
brr.
35
1940
3S.$9 Elizabeth Sanders, deceased.
Lot* 2 , 4, 6
Com. SO ft, E of N E c o m e r of tx»t 2 . B l k .
2
1940
2 .75
File No. 13286.
<» orie'na! t>l*t t o t h e V i l l a g e of B a n William McKellop's Re.-Sub.-Oivn.
rroft. E 1 2 * f t . . S 100 f t . . W, 125 f t . .
Notice is hereby given, that more
Of B l k s 3 t o 1 2 , ineJ.
V 100 ft, t o b e * .
S o u t h 9 1 f t . of L o t 3 6
than two months from this date
*«
1
9
4
0
2
1
.
1
0
6
1939 1940
34.13
Corrt. SI ft. K of N E corner of Ixrt 4. H!k. have bee n allowed for creditors to
V I L L A G E O F MORRICE
<•• original rl«t t o flu* Vill»Te of R » n To increase food production to meet
L o t 2 — B l k . 2 a n d 49 sn- rds. on E side of
claims against said
c r o ' t . E I2r, f t , . S 7 5 f t . . W 1 2 5 f t . . S present their
war
requirements it is essential that
Lot a. And 2 4 s<i. rcis. Off R side of O-it75 (\
W 125 ft., N 7S f t . t o bi-j;.
deceased to said Court i'o,. examinalot 1
TJ&40
{(.91
buildings used to house liv estock and
Jfi
194f»
15.SO
tion and adjustment, and that all
C o m . fi r d s . S, of S E corner of L o t 2 , b l k .
store crops be in good repair.
X 1.-., .-, f N V ' i . «-scer>t O.T.R.R. xr<! n n •2- t h e n c o S fi rds.. W 14 rds.. N 6 rd*. F.
creditors of said deceased are re>f vlr -->),->-'" - Addition
rt-crr.'.
^
••'..'
Con ere te foundations under barns,
\ \ r d s f.o bctrir!.
^940
4'V'
1 '.'< 12
quired to present their claims in
hog
houses or poultry houses will
Original P U t
v -¾ " i s : ,
«f<.i«
^ o t (t—s l 5 of Lot 10. ami S v i of Lot ^1
:
duplicate—one to said court, at the
restore
these buildings to usefulness
v
'•• <S v\"> - •,
/.x.-.-iiV'
i!-.-e
Plst
S"'l
5
1!>S2 19SS
K R
-if1ft to4S.S0 Probate office, in the City of Corand
provide
protection Against rot,
94.S".'
10S4
'S ,;A firrc.s of SV->-i. l y i n s E of Wililum unna. in said
termites
and
waste and damage
County, and one to j
L o i <> and S fi f t . of Lot 10
V. WnrrrnV Aildrlion t o ( h e Villas,- of
»3 2 5
caused
by
rats.
5
1*40
the iduciary of Said Estate, on or
7!i»ri'Tofv
S 1 <3 of Lot 2 1
&2.fU
IfMO
Free booklet, "Restoring Old Farm
before the 17th day of May, A. D.
1.37
!*
1340
Buildings
With Concrete" tells bow
Colby's Addition
Hiram F . H e m e n w u y ' Addition
1043, and that said claims will be I
to
make
essential
repairs with tb«
14.S4
I , M 1 a n d N Mt f f L o t s 3 . 4 . block 3 . T h a t Lots 2 . S
1
1940
19.92 heard by said Court on Monday, the
p*rt of E l m Strct*t ^fhich lies b e t w e e n 0 , : i l o t * 2. 3
194«
use of little or no steel or other scarce
17th day of May, A. D. 1943, a t ten
Ixrt 1 a n d N»ri of L o t * 3 . 4, 8
Georite A . Parker'* A d d i t i o "
13.19
2
1940
10.47 o'clock in the forenoon.'
lx»t 1
4
1940
1
1
.
2
»
t.ot l
*
I M §
N . G. Phillip*' A d d i t i o n
J , A. P a r i * Addition
N ; -3 of L o t s 5, 6
ASSOCIATION
I^>t 4-S 2
1934 1 9 8 *
9.29
Dated March 2, 1943.
t
1940
28.4»
1940
A r>««e e f land o * SWV4 of t h e R7.U S e r .
OUU
Tower
BM*-.,
Laatntt,
Uiclu
Well'* Addition
2«, bounded N a n d W b y land of J . F u r ROY D. MATTHEWS,
So»4»efrf*booktoL*'»esforpnjOW. r orin
L o t M—Blk.
1, »nd a nart o f O a t l o t ? f-owi.
maii, E « n d S b y H i * h w a ?
W*h ConeroJ*.'*
at t h e S W corner of L o t 18, run* R 4
Judge of Probate.
2«
192R
44.77
rrfi.. E » rd*„ N 4 "»»., W t r d * . l o
p**
1140
3 9 . 0 4 C o w . * t a point 7 2 3 f t . W o f S E eorner of By Janice Richardson,
S e e . : t h e n e e , W 5 9 7 f t . . N 144.S f t . . N
£tr«*r or * . JIT. Vo.
Probate Registrar.
l ^ o u 21 a n d 2 2 . n a o p i t f t . o*t V **t e f
SO* 3 0 ' t 443.1 f t . t o een#er of P A u
Lot 2 1 . a n d eoin. a t S B «*ra«r «f I ^ t
.5frM.
RiTor Road, S
> » * » # ' B *J*wr c e n t e r Fiduciary: J. D. Sanders,
2 2 , Btk. I , W e i r * A d d i t i o n , n n » N a n d
of M i d road t o t h e ioten»ertton of t h e RFD 2, Corunna, Mtek,
S 4 rd... E and W . r d . . ^ .
^
e e a t e r line of Sbhrtirajwee S t . *nd S t a
be».
2«
"4«
J 42.41
55.v,
A or,*
51¾¾¾
:**x
A
You'd never let a well dig; t build
your barn nor a plumber care ire your
animals. In the same respect, it's just
plain common sense to take your
John Deere tractor to the man who
knows it best—your John Deere dealer.
We're equipped to meet every John Deere
tractor servicing problem . . . to give
your John Deere tractor that has seen
long, hard work the power and pep it
needs for the coming season.
Our factory-trained service man will
check your tractor thoroughly . . . grind
valves , . \ make all necessary adjustments . . . and tune it up so that it will
work jurt about like new. You'll be
pleasantly surprised how little it will
cost you. Plan now to have our service
man check over your tractor. Stop in
tomorrow and let's talk it over.
r^-rt*.^
F%-i
* y
.y
-.£
-m
tfi-:••••-7-'sd.---•£*
m
,V '-*.',
•i-1
.¾
' . - ^ *?'f*ftt
i :$sr ,
ys\
)-'«£-.»
•
Z
^
\
-mm
j-*Srt- *rSfa
E-i^rr v - .
r^"*''.
.:^¾;,>t':,
54.-.7 3 Syntli4sHc Pro«iucU
Have Much in Common
LsS?*
t^n--^
Swi
PARTS
0*€tZ
Deere Implements and Parts and Farm Hardware
PhaE-re 2 2
New LrOtferop, Mich.
!^>**^*3M£^»<~><£4!^^^
General Elevator
Business
We are completely equipped fot
a general business, and are buying
Beans and all grain crops, and paying the highest market prices at all
times.
We are handling all kinds of
Feeds and Coal, and assure you a
square deal always.
F. S. CHAPMAN
Lennon^ Michigan
Phone 21-F-3
K^>^I^^>^^^>«>4N|^M
i^^t^i^^^x^^^i^^^^^f^
>Xl
Attention Farmers
r
REPAIR FARM X
'BUILDINGS
greater production
We are always in the market for
your Poultry and pay
Top Prices
IX'
L E. LUCE
Htmtod* if with
CONCRETE
and save start* materials
X
POULTRY BUYER
I
P h o n e Lesuton 12-F-3
Route 1
FLUSHING, MICH.
€$!!l@OS0&^
rocnANi cuum
LET THE NEWS HANDLE THAT
i
. » * * . fe.
.'_a ilOR PRhNTlNG M~
« * . ' > . . —*
V-
But You'll Understand It
I
MACHINES FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
MANURE SPREADERS
TRACTOR CULTIVATORS
SPIKE TOOTH HARROWS
CREAM SEPARATORS
„
The Neighborhood Store at Venice Center
_ M A N Y MACHINES YOU WILL NEED THIS SPRINGALL KINDS OF TIRES
For Paaaeuger Car and Track
WE REPAIR AND REBUILD MAGNETOS.
HOWARD MACK
Authorized Chevrolet a n d Oldsmobile Service
Expert Tractor Repairing
McCormick-Deering
Case and New Idea
Phoste 4 4 3
Durand, M i c k .
Ben Glarden has a new Pontiac
car.
Mr. and Mrs. George Morris of
Corunna were dinner guests Tuesday
of 3f r. and Mrss^'ito ..i.t^vTnt.
Wayne Eveleth of Detroit was i
caller Monday evening of Mr. and
Mrs. George Crovrs. He left Tuesday for the United States Army.
Mrs. Stanton. Judd is ill in Memorial hospital- She submitted to ah
operation earlier in the week.
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Friday arid
family hr ,e moved from Owosso to
the house they formerly occupied on
t i e farm of her mother, Mrs. W a .
Gidley.
ili:. and -Jrs. Charles Kurney and
Jli-ji. Emma Kurney were dinner
quests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs.
George Rigoulet and sons. A birthday dinner was served honoring the
birthday ft Mrs. Charles Kurney
and Donald Eldred.
A to Z
ZIEGLER
• 0 0 B ROADS
JUDOVILLE w. c T. u.
Mrs.
Herbert Dreher, county
president of the Woman's Christian
Temperance Union, was a ,, guest
spmket at the regular meeting of
the Juddville Union held last week
in the home of Mrs, George Cademore. An outline of the work of the
union throughout the state and n a ~
tion was given by Mrs. Dreher. Interesting posters were displayed by
the speaker and discussed by tK»
group.
Mrs. Walter Judd, Jr., presided
ovfir the Imsinejss meeting.
Mrs. Paul „ Snyder, Mrs. Walter
Snyder, Mrs. Rose Casemore and
Mrs. Stanton' Judd are new members of the Union.
Mrs. Paul Snyder was appointed
I
M Orotary to fill vacancy, when, Mrs.
Wi!I'.-!v! Snyder resigned on account
of nursing duties.
Mrs. rjporge Stanhope will entertain t! c Union in April.
Mrs. E. L. Cnrless and Mrs. Henry Cutler will act on the program
committee.
Delegates appointed to the county cor»ention are: Mrs. George
Zendler, Mrs. E. L. Carless and Mrs.
Richard Perry.
FERTHJZER
Orders are now being taken for
fertiker. See roe at once.
CMAftUS M. ZBGUEft
IF V M WAIT
Administration of Michigan
^¾
State Highways on an
^ ^ ^ efficient, economic*!,
non-political basis for all the
people, then you want
i*glcr, Republican nominee for State Highway
Commissioner, 15 years
in the department ixider two
X
itSMoners.
a Primary taUat
Monday, April S
PHONE
~j£m
/
DURAND
22
/, m
CHARLES M.
\;
i
Choice Groceries and Meats Ph. 25-F-2, Lennox^
LILY -WHITE ,^,
««Tk« FLO UK
:^1-
i
AND EGGS
ELECT
T,r
};
Effective April 4, 1943
J. CROWE
Glycerin
Becovered
from
Animal
/
Fats
/
JRnts HfP'My vMNMSSDIMV
. i
TIME
CREAM, POULTRY
ZIEGLER KNOWS
GOOD "WADS
ZIEGLER
WAR
Servicing French Trade
Djibouti dominates French Somaliland". Its splendid harbor is the
best in 2,000 miles of northeast African coast. Being the only French
port in a 5,000-mile range from Tunisia to Madagascar, it nas been of
increasing importance throughout
We're in the market for all kinds its 55-year history as a ship coaling and servicing point (or French
and pay top prices.
trade from Marseille to the Far
A. BENFORD ft SON
East. The Franco-Ethiopian railNew Proprietors of Corunna Cream road, only rail outlet for Ethiopia.
is the other major factor that has
Station. Phone 1432
contributed to Djibouti's importance.
Built by degrees from 1898 to 1917,
this line reaches 486 miles inland
and 8,100 feet upland to Addis Ababa,
capital and hub of Ethiopia. It normally carries most of Ethiopia's exFor Prompt Removal of /
ports of coffee, salt, ivory, hjdes,
Old, Crippled or Dead /
and wax.
Horses and Cow?.
/
GEO.
f
WARD'S
A problem which baffled physicians for years was that of wounds
Stuttering has been described as alow in healing. Spectacular proga device to prevent stuttering, Ger- ress has been made in treating these
trude E. Chittenden* Iowa City, alow-healing wounds with carbapoints out in Hygeia, the Health mide, a compound synthesized by
Magazine for January. 'This defini- chemists from the nitrogen of the
tion may seem paradoxical at first," air.
she says. "The stutterer does not
Carbamide does not instantly kill
really stutter on-a word; he stut- germs, yet germs begin to disappear
ters before he comes to it. That when it is used. It is not a cleanser
is, his stuttering is an attempt to in the ordinary sense, ret slow-healkeep from having to say a word ing wounds treated with carbamide
that he is afraid to start. He is teem to clean themselves. Apparstalling. He fills in this period of ently the chemical works by stimustalling with repeated syllables, lating the growth of healthy tissue.
. NEW SCHEDULE OF HOURS FOR STORE AND
much as you and I use the pro* It has been used with success in
longed 'a-a-and-uh' device when we treating infected burns and a large
are groping for the next word. The variety of skin infections, and has
STATION THRU SUMMER MONTHS
straining and the repetitions are re- been found to soften scar tissue.
actions by means of which ihe stut- Moreover, it is readily available and
terer tries to avoid saying the next quite inexpensive, so that people sufSTORE HOURS
word.
fering from infections may fill s
"You probably would have a hard whole bathtub with carbamide soluMondays,
9 A. M. to 9 P. M.
time getting « stutterer to admit tion and literally bathe in it, of
this. He would insist that he is course, according to the directions
Tuesdays, 9 A. M. to 9'P.-M.
trying his best to say a word, not of a physician.
to avoid saying it. However, obWednesdays, 9 A. M. to 9 P. M.
jective evidence points in the other
direction. . . . "
Thursdays, 9 A. M, to 9 P. M.
' France'* Camel Corps
Miss Chittenden explains that a
Not far from the fields where
Fridays,
9 A. JM. to 9 P. M.
fear of words can be built up if the heavy, clanging steel tanks from
speaker has at son*? time or other Detroit, Sheffield and Essen are
Saturdays 9 A. M. to 11 P. M.
noticed a reaction of listeners to his fighting, France's "light tanks" of
speech that has made him self con- the desert—the Camel Corps—have
Sundays, 9 A. M. to 1 P. M.
scious about talking.
operated for years. Recently the
"Often the parents who are con- Camel Corps was reported operatGAS STATION
cerned about their children's speech ing near Djanet in southern Algeria.
are parents who set up high stand- Low "fuel" consumption, a water
Mondays, 10 A. M. to 9 P. M.
ards in general for their children,"' supply that lasts-for days, and nonshe observes. "Perhaps lowering slip traction contributed by wideTuesdays, 10 A. M. to 9 P. M.
some of these standards would re- spreading, padded feet fit the swiftlieve the child of much emotional moving desert 'Hanks" for their jobr
Wednes, 10 A. M. to 9 P. M.
strain. Of course the general physi- in rocky and sandy wastes.
Thursdays, 10 A. M, to 9 P. if.
cs! well-being of the stutterer should
Members of the Camel Corps have
be checked, and any physical deEridays, 10 A. M. to 9 P. M.
fects should be remedied if possi- gone in ior color rather than Jor
camouflage.
Both
men
and
mount*
ble .. . ."
Saturdays, 9 A.M to 10 P. M.
are decked with gay trappings. An
efficient "accelerator" is the camel
Sundays, 9 A. M. to 1 P. M.
stick' grasped in the toes of some
Farm Equipment Check-up
barefoot native troopers. A short
rod of wood, curved M one enf%
Helps Lengthen Its Life tite
camel stick is applied like a
By placing farm equipment in drtrrnstick to the side of the camel's
good shape now, farmers can insure head.
against costly delays later. Many
farmers know by the end of a season some of the damage their ma- Sensations of Beat or Cold
chines have undergone. However, a
The Federal Housing administramere checkup is not enough. By tion/in answer to a question; "Do
carefully inspecting every machine. colors have anything to do with senpart, noting its condition and the sations of heat and cold?" replies:
need of repair or replacement, a
"An example of the sensibility of
farmer can do much to prolong the human beings to color is cited in a
life of his equipment.
recent issue of a magazine. Tha
Last year farmers conditioned color of an office was changed from
•heir farm machinery in earnest. a cheerful yellow to a light blue.
'.*he machine repaired last year will When the colder season arrived* the
have to undergo" another checkup, employees complained of being cold,
but the job should be easier, be- although the temperature was maincause Of the previous good care. tained at 72 degrees. The yellow
Many counties in the country found paint was then restored as an experithat machinery pools set up locally ment, and it w*s found that every.
supplied many farts. Repair cen- one w a s comfortable at the same 72
ter;; ^ave c:;roltcnl results, and sev- degree temperature."
ALSO DEPENDS UPON EATING
eral other met!.ads were used in
A helpful hint for coping with fuel
giving proper attention to valuable shortages and reduced temperatures
PROTECTIVE FOODS
farm machinery. In any event, con- in wartime!
ditioning work should proceed in a
SO tAKE WITH . * •
syjrtematic manner. To insure timeliness, machines are usually repaired
Fesittle Kelp la Fuel Shortage
to the best advantage iti the order
Another new field for the interior
they are required for field use.
decorator from the wartime utilitarian and conservation standpoint
may be found in alleviating the disLack of Gaayaie Seed v
comfort of lower temperatures in
^*THE B E S T C O O K S USE**
-f^}
The expansion of California's all types of structures where fuel
Rrimini AiAs to the Economy of HOMEBakmg!
guayule project has been retarded allowances have to be reduced durby the lack of seed, but recent re- ing the coming winter. For examports indicate that this has been ple, it has been found that office
overcome due to the successful me- help who complained of being chHly
LILY WHITE FLOUR
chanical gathering of the seeds from when the interior of the room in
DOES
_ _ YOUR CLUB
"CLUB AID M . A N "
^f
the 560 experimental acres that have which they worked was painted a
been planted in the Salinas valley. cool blue, with the result that the
I I P WOMIYT
vMtsrcirirumwweo-—'»*-*»'*•
Now there is on hand approxi- temperature had to be raised to satmately 130,000 pounds of guayule isfy them, were found contented
seed and the harve°t this fall is ex- with the previous temperature when
pected to duplicate this amount.
the walls and ceiling liid been reThe United States officials in painted a warm yellow.
charge of this project estimate that
one pound of seed will produce sufficient seedlings for approximately
two acres. Present plans call for
the establishment of two new nurTHE OLD JUDGE SAYS..
series. One near Indio, Riverside
county, and one near Oceanside, San
Diego county. There new nurseries, together with, the present one
at Salinas, will produce seedlings for
99,000 acres to be harvested in the
fall of 1944.
win
/
Help
/
w*
S? / Cattle
V
VALLEY CHEMICAL CO.
•
# #
O
•'*' ", .Vri_i •L
^£
•
•
M
Mineral Pigments Bave Many Uses
Mineral pigments find their main
outlets, both alone and mixed with
•chemical pigments in paint. Iron
oxide pigments are used extensively
in the preparation of paints for the
protection of iron and steel work
l.o;n rur.t, for whzc-j -rephile and
red lead are also widely used. Iron
oxide paints are also used on freight
cars, bams, etc. Other uses for
iron oxide pigments are as coloring
agents and fillers isv.the manufacture of imitation leather, shade
cloth, shingle stain, and paper and
cardboard filler. Siennas and umbers ere used in wood stains and
wcod fillers. Comparatively large
amounts of ground sienna were formerly used for lithographic and
typographic printing, but this use is
now negligible.
i
f
*Tve been meanuV to ask you for the last
couple of weeks, Judge, what you think of
this prohibition talk that keeps croppin' up
every so often."
"I've heard some of it too, Henry, and
I feel like this about :.t...
"It comes from a cc.rrparrtively small
group of reformers... the same type that
plunged us into prohibition during the last
war, And, as we all remember, into nearly
14 years of the worst crime and gangsterism
this country has ever known. Everybody
had all the liquor they wanted only it came
from bootleggers at exorbitant prices and
the government was deprived of millions and
millions of dollars in taxes,
" It seems to me, as I told my Congress
man clown in Washington last week, that
we've got all we can do here at home to
help win this war without wasting time
arguing about things we know, from sad
experience, won't work."
Cmfntmt of Altoktt* B*trr»t* /Mfeatrws, Im~