08-19-1936 - Village of Pinckney
Transcription
08-19-1936 - Village of Pinckney
r.vaHttiarnn VA OUR MOTTO IS: "ALL TH1 OUR dUBftCJUPTlON *ATB 15 *LI8 PER YEAR / Pn&K? W M TWO local Circle Holds Interesting Meetiag Games Sunday NEWS THAT FIT TO PRINT* Pinckney, Livingston , r, MGcnigan Wednesday, August 19, 1936 90° ill the Shade N5T53 ^ I m p r o v e d Conditions Current Comment Aid Tax Collections The different s t a t e finance d e p a r t m e n t s h a v e given o u t t h e i r r e p o r t s a n d Gov. F i t z g o r a l d is e x o n e r a t e d i n Money Coming in P r o m p t l y W i t h g i v i n g ^ o u t false r e p o r t s , i n a s t a t e Many More P r o p e r t y O w n e r s E n Pinckney King's Daughters Present m e n t signed by all t h r e e d e p a r t m e n t s { j rolling in T e n - Y e a r P l a n W h u First G e n e from A n n Arbor, Good Program a t Mooting -—accounting, s t a t e treasurer a n d 9 to 0 a a d Takes Second Contest Last Week a u d i t o r g e n e r a l ' s d e p t . I t states t h a t '{ \ \ v i t h Michigan i n d u s t r y ' e a d : r g t h e g o v e r n o r was r i g h t w h e n he said 4 to 3 . H a r l o H « J » M Win* Own )N r the nation in ecnomic recovery, em- t h a t t h e S t a t e of Michigan collected < * M M w i t h H o m e r in 9 t h . P u t * The regular meeting of Pinckney ployment at a high 1 vel and real es- five millions m o r e t h a n i t s p e n t t h e P i n e h t t o y i n Tio w i t h H a m b u r g Circle o f K i n g ' s D a u g h t e r s w a s held tate holdings gaining in value, both past y e a r . B u t i t also a d d s t h a t t h e at the home of Mrs. B u r t Daller on from a sal<" and rental angle, it is entirely different r e p o r t s given o u t n c k n e y w a s victorious in both T h u r s d a y , A u g u s t 13. . . forecast by state ylficials that this by t h e s t a t e t r e a s u r e r and auditor with A n n A r b o r i n the TriA f t e r t h e u s u a l b u s i n e s s session I I year's collection of taxes u n d e r the g e n e r a l w e r e also c o r r e c t . T h e t r e a s ty L e a g u e last S u n d a y . In the t h e m e e t i n g was t u r n e d over t o the \ t e n - y e a r plan will n n t e r i a l l v exceed u r e r ' s r e p o r t deals w i t h cash on h a n d g a m e A n n A r b o r f a i l e d t o p u t c o m m i t t e e in c h a r g e . Miss C h a r l o t t e 1 the total of $15,000,000 paid in lil-i n i n e m e n o n t h e field a t 1:30 p . m. I s e l e r , a s c h a i r m a n o f t h e p r o g r a m , 135. I while t h e a c c o u n t a n t ' s d e a l s w i t h n e t a n d f o r f e i t e d t o P i n c k n e y , 9 t o 0.p r e s e n t e d t h e following n u m b e r s : T h e r e has been a gival change for 'j cash, detailed cost e x p e n d i t u r e s , e t c . I n t h e s e c o n d c o n t e s t P i n c k n e y w o n Violin Solo E d d i e D r o s t . ( T h i s w a s the b e t t e r in the whole tax collection Now all is a s c l e a r as mud. T h e o u t , 4 t o 3 in t h e n i n t h i n n i n g w h e n so m u c h e n j o y e d t h a t h e r e s p o n d situation d u r i n g th - past twelvi J question, w h e t h e r t h e s t a t e h a d five Harlo Haines connected for a home ed w i t h a s e c o n d ' n u m b e r . ) m o n t h s . W h e r e a s a year ago, lie fore i million in cash a f t e r p a y i n g all e x ran. Reading Miss Clella F i s h . (Which the plan was a n n o u n c e d much pessi- |jpeases, is .still u n a n s w e r e d . w a s a v e r y fins t r i b u t e t o t h e T h e g a m e w a s a t i g h t affair all t h e mism was evident, t"day widespread ( King's Daughters and their work.) way. through. A n n Arbor was reinoptimism prevails, due to improved I In the old days of t h e L i n c o l n f o r c e d b y Tillotson a n d W i l s o n , f o r Miss C h a r l o t t e G o o d r e m o n t of Deeconomic conditions and to the fact: Douglas c a m p a i g n for the s e n a t o r nver U. o f M. p l a y e r s , a n d played j troit gave a humorous reading and; that it is more .universally ri_--.iliy.c-fl j .--hip j n Illinois, these old s t a l w a r t s h a r d . P i n c k n e y s c o r e d 3 r u n s in t h e I also a t o e d a n c e . Both were very that t h e s t a t e has made it cenip-ira-1 wc nt a r o u n d from town to t o w n d e second i n n i n g w h e n R i c k a r d , H a i n e s , ' w e l l g i v e n . tively easy for t h e p r o p e r t y o w n e r , bating., We believe Lincoln won t h e a n d M a y c o c k s i n g l e d in succession, ] D u e t — M i s s J e s s i e G r e e n a n d Miss to m e e t his tax obligations. ' d e b a t e but Douglas won the s e n a t o r t a n d D. B u s t e r d r o o p e d B u d D i l l o w a y s ' C h a r l o t t e Iseler. I P r e v i o u s to the e n a c t m e n t of the ( > s hip. F r a n k Murphy has offered t o f l y . T h i s e n d e d t h e i r s c o r i n g . T h e y 1 Miss I s e l e r f a v o r e d with a v i o h n j Moore-Holbeck act which p h c -d m meet (Jov. Fitzgerald and d e b a t e the h a d m e n o n s e v e r a l t i m e s b u t B u s t e r solo also, a n d B a r b a r a C r o w e # comoperation the t e n - y e a r plan mi'iiy mil- issues of the day. T h e ofTVr hsis w a s e x t r e m e l y s t i n g y w i t h hits. In p l e t e d t h e p r o g r a m w i t h a n o r i g i n a l lions of t a x e s were held t J be un- been declined b y ' t h e g o v e r n o r on the collectable. Interest and penalties on jfi-omids t h a t Mr. M u r p h y is n.)t y e t t h e 7 t h M a y c o c k a n d B. Dilloway got r e a d i n g . I the old bills ran into such high the D e m o c r a t i c nominee. Whether on through errors, b u t Maycock was A v e r y t a s t y l u n c h w a s served to j . m o u n t s t h a t tlv< owners, suffering this may be tak.-n t o mean t h a t t h e c a u g h t off s e c o n d a n d Smith an'l a b o u t 4 0 g u e s t s a n d m e m b e r s . Hie, from the* continued effects ,)f t h e d e - , ^ o v e n i o r j s w i l l i n g t o me'et M u r p h y W a r d flied o u t . S k o w * r s k i d r o p p e d c o m m i t t e e i n c h a r g e wish t o t h a n k pression, lost all hope of s-ilvagingj p r o v i d i n g he wins the nomination, is a T e x a s L e a g u e r o v e r first in t h e 8th all t h o s e who c o n t r i b u t e d m v a r i o u s Service a n d Advice f»om E x p e r i e n c e d 1 Rev. J a m e s C a r o l a n their holdups. Accentmitmg this p r o b l e m a t i c a l . The fact remains t h a t b u t D i n k e l , Miller a n d R i c k e r d all w a y s i n m a k i n g the m e e t i n g a sue-_ N u r s e N o w Available i n Devction to O u r Mother of P e r p e t u a l s t h . (le^ M u r p h y w ; i f a i l e d t o h i t . In the 9 t h H a r l o H a i n e s cess, b o t h socially a n d financially. feeling ot nop. Ie.-lies_ has proved , . . . . . . _t o be a „ regulai .,.„, This County Help, S a t u r d a y a t 7:00 P . M 1 first t i p , h i t o n e o v e r the centerfield-j Winifred Graves, S e c y . in property values and rentals , n i g h t n m r e t o ' t h e s t a t e a d m i n i s t ration i ere as;. Confessions 7 : 3 0 P . M. S a t u r d a y e r ' s head, f o r a h o m e r u n . M a y c o c k ! o ! on a c c o u n t of his Wayne county due l'irgely t;> lack of d e m a n d Continuing its educational p r o followed w i t h h i s t h i r d h i t , b u t the* r r t I _ M A W M i m n F R T R I A L S E T Then it was t i n t the s t a t e t h r o u g h .stlength. T h e D s t r o i t F r e e P r e s s den e x t t h r e e b a t t e r s w e r e all easy _ o u t s . C O L E M A N M U R D E R T R I A L a t i . g r a m t o i m p r o v e m a t e r n a l a n d child? legislative mandnte came t o t h e aid votes m o r e space to a t t a c k i n g M u r p h y h e a l t h , t h e B u r e a u of Child H y g i e n e T , H a r l o H a i n e s , in t h e box for P i n e _ „ ~~"Z _. of its haras.-' d citizens. T h e p i r t - 1 than it does t o a n y other c a n d i d a t e . J o n n and P u b l i c H e a l t h N u r s i n g , M i c h i g a n ,k n e y , o n l y allowed 5 hits b u t i s s u e d ' C h a s . R o u s e , H a r v e y Davis, payment idea \ t\s put into efV ct. A. F . B r o w n , L e a d e r 5 b a s e s o n balls. A n n A r b o r scored F a n n e r m a n , E r y m L s e a n d J a m e s D e p a r t m e n t of H e a l t h , is i n a u g u r a t While through educational methods In t h i e e contests last week, th? Service* each S u n d a y C. i o n a i r er s, ,n wwnh no ing a n u r s i n g service i n L i v i n g s t o n a r u n in the 4th when ~. B ~ u« sotlet ri L c r a n c e , t-h-e Black , .... L e g-^,., I the t e n - y a r plan is is widely wme.y KMOW,., t 0 s h o w known, T o w . n s p n r i i t G S f a i } e d w a l k e d a n d scored o n a wild t h r o w a r e a c c u s e d of killing Silas C o l e m a n c o u n t y in c o - o p e r a t i o n with t h e Liv- j M o r n i n g w o r s h i p 10:30 may not be ;nni,-s to ^-•-'•..^ "••"> p i . 0 ., t ^ i T n g t h - ' i n two contests. S:-nt o first. T h e y g o t t w o m o r e in t h e a t N a s h ' s b r i d g e east of P i n c k n e y , on ingston C - u n t y M e d i a l Society. Special a n d s e p a r a t e services salient f e a i u n • 1i \>r JV ^the \ , b ' n •n / u \ l , , [ a t o r H - r a h . easily defeaced his T o w n familiar semi o p p o n e n t in Idaho and S e n a t o r 6 t h w h e n S m i t h a n d R. M e r c e r sing- M a y 2 5 , 1 9 8 5 . will b e t r i e d in DeMiss E a r t h M G r e e n R. N., wil • l i e not who! f o rthe 1 U t J e f lfc h h o s e w h o l e d . T i l l o t s o n s i n g l e d to l e f t a n d got t r o i t b e f o r e J u d g e G e o r g e M u r p h y h a v e c h a r g e o i the m a t e r n a l a n d S u n d a y School 11 AK ' w i t h them. kohirrxin was a l s j victorious over a t h r e e b a s e s on i t w h e n S k o w e r j k i let o n S e p t . 9 , p r e s i d m g J u d g e M a n e r child h e a l t h p r o g r a m b , r e , w o r k i n g , an.-tax.^ for \W Tovr-nsend opponent in A r k a n s a s .In CltLue^rM U n d e r tin 1 it g e t p a s t h i m . H a i n e s - t i g h t e n e d u p h a s a n n o u n c e d , lto e x t r a j u r y m e n in c o o p e r a t i o n with a n a d v i s o r y , B Y< P U r - « « and prim year- , e v . c p t foi Detroit, Jvfoiida a T o w n s e n d i t e won the nomb o a r d of the c o u n t y medical society a n d s t r u c k o u t Jaffee a n d W a r d t h r e w h a v e b e e n called for this t r i a l . 7 : 0 0 i which has :i 'i: d'•r iaual plon. v "I'O. i'rition t.) fill a vacancy caused b y o u t I . M e r c e r . A n n A r b o r had m e n ° i n c l u d i n g Dr. N H u n t i n g t o n , Dr. G I E v e n i n g W o r s h i p 8:00 ] V u ' m p C(1 and divid -d 'inin t-n ; • T i n U>l1 the d 'ath. of Senator T r a m m e l . In o n e v e r y i n n i n g b u t c o u l d n ' t shove j F A R M BARNS BURN D O W N L. Sigler, Dr. H o r a c e Melius, DA [ T h i r e . e v e n i n g p r a y e r service .. S:00 ! p a v n ^ n t s . All nccumuh-.t, 1 in^Vc-t most cases the T o w n s e n d i f s show them around. S m i t h , first u p f o r i ( JIflcoQ e s s e H oe nnrdl r eo nn a nn dd Dr. C. StPnMV Stepg* l r D. I) ( ; on ' •these . . 1 t.a x o . was e a n•i/.r. oi<i c e l l ^ l . This lack of organization. In this 0th dist h e m i n t h e 9 t h , s i n g l e d ; R. M e r c e r ! b a m s o n the f a r m of M r s . t e n s . M I year's interest :;mooi.t,- to on.y I our trict, T h e f o r instance, Congressman a t t e m p t e d t o sacrifice, b u t p o p p e d M a r k S w a r t h o u t , east of t o w n n e a r ] This h e a l t h p r o g r a m is p a r t of t i p cent, fUnn'ed from Sept "tut. •, 1 , Hlackney has two T o w n s e n d i t c s r u n c l i per down t h e first b a s e l i n e . H a i n e s m a d e t^e D a r w i n f a r m , c a u g h t fire f r o m I developnv nt o'f m a t e r n a l a n d ^j plan w e n i into effect. ning against him, which should m a k e 1 11)05, when tl innnic ri a r e m a r k a b l e c a t c h of it a n d doubled a n U ! k n o w n s o u r c e and b u r n e d t o ! health service in Michigan u n d e r t h e T h e re r m v c t o tins ei C, H. Zu the m a t t e r of his r e n o m i n a t i o n sim*e, M i n i i ' e r tev. S m i t h a t first. R i c k e r d e n d e d t h e t h e g r o u n d ] a n W e d n e s d a y n i g h t . j Social S e c u r i t y Act. N u r s e s a r e be-1 ' ' V th slate n1- ple. Mr». E . C. B a u g h n , O r g a n i * t lief project afforded 'game b y t h r o w i n g o u t T i l l o t s o n . j T £ e p i n c ] < n e y firr> e n g i n e w e n t o u l j i n g located in counties h a v i n g no | noials was in-lan^aneau--. A< a reT h e first v i c t o r y gives P i n c k n e y a D u t v ; a t ! u n a b l e to obtain a n y w a t e r . | g e n e r a l i z e d nublic health p r o g r a m . ) taxcv. e e suit $5:-.,000,001» i1 A peculiar situation exists in E a s t Sunday Morning Worship, 10:30 tie w i t h H a m b u r g in g a m e s won a n d T h e f a r m [s k n o w n a s t h e W i l l i a m , Special e m p h a s i s will b e placed o n :! on the acbroughi to life and pi T>*• 11 i t . T h - i e two deluxe g a m b l i n g p l a y e d f o r t h e first h a l f o f the sea- H a r r k f a r m a n d was occupied by s e m c e s t o prospective m o t h e r s a n d A. M. l i \ e i oils. 11' me., w i e. ..eecd a n d hah . tin Chesterfield Inn mid t h e son, e a c h h a v i n g 9 v i c t o r i e s ?nd one p 0 C C 0 L u m a? t e n a n t . H e lost 3 0 0 [ c h i l d r e n u n d e r school age, a l t h o u g h S e r m o n e t t e for J u n i o r C o n g r e g a - owners of olh r prop iiv ssece a b l e Chalet flourish, seemingly immune i defeat. T h i s tie will b e played off h „ s h e l s of c o r n , several s t a c k s of j some h e a l t h e d u c a t i o n will be& of- tion, to b r e a t h e easier agaip. \ ' a . r i o u s u n - lr(Hn . Murontb c o u n t y a u t h orities, a t P i n c k n e y on L a b o r D a y , Sept. 7. haw a n d a n u m b e r o* chickens. T h e r e Ifered in t h e schools, i n c l u d i n g f e c a s Bible -School Session for All •at its of govern'mt-ni. Hire .i.tiMie'd with Fast Detroit officials, the state police 1 1 : 3 0 A. M Tfc* s e e e n d ^ C t o t y ' - e ^ D t ^ T h f S r t o ZZ. n o " I n s u r a n c e on t h e b u i l d i n g s or ional child c a r e classes. c u r t a i l m e m t h n n i g h lack ef fund,--, and T h e lnfnnt t h e a t t o r n e y g e i . ' r a l ' s office. C. K. M e e t i n g f o r A.'I k e e p l « B t o n e g a m e b e h i n d of H a m - . c o n t e n t s . ' w e l f a r e _ p r o g r a m will Y o u n g were enabled to continue functioning Kacli 'me ot these d e p a r t m e n t s disinclude t h e d e l i v e r y of birth certifiPeople at 7 :00 P. M. b u r g in t h e second h a l f of t h e season. in the n> i, st of all l b " p e o | i ' e . claim- all responsibility for s u p p r e s cates t o parents-, of n e w b o r n babies. E v e r y b o d y Welcome e w n e i - - w h o paid t h e i r They play H a m b u r g a t H a m b u r g on! t N y | j £ r > j o P r o p e r t y sing them. Recently, a Mrs. H a n n a A t these calls t h e m o t h e r s a r e u r g e d Sept. 6. I — S U P E R V I S O R S ' P I C N I C | to tak:* t h e child to the family physifirst y e a r in- > u" m e i i t mo -i now ,-ettle of Ka-i Detroit tfot some X0 s i g n e r s , hou.-and.> ha\'e asking the city a u t h o r i t i e s t o supfer the second yeai | cian d u r i n g the first y e a r for iniiminPinckney a h e a d / done s i . Many more tliou-- pi s, the gambling dens, The opponAll m e m b e r s of t h e B o a r d of S u pu ization a g a i n s t d i p t h e r i a a n d vaccin AB R H PO A anrls will make their piyt'i>a!- on -ii ent.-, immediately got busy and got and p r e s e n t ; also . G e nr e raa l NMa at ti ioonn a g a i n s- t smallpox. Gen Smith, l b 5 0 0 11 0 0 e r v i s o r s , p a s t and prenein., ai»o b f o r e S e p t e m b e r i t , and be >w un £00 signets to a petition asking t h a t * 0 al1t " ] , , i U kl,.™., ~ »' iUn / i V i i l / l w > n o f h e a l t h p r o b l e m s of t h e children o W a r d , 2b 4 0 0 2 1 0 c o u n t y c a n d i d a t e s , a r e i n v i . e u to; ;a t--i T h e class met a t the home of t h - in t h e i r tax position. l the g a m i d i n g places be a l l o w e d t o •petty J . Dilloway. s s . . . 2 0 0 0 2 0 t e n d t h e S u p e r v i s o r s picnic a t ^ ^ I the family will be discussed. Haze sisters on A u g u s t 12, l!>35 for F o r various reasonmany pr run, for the reason that they s t i m u e d u c a t i o n s ! pre A s e r i e s ot-n i m , S k e w e r s k i , If, c f 2 0 1 2 0 22 L a k e S t a t e P a r k on l u e s . a a y , AUfcu..t its q u a r t e r l y Missionary service and owners were li"t able la ta.ke i d v a n - lated business in t h e n e i g h b o r h o o d . n a t a l l e t t e r s and one p o s t n a t a l letter m o n t h ' y business meeting. T h e first Dinkel, c 2 0 0 5 1 0 25th. tage of the t e n - y e a r plan when it Tl> se t w o pine s have been wise will vill be be mailed mailed once once a a month m o m n to to pro.j»o-,d _ •> was originated. Miller, r f 4 0 0 2 0 0 t e r f j } Marly | ayniejn,- th ; s enough to do all buying locally, a n d Rickerd, 3b 4 1 1 1 3 1 KING'S DAUGHTERS BRING reveal tha.t add d n u m b e r s a r c one meat m a r k e t has sold t h e m a s year . P U P P E T T S H O W T O H O W E L L phy 1 i n s much as $500 worth of m e a t a week. 1 3 0 Haines, p 4 2 2 rnv .. : . ,„*:.,«!.. , , , 1 . I ! • " " . ' ^-1 • ing undei it • jn-cv.'i ion selves. T h e p r o g r a m is e n t i r e l y cd enro Tlie M a y c o c k , cf, s s . . . 4 1 3 3 3 1 local I s e c r c t a i y being a b s e n t on n ' m a v be 'done by nviking i he lit -st two A m o n g the signers were two mem-^ u c a t i o n a l in co-operation with loca • • - • - - • • I i|:],-(-l !•:!("' - wPh tntere.'t hers of a P r e s b y t e r i a n church b o a r d / B. Dilloway, If, cf 3 0 0 0 0 0 n e f . ? ° ^ h ^ u n ^ w m ' r ^ e - l p i ^ ^ t r i p Clella Fish served a s puymentnal! additional C o n s e q u e n t l y the E a s t Detroit c o u n to be seen m this c « u n t > ^ " / " F ».? n u r s i n e s e c r e t a r y pro tern. C a r d s of t h a n k s a t 4 p e r cent., p l u s a charge on the payment that was not cil tabled both petitions and the Ann Arbor so-anization e n t e d b y tof h e Howell K i n g a Don ° u g h ltue ei Ss a aoy r side n u r s i n g . \ . {. v e r b j .| ] t h.a n k s. ^ ^ . , th t places will c o n t i n u e to o p e r a t e . T h i s ^ . ^ g c h o o l a u d . B R U C K E R F O R .,.-.,,-. wR » o t h e r r o u t i n e business loie-nvi.u, and m:ide last year. S E N A T» O A B R II P O A K gamzatio-n . ^ passing-tho-buck shows cowardice. Q A u g u s t 2 5 in Alloth <Y favorable condition C L U B O R G A N I Z E D ' plates a n d cards ordered s e n t to shutE . S m i t h , 3b .... 4 1 2 2 2 prevails this year is the largo num- We r e m e m b e r how t h e late Gov. F r e d j ins. willl R. M e r c e r , ss .... 5 1 1 1 1 M. W a r n e r handled a similar s i t u a Fhjcker-ForT h e S e p t e m b e r m e e t i n g is expected ber of p r o p e r t y owners, who, with h e Pplan Tillotson, l b 4 0 1 12 1 0 ' t 0 * n wn^troulk°a£ h S in I In In tthe l. f o r tion in th.> s a m e place years ago. H e c o u n t y , a to be with Mrs. Lee o r Mrs. H e n r y , money easier, an? payir.g their reev:>ry C. B u s t e r , p 2 1 0 0 4 1 ^ r w o n - " n o . r ? t o ^ a : : S n r W h i t . ! S e n a t o r - d u b in .•• ent the Macomb county p r o s e c u t o r m a i n i n g balances on the ten year plan Miss Mit m e e t i n g was held in the Hotel Liv- the l a t t e r especially u r g i n g all t o Jaffee, If 3 0 0 3 0 an u l t i m a t u m to the effect t h a t if h e a n d t h e Seven D w a r f s . " in a lump sum. This, of course, I. M e r c e r , c f ...... 4 0 0 1 0 did not close the places h e would • savinev X to Ho' per coff brings a l a r g Wilson, c 4 0 0 6 0 send t h e s t a t e militia to do it. Gov. teers per cent interest on future pa.unent.^. Fitzgerald could d o the same t h i n g , Seyfried, 2b 3 0 1 2 4 &T*t S t a t e officials h a v e received mu"h D. B u s t e r , r f .... 2 0 0 0 0 and much easi r, as he now h a s t h e S itV of"Rome. sitv P u p p e t r y a n d outside v °r\ J ^ t h a t ' i t T n e w "again, and n t , a n d H e r m a n H c g , Howell city After the P h i l a t h e a benediction, i P a i s o from t a x p a y e r de state police t.) do his bidding. This Goodwin, r f 2 0 0 0 0 "or the wanking o u t of the sourc ^ v i v e d all o v e r t h i U n i t e d , w a s n a m e d s e c r e t a r y t i a s u r e r . Mrs. Bowman called on v a r i o u s ones ' ' * c l e r k H o m e r u n , H a i n e s S t r u c k o u t by ™T-L if. b e i n g revived all It has been coined hv Gov. H a i n e s , 5 ; B u s t e r , 6 . Bases on balls, ^ , , ^ 1 e X C G l l e n U e n t e r t a i n m e n t for. T h e r e w e r e a l s o - a n u m b e r o t viceA old I p r e s i d e n t s elected. off H a i n e s5, 5 ; B u s t e r , 2. D o u b l e p l a y , ? : $ ; V 0 U T , g a n , ^ . r •• „ , 1 • will bbe R rrUueckkeerr is is m m aa kk ii nn gg aa. s t r o n g c a m Haines to S m i t h . L e f t o n b a s e s , b ° TThheerree will e bbootthh aa ff tt ee rr nn oo oo nn aa nn dd ,, R • ^rVm-rnan^ces t o a c c o m m o - ' p a i g n f o r the scnatorship against HO UrnPinckney, 6 ; Ann Arbor, 8 f o e v e n m g P « ^ t o u « e l v e y o u r S e n a t o r C o u r e n s , who o n . t h e o t h e r 8 , J}empires Stackable a n d Adesh. S S & r S i andI y o u - g u e s t s a r e a l t r e a t , h a n d , h a s m a d e no c a m p a i g n a t all. and Miss H a z e gave an exceedingly ers who had n >w of the g r e a t de- ocrat g a t h e r i n g , recently held" in Deo h l « « „ ? t i c k e t s f r o m M r s . P a l m e r , T h e r e p o r t t h a t H e n r y F o r d is finbefore the sha< helpful talk, c o m m e n t i n g also on over the nation. i troit, is p r o b l e m a t i c a l . One and all, Buy, y o u r tickets iron. j » R r u c k e r c a m p a i g n is u n spread " K a g a w a " , w h o m s o n u v o f o u r m e m - pression •am vaiion c o u n t i e s ; they unite in p r a i s i n g Messrs. Reed, Batting Average* a n t i n g chapter, TTVhIeP rreettuurrnnss i, e m v, of t h e lcif.; confirmed a n d d o u b t e d b y m a n y . bers w e r e privileged to h e a r r e c e n t l y , H AB Pet,! R indicate th.u the Len- Fly and Colby as God's noblemen a n d -o— o in Michigan and q u o t i n g Dr. F i s h e r a s s p e a k i n g the salt of t h e e a r t h . Unfortunately 23 .547( 10 Searlcs 42 an adde'd a p p e a this year plan has W I N S T H I R D P R I Z E C A R T U R N S O V E R S A T . N I G H T of " T h e P o w e r t h a t we call G o d . " their Democracy is mostly synthetic. 2 6 .428* M a y c o c k .... 1 4 the taxpny ;\ T h ea-e thi: Of these E x ' s , S e n a t o r Rcid w a s a v e a r to She s r o k e of Dr. G r a y in his travels 12 .414 10 Ferrell 29 w hen the plan wa < it did la enrouts from Detroit t o 8 10 .384 Haines 26 c l u r a - bitter foe a n d o p p o n e n t of W o o d r o w 10 1 8 . 3 7 7 ' J. Dilloway 4 9 10 16 .350 Ward 44 14 .333 1 2 Dinkel 42 .350 7 7 Hollis 20 .285 0 2 S k o w e r s k i .... 7 .281 18 19 Smith 64 .235 6 8 Miller 34 .145 3 2 Reason 21 .125 1 1 Rickerd 8 .128 5 B, Dilloway 39 4 frtsenh B. S k i b a of 2 7 0 8 E a r l r i . - u c - 1 ^ t h e y g a v e f o r Missions' j " " ^ >•",--- • - ; , „,,,.„,•;..« todav. camei troll, and stated the w e r e o n their .-ut > t , c , ^ ^ W ewi,h t o t h a n k a n those who a b o u t a Rm u c h a m o n t h a s w e d oj n ^ , o r in.iisina o n Sflv to G r e g o r y t o a w e d d i n g . } j s a v i n g o u r h o m e from be, , t h e si a t e in vUm-u «™ a { ( I e < J u s n a v e n r # M r f ( < V a i t o M o f w o k f o r Game* N«xt Sunday ' T h e y w » r e t a k e n t o t h e P i n c k n e y i n g f l . s t r o y e d b y fire on t h e n i g h t of Saline at Pinckney , „ r s . r . u l c r s a i a i t . w a « m o « i y . "•«» r _ : — - t . , . - . , , , , , ^ | r h o Woolworth Co. announces S a n i t a r i u m w h e r e first aid w a ^ given. A u R U s t 1 2 . Also t h e m e m b e r s of t h e a ] v a Hamburg at Chelsea M a r v i n a n d H e n r y S h i r e y t o o k t h e m P i n c k n c y fire d e p a r t m e n t . njoyed the b e s t b u s i n e s s Manchester at Ann Arbor ?«?J; D e t r o i t . T h e n a m e a n d a d d r e s s Family R o c c o L >upo u p o a n d nee d u r i n g t h e p a s t -o Sangst Svtn m be false as t h e m a n w a s year. The General Motors Corp., campaign again this y a r . MARTIN FAMILY REUNION T h e offering for the Benevolence A R E H U R T IN A U T O A C C I D E N T ! X To a n a d d r e s s o n B u c h a n a n The C h r y s l e r Corp., F o r d Motor Co., o Ave a n d t h e girl t o o n e o n 14th. A reunion of t h e children and T h e c a r fn w h i c h H a r r y F r o s t a n d E d PaVker, local g a r a g e m a n , n o w . g r a n d c h i l d r e n a n d t h e i r families of P r a n k S n e h a n w e r e r i d i n g , skidded h a s t h e w r e c k e d car. I t h e late Mr. a n d Mrs. E. W . M a r t i n , a n d w e n t t h r o u g h t h e f e n c e on w h a t n / . i t n o n A D C A S T L I T E R A R Y . is k n o w n as t h e J o h n V a n H o r n faum, icm g, ] w a s held a t t h e h o m e o f Mr. a unn n just east of the over-head *"»»1road D K W l i X ^ ^ T R A W V O T E V . . M a r t i n of L a k e Ch l G E S T Mr8 L W bridge on M-36, S u n d a y evening. ThA G o o d y e a r T i r e Co. h a s p u r - ! S u ^ ilfi. ncluding the host . t h e class, Mrs. I n e z Zuse, who is e n the t o w n s h i p in which she ... to teach n d a y ,^ A p ru e ggGuns t B o t h m e n w e r e i n j u r e d , n o t serf* These meetings a r c to be hHd m t h e , ously w e u n d e r s t a n d , a n d w e r e tak* c h a«s eSd t h e r i g h t s t o b r o a d c a s t t h e a n d h o s t e s s , w e r e Mrs H a t t i e M. Ea- j o y i n g a vacation t r i p . Wc will b e C o u r t H o u s e , H o w -11. a t ^M a m i c e s t ' s t r a w v o t e ' o n t h ^ : m a n o f G a r d e n City, K a n . , V i l a M. ' glad to welcom* a n y who c a r e to join T h e r e will be a m e e t i n g o f t h e en to Howell for treatment^ L i tSe rSa U r y nDigest T h u r s d a y , Aug. 2 7 Genoa, Ham This p u t ' ,g ^ ^ gs ,. aand J . ^M"a' yr t,i' n" »» of I us for n e x t S u n d a y ' s lesson period, I ' M t l o n a l election. This will wiij b uee yuv n a nBilaannrcnhee o. Masonic B u i l d i n g Association a t t h e R cnard b u r g , P u t n a m , Unnrt^lla, lo^-o. ^Mo wo»n d a y^, WILLIAMS . V A N H O R N ^] JT^.« Sh e aoiT «li^ , W e-d n e J a y« tw R . H . T e. e,p ^ c o n s i d e r r n g t h e topic, " T h e Gospel T e m p.l e o n _ S a tmm u r d a y ,Amm evening h icg. p,,.~—, l a p e ; M r .and M r s . „ oS n* tth» i r ee v e rcyj M T,vi^iv A u c 2X DeernelU, i y Masonic , ,...il !aSn dd F F rr ii dd aa yv eevveenniinngg, s t a r t i n g S e p t . 2 o f B r i g h t o n , C l y d e a n d E u g e n e M a r - f o r A 1 1 M e n > " K R o a < 1 A c t s 11.: 5-18, . e lone O c e o l a ' B n g h t o n , G r e e n Oak. I A u g u s t 22 a t 8:00 P . M, AU W r a n a t i o n - w i d e ^ h o o k - u p whichiin- t i n 0 f Chelsea, M r . a n d Mrs V o l n e y | a n d R o m a n s i : 15-17. i dcej S a t u H a y Aug. 2 9 — C o h o c t a h , Con- b e r s a r e especially tovited t o , 1 ^^ T h e m a r r i a g e o f . S t ^ h e n . V a n H o r n . o ovveerr^ aa "nnaaut io^onn - w ^m — - ^_6 A6 r ,t A0 A0A0A r_T _ w ^ '.S S d ,' t±th S . sons of t h e C rSt /o4 .o ; ^ ^ g p o n s o r g ^f the Toledo N e w s w a y Howell. Marion, H a n d y . a s a m a t t e r of i m p o r t a n c e i t t o o f H o w e l l t o M r s . J o e i e W i l l i a m s t o o k e l u d e * 64 N B C s t a t . v — --.. « . - - ^ - - - - - - - , - - ^ w _ _ t / m flnd a o n place at Mason on August 12. The ' v « i u S h a v e b e e n s e n t o u t t o t e l e - Mi\ a n d M r s . Leslie W e s t o n a n a son, ibnotyesr'e sCt ianmg p aatr et h em aCk oi nmgm tuhnei t yservices Supplies will be r e a d y for t h e S u p Up, Conn i a«u t o» m o b i.l e !<,.«««* license Dr e. w e y , of a. • couple will live at Howell. Mr. Van- ^b a^l •l out sb s ncarvieb eo«e« ^ . Oorapolis, r ^ « . « « i u PP» Mr*, Atta Meyer*, AU e r i n t e n d e n t s o n W e d n e s d a y a f t e r . ational church during Rev. Zuse's Horn wai formerly » rtrtdtnt of S S ^ n Sprofession*! S S S w l tt» wd regu>, A >ppy time was .peat and will gf rbe*g W owner*, rhiinhan i * Sv«r?bQ<l| Wtlcowo, llong b« remembered, County Nurse CHURCHES Is Established, Cajjjoijc church Service Baptist Church Congregational Church Philathea Notes North s t a t e * \ The Pinckney Dispatch, Wednesday, August 19,1936 • FROM AROUND* Roses as Motif for MICHIGAN D i: N v r: R Huty o New Bedspread Lansing — Dr. William Haber, state administrator for the SERA, reports that 497 persons employed in clerical and typing work and 495 social workers nave completed civil service examinations. Powers—Approval of a new WPA •w *t %i — @ «Wtstm Newspaptr Union _ project at the Pinecrest Tubercular Sanitarium in the village of Powers and 200 meter runs and the broad Jeftersonian Democrats has been announced by the state jump and for pacing the winning director. Construction of a 75-bed Band Together American quartet in the 400 meter IfORTY - THREE Democrats, relay. The decathlon was won by addition to the hospital will take "most of them prominent nation- Glenn Morris of Denver. about eight months to complete, it ally or locally and representing was stated, and will cost $353,298. Japan captured the most highly twenty states; gathered in Detroit prized Olympic championship when Houghton—Faced by the possibilPatten 1214 to tell one another Kitei Son, young Corean student, ity of a barren 4sle for its newest and the world how won the marathon race over a very . i A- wm^m national park, the U. S. recently With roses as its motif this much and why they tough course and in the record time rushed CCC reinforcements to an newly embroidered bedspread's disliked t h e New of 2 hours 29 minutes 19.2 seconds. army of 600 firefighters on Isle sure of admirers t So is its emDeal. After two The distance was 26 miles and 385 Royale in Lake Superior. Large broidered bolster, or a matching days of conferring, yards. scarf adorned this speedy way. areas of the island have already they organized Among the women contestants Flowers are easy to do in single* been denuded by the raging blazes. themselves as the Helen Stephens of Missouri distinNational Jefferson- guished herself by breaking the Ann Arbor—Wilmot F. Pratt, 24 outline and lazy-daisy stitch— ian Democrats and world record in two heats of the years old, of New York City, has their effect truly lovely! Pattern 1214 contains a transfer n a m e d Former 100-meter dash. been appointed carillioneur for the pattern of a motif 16 1-2 by 19 1-4 Senator James A. University,of Michigan's new bell inches and two and two reverse A neeo xtmmA ^ Reed Missouri as Commerce Department on tower, now in construction. Pratt * ji . A. ^ nof ational chair. motifs 4 1-4 by 5 1-2 inches. Color is a graduate of the M alines, BelRecovery and Public Debt s c h e m e s ; illustrations of all man. They decided to establish gium school and has been associaECRETARY OF COMMERCE Eastern High School, an Example of Denver's Fine Educational Buildings* ted with St. Thomas' Episcopal stitches needed; material reheadquarters at once in St. Louis ROPER'S department has just quirements. and to set up an organization in prtptred by th* National olographic society, l hours each day in the summer a Church in New York. every state. Then they gave out put out a "world economic review" Send 15c in stamps or coins Waahlarton. D. a - W l f c Sarvic | ^ ^ ^ hziT%£ ^ ^ ^ ^ Qf Detroit —This metropolitan city (coins preferred) for this pattern a 1,500 word declaration or plat- for 1935 which contains many " I T THEN you -enter Denver, down over the 1,600 acres of lawns has been pronounced the largest form in which they declared they interesting s t a t e \ A / Colorado, you come to the in the city's parks. So frequent steel c o n s u m i n g center in the to The Sewing Circle Needlecraft "will not support for re-election the ments. It says, for V V urban hub of nearly one- are these drenchings that in sum- world. The statement was made Dept., 82 Eighth Ave., New York, t h a t candidates of the Philadelphia con- instance, fifth of the United States. mer, the watering hose is not re- by the president of the Association N. Y. business vention for President and vice presi- f u t u r e Write plainly pattern number, A state capital, a great western moved night or day from the- hy- of Iron and Steel Engineers, and dent, and we call upon all loy- prospects are condicity, a gateway to the mountainsyour name and address. drants. Driving through the parks went on to say that the automobile al and sincere Democrats to con- tioned in part upon all these Denver is and more. in late afternoon, you see orderly industry is largely responsible for sider the question of their duty to the possibility of Spokes of influence extend from piles of hose, as regularly spaced the heavy consumption of s t e e l Battlefields Still Draw their country in the approaching narrowing the gap it into the entire Rocky Mountain as the trees of an orchard, each between g o v e rnelection with the same earnestness More than 250,000 people a year area, and into large regions of the like a coiled serpent on sentry products. that has guided our delibrations— ment expenditures are still visiting the battlefields adjoining plains states as well, duty, guarding its allotted plot. Jackson—A near tragedy occurred ^joining with us if they feel that our and receipts. It asof France. Most of /them are making it the financial, commerwhen fire broke out in the Alpha Use Water Lavishly conclusions are sound and our anx- serted t h a t "the French. Then comeVBelgians, cial, and industrial center of a vast Gamma Delta camp at Crispell Knowing that this is a dry couniety for the future of our party government deficit A «1 „810M t11l and Germans take thirl place inarea. No other city in the United Lake recently. Housing sixty under numbers. springs f r o m the A* *- * try and that water is precious, you and our country is justified." root of unemployment, which is States with a quarter-million popu- ask one of the officials of the water privileged little boys, the building The name of Governor Landon still Verdun alone attracted 14,700 the major problem confronting lation is to far removed—500 miles board about the heavy use of water caught from embers of .a fire was not mentioned in the declara- the country. , . ., . fire . . , . Germans last year, though its or more —from all other big cities. 4 4 in the city and run mto a surpristion, but a number of its signers kindled the eveiung before^in the_l . Naturally, the people of this t a s s o c i a t i o n a and historic As to "the part played in the re- great region turn to Denver, ing paradox. are openly supporting the Republifireplace. Cottagers and firemen £ f w e r e t h e g o a l s o f pilgrims "It is very important that we use co-operated to extinguish the blaze Qf a l j na ti 0 ns. can candidate. Among these are covery to date by the heavy govern- whether they are out for business Joseph B. Ely, Col. Henry Breckin- ment expenditures," the report said: or pleasure, for a commercial fight water lavishly today," he tells you, and bring all of the children to All over northeastern France "This question \- not easily an- or a recreational frolic. It's a "in order that our grandchildren safety. ridge, John Henry Kirby of Texas nowadays one sees groups of visand Robert S. Bright of Maryland. swered, but it is certain that such habit of long standing. The miners shall have enough for their vital Cheboygan — A visitors' day at itors kneeling before shrines, However, the avowed prime ob- outlays have had an influence started it when they came every needs. Visiting water-works ex- which guests were to inspect the English, French, American, Italjective of the Jeffersonians is the in many directions — for example, so often to the rough little town perts think we are crazy when we buildings and exhibits of educa- ian, that commemorate the herodefeat of President Roosevelt and on retail sales, on farm income, on that was Denver in the sixties to mak£ that statement, but it is tional work being carried on this ism and suffering of the years of the restoration of the Democratic the growth of bank deposits and on spend some of their gold for sup- literally true. summer, was to be held by the warfare. party to its status before the New the prevailing level of interest plies and the rest in more or less "This is an irrigation country. University of Michigan biological Dealers captured it. * Their declara- rates." Municipalities, as well as indivi- station on Douglas Lake. The inriotous living. tion is unsparing in its denunciation The latter statements may well must follow the laws worked stitution is known as the largest KEEP Later, when great riches were duals, of Mr. Roosevelt's course and the be compared with the report of made out under irrigation conditions in fresh-water biological station in the YOtR in gold and silver and cattle, policies of his administration. Alfred P. Sloan, president of Gen- the fortunate ones moved to Den- getting their water supplies. Once world. Enrollment for the 1936 seseral Motors, to the stockholders. ver and built the mansions and you got hold of a flow of wa- sion is 105, gathered from 24 states. EYES Business recovery throughout the hotels ahd business blocks that ter, if you don't use it you forfeit Bar Association Split on Mayville—Three former pupils world — in which the United States started the solid structure of the it to some one who will. We are New Deal Legislation has participated — is being gen- city. Globe-trotters, adventurers, looking forward to a city of half and their school teacher, none HEN the American Bar as- erated by a combination of various and capitalists flocked to Denver a million or more by 1950. That's younger than 77 years, met at a sociation convenes in Boston factors, Mr. Sloan explains. In in the seventies and eighties. Many why we want to keep every drop reunion here recently. The teacher, soon it will receive two widely dif- this country the automobile indus- "younger sons" of the British no- of Denver's annual water supply a Mrs. Smith, of Fostoria, began f and to increase the supply in teaching at the West Dayton School fering reports from a special com- try has been helped, he says, by bility and several Britons with busy cVi is all possible ways." mittee named to study the effects principal influences. Only one of well-known in Tuscola County when she was titles made the city ASK YO U H DHUC-GI'il of New Deal legislation on the these, he points out, has its roots their headquarters for extensive One way in which Denver plans 16. She is now 86. The former rights and liberties of citizens. They in the New Deal financial schemes cattle operations, and gave glitter- to increase its water supply con- students are Mrs. Ida Putnam MatHappy Ways were made= public in Washington. and he finds that particular influ- ing parties at the old Windsor hotel stitutes an engineering romance. thews, 77, and Alonzo Lumley, 78, Good manners have been well The majority report, signed by ence a bad one because it creates and the American house that have When the Moffat tunnel was dug, both of Mayville, and Tunis Rice, defined as happy ways of doing John p. Clark, Cheyenne, Wyo.; a temporary fool's paradise in not faded from Denver's memory. an eight-foot-square pilot tunnel 77, of Caro. our duty. which sales and earnings are balFred H. Davis, Tallahassee, Fla.; was carried through the ConBefore its irrigation empire was Ionia—When Leslie Nelson, 39, George L. Buist, Charleston, S. C, looned by extraordinary govern- even dreamed of and while its tinental Divide beside the large about town with a new and Charles P. Taft II., Cincinnati, ment expenditures. railway bore. Denver leased this appeared mineral kingdom was still undecar and purchased $300 worth of Ohio., "deplored" the action of Asserting that political extrava- veloped, Denver's location was of small tunnel, and plans to bring new furniture two days after a burPresident Roosevelt in reducing gance has created a highly undevalue; but young Denver, de- through the towering mountain glary had been committed, the sus- Take if our Choice of congress to a "rubber stamp" body sirable and artificial stimulus, Mr. littfe spite surveys, clung stubbornly to range hundreds of millions of galto carry through his progrem. Sloan urges that such spending be the belief that in some way the lons of water that now flow into picions of the local sheriff were FLY PAPErf FLY RIBBONFLY SPRAY aroused. Questioned as to his af"Novel legislative and govern- halted before it is too late to stave transcontinental railway, when it the Pacific ocean. fluence, Nelson was said to have mental trends of the New Deal are off disaster. came, could be pushed through the In education Denver's fame Is confessed to six safe burglaries just as uncertain today as they mountains west of the city. When, great. Educators from the two were two years ago," the report Oil Men and Companies | TmgkfaMAti/ Fly Ptp«r to•ft* instead, the lines of steel were ex- hemispheres have beaten a path which netted him $900. The thefts I makes them lard afctttbu ban U» said. "Laws specifically proposed Accused of Conspiracy tended through Cheyenne, a hun- to this far-away city at the base included the Ionia Post Office and leading fly «rterminrtar be 3rt as emergency measures with limitSOycvft CtaatStcttotftf! dred miles to the north, Denverites of the Rockies to study its scheme a railroad ticket office. HARGED by the government • HMBEfPSIsBVVX ABSwtpVnBnsMM ed life have been declared by imSault Ste. Marie—With 7,591,157 with conspiracy to violate the put aside their disappointment and of teachers' salaries, its indefatigain tfa« Junior lift in «n»' portant members of the administra- anti-trust quickly raised the capital to build ble efforts to keep the subject-mattons of iron ore and 2,197,157 tons law by combining to domtion to be the beginning of perma- inate the purchasing of oil in the a connecting line to the new high- ter which it teaches abreast of all of soft coal establishing new five- Tttftefcot Fly Ribbon i nent changes in national policy. worthwhile developments, and even year highs, a total of 10,950,748 tons fe« aiaptndtd- Iron CBUAC T e x a s , Louisiana way. or tny other outef'tte"There has been a continuing its school architecture. and Oklahoma fields of freight passed through the Sault wtD With this rail contact with the wtypfee*. Unumfly detn conflict between such officials as to and to fix prices of eastern settlements established and locks in July, bringing the total for u d teAvfflitni Arawjyt The "Denver Plan" for teachers* whether a new social and economic gasoline in the Mid- with the steady growth of mining salaries has been adopted by many the 1936 season to 29,532,527 tons. order is in the making or the old Ttmltfcot Fly Spray * dle West, 58 per- in the mountains, Denver drew to municipalities. The boom swept through the entire institutions are being perfected so >pw itlly prBpiftd. Super* sons, 23 petroleum herself in a few years direct lines major commodity category, accordA Practical School powerful. K i l l ! flii» that they may be preserved." concerns and three of railroad from the east. Now ing to the recent lock report and .qttfcUy,j«fefcaral»t» Another famous part of the DenThese findings were challenged publishing compa- these highways of steel radiate bumaas. furaisUBfi «f % ^ ' was the first time in years that tonby Kenneth Wynne, New Haven, nies were indicted north and south and east from ver educational system that draws nage for any one month went over educators from afar is its OpportuConn.; Fred L. Williams, St. Louis, by a federal grand Denver like the ribs of a fan. nity school.' From 8:30 o'clock in the ten thousand ton mark. Mo., and James G. McGowen of jury in Madison, A result of this railway converthe morning until 10 at night this Jackson, Miss. In their minority Wis. A m o n g the Traverse City—An appropriation report they said: "If the purpose prominent defend- gence on Denver has been to make practical school is open alike to of $150,000 to advertise Michigan as of the resolution creating the spe- H. M. Dawes ^ ^ a r e Edward G. the city one of the country's lead- youngneople and old. In it elderly a tourist and resort state will be men'^nd women, denied the educa- asked of the next Legislature by the cial committee was to get the opin- Seubert of Chicago, president of ing livestock markets. Never Lost Dream ion of the American Bar association the Standard Oil Company of Indition they wished in youth, receive four Michigan tourist and resort asWhile the transcontinental rail- high school instruction; men dis- sociations, it was indicated at a regarding legislative trends de- ana ; Henry M. Dawes of Evanston, signed to meet changing economic 111., president of the Pure Oil com- ways went their busy ways north placed in one occupation may learn meeting of directors of the West and south of Denver, the city never another; and young men and wom- Michigan Association. The Upper | conditions, the report is superficial. and many officials of Stand- lost It does not deal with the problem pany, dream of a line straight en may be trained in practical arts, Peninsula Development Bureau has Oil, Pure Oil, Deep Rock, So- west its but concerns itself with a short ard through the mountains. from barbering to bricklaying, and approved this amount and the Eastand various other oil Concurs Ointment into range attack on surface triviali- cony-Vacuum Greatest and most tireless of the from cooking to etching. ern Michigan and Detroit associa- Rub concerns and their subsidiaries. Alleave overnight—then wash with rich ties." Most of Colorado's institutions of tions were expected to concur in lathering, so in the list are Warren C. Piatt dreamers was David H. Moffat, medicated CutScurs Soap. of Cleveland, publisher of the Na- who visioned a six-mile tunnel higher education are naturally con- the action. Kelps clear out dandruff, relieves Hchy tional Petroleum News and Piatt's through the Continental Divide un- centrated in and near Denver. In Congressman Zioncheck scalp and promotes lastrom hair Jackson—Jackson can thank its He not only the city is the University of Denver, Oilgram; his two publications and der James Peak. growth* Start the Cuticura treatment Commits Suicide forgotten sandstone deposits for the dreamed, but worked, and spent ARION A. ZIONCH&CK the Chicago Journal of Commerce. his fortune on the project. He did founded, when the community was fact that it has the second largest today. FREE Sample—wriwXfcticmV The indictment charged that the little more than a village, by Col- penal institution in the world. Henry Dept 32, Maiden, Mass. brought to an end in charnot live to see his plan realized, acteristic manner his checkered defendant oil companies formed but on July 7, 1927, the Moffat tun- orado's territorial governor, John B. Lathrop, who had built a cfty career and his life. He leaped to pools in the east Texas and mid- nel was holed through. Now a Evans, the same John Evans who prison and workhouse at Buffalo, his death from a window of his continent fields for the purpose of standard-gauge railway operates previously had founded Northwest- had just moved to Jackson when office in Seattle shortly after he had purchasing gasoline at artificially double tracks through it into Mid- em university, Illinois. the location of a prison was being filed for re-nomination to the con- high prices from independent pro- dle Park, opening up a new mounThirty miles to the northwest, at discussed in 1838. Detroit and Napogressional seat he had held for two ducers, and in furtherance of such tain realm to Denver. Boulder, is the University of Colo- leon were contesting for the institerms. His friends attributed the a scheme were members of associrado. So attractive are the moun- tution with Jackson. Lathrop reYou sense Denver's most aston- tains suicide to w o r r y over a psy- ations which included the indepenthat cast their shadows on the f \ 0 you suffer bumbo, teesly.ot chiatrist's advice that he take a dents. Further it was charged that ishing physical achievement only campus and beckon for week-end ported that the Jackson sandstone hS toe frequent uriiwiion/ bsdcseSe, when you let your imagination deposits were of the grade needed long rest from politics. His trouble independent refiners to aid the hetdeche, dtssineti, lost of snsiBVr rambles that the University of Colhad been diagnosed as dementia plan, had curtailed their production wander back seventy years. It is orado is as busy in summer as in for building stone, and that settled ieQ ptint, twuliass end ••I frmitnf vvrw«IH>y« W W peMsess pail hard to believe that barely threethe argument. of gasoline. mffi " praecox. under the eyet? Are you tired, sen* winter. This, said Mr. Piatt, is exactly score and ten years ago this great _ . — JII.-ML f ell unttnatg and See* Lansing—The Conservation DeFifteen miles west of Denver, at mow W I I H n wfonsjT what the oil companies did with the city, with its hundreds of miles of partment reports that its forGolden, is the Colorado School of American Track Team streets, lined now with fine, towerapproval of Secretary of the Interi[hen flive teste thouQht a) yow fire crews battled 1,200 forest Victor in Olympics or Harold L. Ickes, administrator ing shade trees, was raw prairie. [Mines. Growing up in the edge of est IGHT days of track competition of the NRA petroleum code, whan Not a tree was in sight; only a an important mining region, the in- fires during July. The fires burned nHs excess waste to stay in j^woeeV that brought out many record- efforts were being made to limit the level plain covered with sparse stitution is one of the outstanding over 17,500 acres, it was estimated. eadte poison and upset I M isnoft The state's r e g u l a r fire-fighting mining schools of the country. In breaking performances showed that production of gasoline, prevent the grass, dry and brown through most syttejB. it in 1926 was established the first force consists of 135 towermen, or the American team was unbeatable flow of excess quota oil into mar- of the year. , t U»e PeafftfJBs, Peon* m_kt\ course in geophysics in American lookouts, 150 fire wardens, 840 "key As the outlander drives about in the matter of total points. These ket channels, and raise prices in Denver he is struck by the beauti- .colleges. Graduates of this* latest man" who art paid per fire, and Yankee athletes piled up a total of that turbulent industry. the woM O Y e r l ^ S a get Ike eaa» 203 points. Finland was second "The government's charge turns ful lawns. There are no excep- course in mining lore fare forth with emergency help drawn from 28 sine, Mm iwiid DeeVs at ssy > • # with 10 1-4, Germany third with on whether a practice legally start- tions. Whether he views the grass dynamite and radio sets, electro CCC camps and WPA p r o j e c t s . 69 8-4 and Japan fourth w i t h ed and carried on under the recent plot of a humble cottage or the magnets, torsion balances, and oth- Fifty trucks, 35 tractors and plows, 51 1341 Jesse Owens, the marvel- NRA petroleum code was continued park of a near-palace, the lawns er devices of modern magic to map a radio car, an airplane, and a fleet ous colored lad from Ohio State in illegal manner after th4 NRA are perfect. rock strata lying hundreds and thou- of pickup cars complete the equipuniversity, captured four g o l d was killed by the United States SuThe price of the beautiful lawns sands of feet bentath the surface of ment. ^nedals for firsts in the 100 meter preme court," Mr; Piatt sakL Is much moisture. At certain ] the ground. By Edward W. Pickard A . Vast Area .*•: .:- ? " > - 4 - • •' ; : &::5 *-'' i ; S W TANGLEFOOT C M RidYourself of Kidney Poisons E DOANSPlLLS IfrfffBlK : - ¾ ^ »• ; m^rm*h!T Jmvmppitiuniuyy DUpafcfi We3net3ay, August 19, 1936 Notes of 25 Years Ago Neighboring Notes GENERAL INSURANCE ftau N* 1 and S9F1 jrlncknes/, Michigan DISPATCH O F AUGUST 17, 1911 . •v, • • > " - ti TJie onion-raisers of Jackson and Ingham counties are having one of PERCY ELLIS their best y e a r s , despite the dry wea-J ther. Most of the muck lands of AUCTIONEER this section were in use this year. Salts a Speciality. Topping a n d crating the onions will Phone Pinckney 1 9 - F l l soon start. Harold Smith has rented the Stockbridge hotel and will operate it. C. ALBERT FROST Over 500 books have been repaired k J U S T I C E OK T H E P E A C E and mended by Mrs. Susie Hulce of Pinckaey, Michigan Chelsea, under the Washtenaw county W P A project. Judge George Sample of Ann ArDR. a R. McCLUSKEY bor is said to be recovering in a PeDENTIST \ oria, 111. hospital following an oper (Successor to Dr. li. G. Gordaniex), ation. In the inquest into the cause of the 1 1 2 ½ N. Michigan death of Wm. Greening of Iosco, who Office h o a r s was killed July 23 in an auto acci- j 8:30.12.-00 1:00—5:00 dent near Fowlerville, the coroner's . Tuesday and Saturday evenings j u r y "brought in a verdict, t h a t ' said Mr. Stevens cutting in front of 7:0ftL.8:30 said Buick car too close, caused the P h o n i 220 Howell accident which resulted in the death of Mr. Greening. The jury mad? no recommendations. Prosecutor BerriDON W. VANWINKLE man will examine a transcript of the Attorney a t Law testimoney. He stated that he had 1IIIGAN has mat'e real A n d r e m e m b e r : if y o u f a i l e d t o at received Tetters from Greening's atOffice over First State Savings Bank p r o g r e s s in c l e a n i n g u p p l a c e t h e s e t a x e s on t h e 10-year torney and Roy B u m s , who was also Howell, Mich. its back tax problem. hurt, asking that no criminal action plan heretofore, you still m a y do D u r i n g l a s t y e a r ' s d r i v e rlfty-f:ve be taken against Stevens. Stevens S J b y p a y i n g t h e first t w o p a r t s , i. JAY P. SWEENEY ^ employed in a Howell garage. m i l l i o n s of d o l l a r s in t a x e s f o r together with 4% interest, and a Judge Collins held a short court ATTORNEY AT LAW 1932 a n d p r i o r y e a r s w e r e p u t o n , ion Tuesday of last week. He s e s s H O W E L L , MICHIGAN s m a l l e x t r a c h a r g e o n t h e first a 10-year p l a n , b y p a y m e n t of t h e granted divorces to Mildred from Office at Court H O U M first p a r t . payment. Morris' Klase, and to Helen from Robert Bordon. Julia Panck was given N o w t h e second p a y m e n t beDRS. H. F. & C. L. SIGLER $8 temporary alimony from Carl comes due. PINCKNEY, M i p H . Panck, Jr. for the care of two childOffice Hours 1:00 to 2:30 P. M. ren. ' You must meet this payment Benjamin Borgeman, charged with '. If You can />;/> now ni full You promptly in order to rernin the negligent homicide in th? death of [ GUS RISSMAN fullest benefits you secured by \ W . E . Murphy has returned from Oswald Cook, whose car the former hill Save 8% to SO' t, in Future a t, • ' , ' fittsuurg, Penn., and Washdriving when it crashed into a putting your back taxes on the t J w a s LICENSED MASTER PLUMBER Interest Payments. truck near Brighton, pled guilty beington, D. C. 10-year plan. Plumbing and Heating Claude Danforth has resigned his fore Judge Collins and was placed on I We Do Plumbing and Heating of AH ' " p H O S E who are in a financial posiposition with Mrs. A. M. Utley and probation. He is to pay the county j See y o u r c o u n t y t r e a s u r e r im•*• tion to do so are urged to pay up Kinds. We Handle Electric Pumps, ...-iie to Bay City to accept a position all exne"s?s and also his hospital bill j the remai ling portion of their back m e d i a t e l y . M a k e y o u r s e c o n d Septic Tanks and Water Preaetir* with a coffes concern as salesman. out of his bonus. I taxes now on the 10-year plan. For p a y m e n t , w i t h i n t e r e s t of. 4 % . Recent applications for marriage i Tanks Clayton Placeway will work for Mrs. them there is a substantialssaving, Y o u r p r o p e r t y s h o u l d be a c h e r l»cen?es filed in this county a r e : C. j ranging from 8% on the t h i r l year's 611 E. Gd. Ri Howell, Mich. Utlcy. n i s h e d p o s s e s s i o n . P r o t e c t it b y Payment to 30% on the tenth year's '^e KnieMs of the Maccabees will L. Nadeau, 28, of Plymouth and Mer-1 fnone 610 Repair Work of All Kinds k e e p i n g your tax record clear. na VanTassel, 20, of Howell. Earl j installment. Pay now and save. hold a county convention at Howell C. Peckens. 21. and Frieda May Wov-' i .-.u^ust i •>. £'. A. Jones of Ann Arbor and Judge Cole of Fowlerville den, 20, both of Fowlerville. Walter b 25, and Arlene Smith, 2 0 / ' areT hthe speakers. local real estate DcWolf, - following Cecil G. Hill. 24, b o t h 0 f Hamburg. transfers are lifted: Elizabeth Kelly of- Lprism^ and Madelon Imus SoV., J U S T I C E OF T H E P E A C E to James Treadway, 120 acres, $4,- 2 4 , of Howell. Pinckney, .Mich. 800* G. W. Hendee and wife to I\lizOwosso will ballot at the S e p ^ ' " Old Age Pension o b . l h Kelly, lot in Pinckney, $900; her primary election on whether to Applications Made Out H. G. Rriggs to H. H. Swarthout, lots !ii'r,v food stores to remain open on Sunday. in Pinckney, $1300. Va'do Herman, former editor of — o " • ' NORMAN REASON the Brighton Argus, has pm-chased R E A L E S T A T E BROKER tho Richmond Review of the Bi ck Estate. Mr. Herman was in Alaska Farm, Residential Property and leaving Lake Frontage a Specialty. I Also DISPATCH OF AUGUST 18, 1886 for several years after Prir:Mon. • Have City Property to Trade. ??i=s Edith Gr^en of Petersburg Pinckney, Michigan P. Monroe cut a uull-thi-tio yes- ha-; been assigned to Livingston counOF MORTGAGE »««a«i3aa;uttftttaaaaMtscfii teH'iy which was 9 ft. C'j inches in ty as nurse under the provisions of NOTICE Default having b;-i'ii made the National Security Act. in th" fl MARTIN J. LAV AN height. VVa'or consumption hit its highest conditions of that ceitain MDI i w.^r r ATTORNEY AT LAW Pinckney took n nicked-un t am to peak in Howell during the month of dated the eighteenth (Liy 3f June; • ;i Phone 13 Brighton Anderson last Saturday and took July v.-lten f) 1 - million galbn.« were if) 11», executed by Tuft*Van S\vk I bad hrnlin$r. and Jennie Van S y t ^ ' l , as his wi-iV Cash & Cavanaugh have opened up pumped^ The Farm r's Vni-m Party will and in her own right, as moiv:M,- v*. a funeral store in die Beehive buildhave a full county ticket in Washl<>- to The Federal l/\nd Hank «;;• . : i i i t QBDER F O R PUBLICATION— ing. naw county, The candidates are Hep. }' ;ni l, ., body corporate, of St. I'.iK1, I! NO DOWN PAYMENT — h Final Administration Account. L »™ ^ ^ 'X ^rZ ^ J ! Louis Shew.-in, Dexter; Sheriff, Prof. Minnesota, as niortji-;ie;"e, fih'd 1' >r a SMALL MONTHLY PAYMENTS S T A T E OF MICHIGAN, buiM.ng John ^ t e n t s rvv ou c a Norman English, Ann Arbor; Pros., v,uv>rd in the otfic . • <>t» the liegi.t. v Some Go<£cl Used Cars from Which To Select" Tha P r o b a t e Court for tha County) *?• W ' l c o x ^ 1 M l k f i . , ^ % ^ ' Wm. Kcr.nnkz, Ann Arbor; Drain c,f Deeds of Living-ton County, Mi.h- a y of Livingfon. !work>ng three colts on C< St-ckCom.. llrv. Ransom. Yi'dlanti, negro j ^ (he tweiu\-fifth day 'of June, i i n ] ori from $50 up to $450.00 h At a session of said Court, held at *>™}w [j< ^ k - r nlf 'f' . ^ mini.her; Judge of Probat<;, J V r r y j<»i!), roeortlAj in Liber 1 1 :i of Mortik; the Probate Office in the City of P « ' f ; of J» / , . 1 ee. !e, Mike L » c > Martin, Ann' Aibor; Reg. of ~" Deeds gages, oit^^frrrges 214, -].">. 21 (\ and HOWELL, in said County, on the ^ 1 ^ M l s \ L! e owti; s , 1! - Jf V n l ^ r t ' i h w i s Mi\s. Winifred Proctor, Ann Arbor 217 thereof; which moitgage wa> 17th day of July, A. D. 1936. ! «5"V . . , / ° l u ° ^ u ' and ™ ' Trea?., Leonard Field, Ypsijanti fil"d for record in the olVic of the ' - Lj vnM<! pored by a vicious ball bundaj and Present, HON.* WILLIS L. Shields, Northfteld; Cor- Register of Deeds cf Ir.gham County, b id could could be be sumsum Clerk, Win. died before medical aid Judge of Probate. Richardson, > psilanti, Michigan, en the second dry of July, II •'"•"• Samue In tha Matter of the Estate of 1 <)!!>, recoi'deii in Ihbcr 201 of MortSim Gilchrist has exchanged his negro undertaker. a COLLISION, PAINTING Thomas Richardson, Deceased. ...ft.i..i u n e n n ^ j ^ gages, on page !) thereof, t h F. C. Sh.-ntT Claude Fawcett has re1 1 Neva Grainger having filed in said Y, "* ^farm, a mile north of town, and turned from Pet->ke>- where he w m t NOTICIO IS IIKRKIJY GIVEN Rose AND BUMPING SERVICE court her final administration ac- ^ n ' n o ' ^ r "sion ^ " ' after two Indian boys who ran away That said mortgage will be forecount, and her petition praying for U K * n G l E m b l e r V ^ i n g v o u n < r Howell from a Livingston county home where closed, pursuant to powc j- of sal', U.C.C.Terms: $25.00 per month buys any new Ford the allowance thereof and for the as-' £ ^ *<™ suddenlv^Ionday. He they had been placed by an aid soci and the premises therein described SEE HARItY FRAS1KR AFTKU YOU ARE wgnment and distribution of the resi- was ^ ' [ ' ^ / J M , ey a,s a ?on of Mr. Cha's. Love of thi* ety. One formerly lived in l\-toskej due of said estate, and the other in Calumet. , . The Southwest Fractional Quarter THROUGH SHOPPING. It Is Ordered, That the 17th day vtownship. " ' ; r " ; , , A n . « own-t,-.^ n voo-nnt Kd. Kallak broke both , of Section Six, Township One North, ami? „MwinVWV Marshall Allen . . . . , , of August, A. D. 1936, - — - » - ' - ^ ' Marshall Allen a l i e n e d a ^ . ^ r a n t T'lesdav when ho fell from a ladder R o n j ; o Three Fast; less on • ac?-<-heroat ten o clock Sheridan, and kept him in the . _ . Detroit Creamery t o f o r c CO nveycd to Francis P.roughtin tne i 9 r e n o o n , ai said probate ofH . n g Fowlorviih the K(i w a s fined wbuild'ngs h i l o p a m t lat on by that certain warranty deed datfice, be and is hereby appointed for ' ° « U P ^ -• d ^ l R a s o d Tuesday. Harry Morlock of Fowlerville sus- ed September 4, 18G!>, and recorded c examining and allowing said account ^ *™ ° ^ , h a r ( l w a r 0 store is tained a fractured shoulder Inst in Liber 47 of De.'ds, on page 5 0 1 ; and h e a n n g said petition; 'u,:t.« vAmn^eiod Thursday when the team he was Livingston County; BRIGHTON, MICH. It I . F u r t h e r Ordered. T h a t public , ¾ T n a d ^ L o d g e of Good Tern- driving ran away and thre him out. The North Half of Fractional .SecEdward Lewis, Michigan's heaviest t i o n ^ Township One North, Range mar., died at Eaton Rapids last week, -phree East, less the East eighty acres For the past two y a r s he was con- thereof, Livingston County; fined to his bed. He traveled with The South Fractional Half of the circuses for 15 years and weighed in said county. Southwest Fractional Quarter of Will Davis has rented the Gregory 575 pounds. At the time of his death Willis L. Lyons, Section Thirty-one, Township Two me^t market The Grand Trunk railroad is bui.u- he only weighed 300 pounds. Judge of Probate. North, Range Three East, Livingston ins• stockvards at Anderson. | Commissioner of A p i c u l t u r e Jam -s County; A. true copy. Martin Kuhn will teach the Plain- Thomson, has announced a drive Celestia Parshall, Also that certain parcel of Six and f,PlH Jrnool next year. against hamburger and barbequc five hundredth? acres in Ingham Register of Probate. B u s V . new mill Pt Plainfield is all road-side places, where health and County, described a s : Commencing at ' o enclosed and ready for painters. , : sanitary rules are ignored quarter post of Section One, Town The rain last Thursday ended the Milford has completed her $44,000 ^ . Q n e N o r t h > R a n « , 0 T w o E a s t o n ORDER FOR P U B L I C A T I O N - . drv "pell and checked the fire in the WPA sewerage disposal project_ and c .^ u t h e n c e N o r t h nfty.Beven Appointment of Administrator. Bialey swamp at Plainfield. About will vote on .Sept. 29 on a $5,000 ^ e n c e W e s t ^venteen rods, d WPA bond issue to replace w a t e r ! t n e n c o South fifty-seven rods, thence STATE OF MICHIGAN, 100 acres had been burned over. East seventeen rods to the place of Tha Probate Court for the County Wm. Keedle threshed 155 bushels mains, -0of Livingston. of wheat the other day in 55 minutes beginning; ! At a session of said Court, held at for John VanHorn of Pettysville. will be sold at public auction to the Probate Office in the City of Ed. Mercer spent a couple of days the highest bidder for cash by the Howell in said County, on the 29th at his home in Pettysville last week. Sheriff of Livingston County, at th» day of July, A. D. 1936. He ioined his show again at Gregory. front door of the Court House, in the City of Howell, in said County P r e s e n t : Hon. Willis L. Lyons, The Howell school board has called and State, on Tuesday, November 17, Judge of Probate. a special meeting to consider build1936, at two o'clock P. M. There is In the Matter of the Estate of ing a new $6,000 school. due and payable at the date of thi3 Julia F, Farnam, Deceased. Henning and Forbes, charged with notice upon the debt secured by said Katherine E. Fitzpatrick having selling liquor at thr> Island Lake enmortgage, the sum of $7059.44. ' filed in said court her petition pray campment, plead guilty before Judge Dated August 15, 1986. ing that the administration de bonis p o w e r s and were assessed $25 nne "A gossip speaks ill of all. and all THE FEDERAL LAND BANK non of said estate granted to Lee a n f j c 0 S t s amounting to $95 in all. ipca\ xtl o/ her." OP SAINT PAUL Lavey or to some other suitable perp r e ( j Hill, while blasting stone on AUGUST Mortgage* son, , the James Young farm n e a r Bright,20— End etftvt*4*yAtlinds DON VAN WINKLE It Is Ordered, That the 31st day o n > Wednesday, lost a thumb and two eycl«ns. M0 ships 4 tssbltd, Attorney for the Mortgagee. of August, A. D. 1936, at ten o'clock: finf?erSi (179. Howell, Michigan in the forenoon, at said probate of-j £ e v . Fr. Garry of Brighton has tl—Csrmsni iheet down thstr f/ fice, be and is hereby appointed for bought James Hyne's Pasc%s colt for ftrit British sirplstis. 191«. ( hearing said petition; $200. • ^nn_. It b F u r t h e r Ordered, Thet public Willis Loree of Fowlerville report*jt 22-Amcrtet iHni tht Knt In* notice thereof be given by publica-j e d his horse and buggy ^ . ^ n i r t o i ' ^ 7 \ tenutiensl yscht rscs» tion of a copy of this order, once e n f rom him in front of the Abbott i each week for three successive weeks g t o r e there Tuesday. It was tracea ' * ^ ^ > - W - A h«vy snewfiD hits'; j'^Js^^T' wemrn Ntw York, tS9t' —^ * — •r, L ^, ,1 ] ' Reuben E. Finch, 72, died at his ^ome- here on August 11. Surviving Are his wife and a daughter, Mr*, Emil Brown. He was a member of Waddell 1 Post, G. A. R., Livingston Tent, K. 0 . T. M. and Livingston Waddell Post, G. A. R., Livingston Lodge No. 76, F. & A, . Funeral services were held at the home Saturday afternoon with Livingston Lodge No. 76, F. & A. M. being in charge. The Pinckney school will open on September 4. St. Mary's picnic was another decided success this year. A. D. Thompson acted as toastmaster, and speeches were made by Senator J a m e s Lee, Detroit, and James Greene of Howell. The Stockbridge team cancelled the ball game at the last minute and a picked-up team consisting of Howell, Fowlerville, and Standish and Berry of Stockbridge played. Pinckney won 8 to 0. 700 dinner tickets were sold and -the net proceeds were $420.00. The case of Henry Ev?rs vs. J. W. and J. F. McGuinness was settled out of court Monday, Evers receiving $70. In 1909 Evers bought a team of horses at the McGuinness auction in Dexter township. Later he brought suit, claiming ths team was misrepresented. Lewis Howlett represented Mi. Evers and M. J. Cavanaugh, the defendant. B o m to Matt Brady and wife of Howell on August 4, a ten pound girl. N. H. Caverly has leased the Park Hotel a t Northville and moved his Michigan Real Estate is W o r t h P r o t e c t i n g Make your 2nd p a y m e n t on the 10-Year P l a n before September 1, 1936a MI Note: N. O.Frye Jly Order of Augmented Administrative JSoard of State of ZMichigar Ncies of 50 Years Ago II Used Car and Truck Sale 3 Fords, Chevrolet*, Plymoutha.Oldg3 mobiles Etc 3 3 WUlis L. Lyons, Judge of Probate. A true copy. Celestia Parshall, Register of Probate, being intoxicated and paid $15 and costs. 1 o \ • • The Highland school district has purchased three new buseg to use In transporting school children. The price of the Dispatch during 8««« *«* *»****»*. 11.00 \**g2tfs; 5¾%.¾¾ /t\ Ford Sales & Service 24—Two ArqtrtcsM tni erets* [ Atlantic trip in lourtMn* foot host. IttL 2*—Unltsd Sutss trtxUlfl*] Ksnsas in suts si rtbsi* eeevllSe. ' I t 'Cnksfs't fstneeiMeVkks c-v.a 4¾¾ -t.v SMlsVy«J4VSe<»/' , r^^1V®£S«* ^,.,. . : , . ^ a ^ a ^ a ^ a M ataMatfattalaMM / '-*^ ' ¥M! ,W.v w&?-. The Pinckney DUj m %- Howell Theatre & *#>,.. WED., THURS., f RI., 19-20-21 MARION DAVIS "HEARTS DIVIDED" WITH DICK POWELI CHARLES RUGGLES CLAUDE RAINS_ED. EVERETT HORTON News Buster Keaton Comedy—"Blue Blazes" Betty Boop Popular Science >v a• Double Feature SAT. Aug. 22 WO. 1 M a t 2 P. M., 10c-20c NO. II "TREACHERY RIDES THE RANGE" "THE GOLDEN ARROW" WITH BETTE DAVIS GEORGE BRENT EUGENE PALLETTE DICK FORAN CATHERINE DOUCET CARQL HUGHES WITH w> DICK FORAN PAULA STONE CREIG REYNOLDS Color Classic Popular Science / T SUN., MON., Aug. 22-24 Mat. Sun. 2 P. M., Cont. MARY BOLAND—CHARL1E RUGGLES IN "EARLY TO BED" WITH GEORGE BARRIER GAIL PATRICK "El Brendei" Comedy News Short Subjects I' I r, TUES., WED., THURS., FRI. -~ ^ ^ 4—DAYS—4 Aug. 25-26-27-28 "THE POOR LITTLE RICH GIRL" ? WITH SHIRLEY TEMPLE ALICE FAYE, JACK HALEY, GLORIA STUART MICHAEL WHALEN Comedy News Betty Boop Vitaphone Headline t Ate*! Mr. and - Mrs. Adney Reynold* have returned to their home at Middleton, after spending a few days at the home of Cleo Smith, having been called here by the death of their daughter, Mrs. Cleo Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Willie Blades and two daughters, Barbara and Billy, of Ann Arbor, spent the.week end with Mr. Blades' parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Blades. Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Warmer and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bambulis and two children, Miss Georgia and Chas. Jr., of Detroit, were Sunday guests of Mr. Wehner's and Mrs. Bambulis' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wehner. Dr. Russell A. Hayner of Highland Park visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. James H. Hayner, Wednesday. Miss Helen Wenderlein is home, after attending summer school at Michigan State Normal college at Ypsilanti. Harley Young of Detroit is spending some time at the home of his aunt, Mrs. Edward G. Houghton and family. Mrs. Howard brown and daughter, Patty Joe, of Ann Arbor, spent the week end with Mrs. Brown's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Shannon, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Henry M. Queal visited Mrs. QueaPs aunt, Mrs. Helen A. Rogers at Dexter, Monday. Announcement has just been made of the marriage of Miss Claudine Featherly, daughter of Thomas W. Featherly of Hamburg village and Jack Brogan of Brighton. They were married last March. Mrs. Carol Lysle and daughter Miss Ella, of Tulsa, Oklahoma, came Saturday night to visit Mrs. Nellie E. Pearson. Mrs. Charles Root has returned to her home at Ashley from a visit with her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Buckalew. o Plainfield M r s. Clayton Anderson spent Thursday afternoon with Mrs A. L. Dutton. The W. M. S. met with Mrs. SwadCOMING—Jane Withers in "Little Miss Nobody" ling, Wednesday afternoon. Each Robert Taylor - Lorelta Young in "Private Number" one present presented the host with "Rhythm on the Range" a small gift, after which a light lunch of cake, cookies and ice tea was served by Mrs. Jessie Topping and Mrs. Laura Hutson. Mrs. Florence Holmes spent the past few days with her daughter, Mrs. Miller, in Holt. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Dutton called ENTIRE WORLD IS WATB Tuesday on Rev. and Mrs. J. H. ReilCOLD WATER. CIVILIZED ley near Howell. HUMAN BEINGS NEED Mr. Orla Jacobs, Lawrence PeterLOCAL LONG DISTANCE son, Clyde Jacobs, Mr. and Mrs. A. WATER. THERE ARE OVE L. Dutton were in Howell, Tuesday tQO USES FOR HOT WATE on business. STOCK—GRAIN—CREAM IN THE HOME I -• Mw. Mary Sharp's funeral was held at Plainfield church Tuesday afix. ternoon at 2 p. m. Rev. Swadling Produce of All Kinds officiated. Burial in Wright cemetery, Mrs. Sharp will be remembered as ...., ./•_ . 0113 of Iosco's aged citizens 90 last AUTOMATIC June. t ELECTRIC HOT WATER Rev. Swadling and wife were dinner guests of his daughter, Mrs. C. SERVICE IS ONE Anderson. Their daughter, Geneva, OF THE FINEST WEEKLY TRIPS MADE TO DETROIT went home with them. CONVENIENCES Mr. Frank Watters and Bertha and Mrs. Ernest Watters attended a THAT ELECTRICITY cousin's- funeral in Sparta, Tuesday. BRINGS TO VOUft Mrs. F. E. Gauss spent the past HOUSEHOLD, IT week with her daughter and family, Mrs. Sam Goer in Toledo, and they] REQUIRES NO came home with her for the week end ATTENTfON WHATEVER Mrs. Mettie Watters and Mrs. Guy ASK ABOUT IT TODAY Watters are sick and under the docAT YOUR DETROIT tor's care. Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Kinsey and EDISON OFFICE, Mrs. Donald DuBois and MiSs Donna DuBois of Shepherd; Mr. and Mrs. daughters and Mrs. Jessie Topping' Charles Warner of Ann Arbor, Dr. attended Mrs. Floyd Howell's funeral" Russell A. Hayner of Highland Park. Sunday. Miss Mable Jackson of Detroit; Mi. Mrs. Jessie Topping was a guest Mr. and Mrs. Albert Dink<;l and and Mrs. Hunter M. Galatian of of Mrs. E. N. Braley Thursday evefamily spent Sunday at the Zoo. Pinckney and many others from Ann James Langley is visiting his fa- Arbor, Webster and Whitmore Lake. ning, and Mr. Richard Baxter and Richard, Jr. called Sunday after- Margaret, of Howell, spent the past ther and brother in Detroit for a few The Lakeland Circle of King's noon. week with the former's parents, Mr. flmiiiiiimmiimmiiimmnimui iiiiiiiiiuimmMi7Minnnniiimiiuiiiiinii* days. 2 . . Daughters was entertained at its Aug. and Mrs. Charles McGee. The Gladstones were in Lansing on Mrs. Louis Wagner e Sunday and found Mrs. Holmes her e e t i n g f b y M i s s viola Petty* at her Harold Ludtke returned to his g her sisters from Wayne andnterUuned mhome at Lakeland. A delicious Bo daughter's, Mrs. Deland Miller, much work in Ypsilanti after his vacation. , 1 r l i n t o n e -u^.^^ „, T ..L-«I,, ,J A ,4,-.1:,.:^,.,. ::>., M day last week hemian dinner was served at 1 :00 improved. Ralph Hartley was in Howell, Wed- t g= Mr and Mrs. Clayton Parmclee of o'clock. The meeting was in charge nesday. Mr. A. J. Holmes and Dale, BarDearborn spent Saturday night and of the president, Mrs. Charles Weh2 Mrs. Katherine Gwozdzik and Sunday at1 - the Kingsley flUflJ « W i t C. v.. « i'i(,^nj .home .v...v.. . . j 4. L. Mrs. ft/lve Edward fc'Hii.ni.,! |i.'r, .with (J. Houghton-J, bara and Betty Miller of Holt helped id son, ) J l t h Mrs { Buster, of Detroit, ar Mrs. Max Musson of Marion spent ' J.' * " *'<luairt ' tern in the celebrate little Miss Janet Gtydstones at the 1 a t , n Peter Reechko home. . == Weednesdav afternoon with her par- £ * ** secretary pro Mrs. Clif- birthdav Sunday evening, while she Born to Mr. and Mrs. Mike Petjr- 5 cnt> ts, Mr. and 1 Mrs. Charbs Smith. ^t o w¾l ^C.. % .__^. V n ™ ft e meeting enjoyed a birthday cakfc with one Mrs. and son, Walt, ' . ; " " . • \u u son, Saturday, a girl who has been camdie on it. M... Harvey -. -. Craft . -- • • - '».• opened onened with singing sininner the hhymn of the S Mr. H. A. Wasfon and family at- named Katherine Elizabeth. cr, of Marion called at the C. Kings Order and Scripture reading and a! tended the Kuhn reunion at Howell I O TAND off at a distance and look at your home. 1 ley, , home ,Sunday »- - ,,, M«,.,.«,. rtr prayer by Mrs. James Jury. GuesU City „,-OU iiu H-JI > ^ ,-••-* Park, Sunday. I » J HAS everything been done that should be done f M± and Mrs uWm. > * * «~" < » were as follows, some of h "Around ' "eft this "Moi.day morning from c h S L ^ ^ Gull Lake. ton at young people "*"M«'~:',„,I \f\.. ^ i , Aii^rm whom introduced made remarks: Mrs. Paul Kings! Mrs. Galbreath in a lounion at Ply- s *,„ i„„ ,v . .. i u ^. J •- • i , i S week's stay at Gull Lai Pinckney were Sunday dinner guests , .., , . . » , . . . r>....i t.-.-—1 here icu mis . 1O"^ „• , _i_— - - - for mouth Riverside Park, Sunday, Aug. 5 to make it a real home and presei*ve its beauty and S f ° p^ui C l l r k h f X Pent last J f - V T * ^ ¾ " ^ 'd M'*° ' 16th. There were 32 present Guests g » , , § wet* with his cousin, Jr. Wagner. Richards Mrs. Floyd Sallow and Mrs. 0 Mr. Glenn Perkins of Flint called Cyril Sutton of Brighton; Mrs. Bert were Mrs. Mabel Miller and daughter, g U S e i U i n e S S : i <m his uncle, C. Kingsley, Monday. g f c ^ M ^ I q Martft T T ° O Marjorie, of Flora, Indiana, who ' S , . 2 M .. , . ^ J M „ , 7 „ , ; / W n n r o v >n rPinckney; ont3 n Miss L. b. Martin 01 10Ralph Meyers spent Tuesday night •„f l w ? f i w i npnfSiTiriftS ' Ca -> Mr.. W. W. Mann of have spent the summer in Detroit. 5 Painting the home, both inside and out, adding S with Sam Hartley. company with friends, spent Sunday A rbor, Mrs. Anna Dickinson of in Detroit. Adrian and Mrs. George Thiebolt of § ? in Mr. and Mrs. Bert Hisies of Tor- Mrs; Miller is the daughter of Dr. s evening Detroit. Mrs Clayton Musson and son s>pent D p e r f i c l d C e n t c r > A d i s c u s s i o n t v e i . nto, Canada are visiting their cousa eceased of neati Wedne Sie^ G-\Tbreath ^ ° ^ I y Pointed porches, flower boxes, fences, trellis- I ins, Mr. and Mrs. Olen Marshall and sday afternoon with Mi. and a t i v e t Q t h e a n n u f ) ] dinr>?1% w a g h e M Mrs. Mark Allison. but no definite action taken. The Mr. and Mrs. Charles Galbreath. Mr. and Mrs. C. Kingsley, son, September meeting will be held at es wi11 o u bi Miss Mirnavieve Voegts is spend- * t S S r S ^ Glenn, Mr. and Mrs. Andy Campbell the home of Mrs. Henry M. Queal, M' | ^ P ^ ? ^ dividends-both in personal in- | and daughter called on friends in Wednesday, September 9, with pot- ing her vacation with her mother, ^ ^ ™l™> Y ° U « « do the job yOUT- 8 Mrs. Jennie Voegts, and aunt, Lottie ^ ^ t T n e T l Z ^ Mr. and! **** ^ Cohoctah, Sunday eevning. luck dinner. The Memorial Prayer Brearley. Mrs. Abe Orr and husband of Berk- g s e l f 0—» was given in memory of the late ley, California; his four sisters, Mrs. g ' ** * Misses Marian and Julia McCleer Mrs. Cleo Smith, who was a member Laura Blakely, Mrs, Sam Boyce and * of the circle. Sewing for the Uni- left Detroit by boat Tuesday to visit Mr. Boyce of Lyndon Center, Mrs. 1 vcrsity hospital was distributed. Mrs. various points of interest in north- Angeline Backus of. Dexter, Mrs. Michigan. for M r s cleo J a m : ? s «J urv received the rug. On ernMrs. Byron R Kenney daughter, Hanchett « ^ ; ! Frank o ^ andand husband: " c a !Mabel, i e « in . Funeral sen*ices Mrs. Hanchett returned returned s WednesSmith'," which were held at her late account of Tuesday being the day of Webster; and a grand-niece, Mrs home in Hamburg village Wednesday a ^ e r Labor Day, the executive cornAfternoon, were vei largely attend- ™ , t t c * t f e u f h t , b e s t t 0 c h a n * e t h e caring for an invalid lady whil-c her; Rev. Cross of Leslie delivered the ed. The officiating clergyman was d a t c t 0 Wednesday. ,m a rest Misshad Esther Jorgensen was a How- sermon at the church Sunday. Rev. William F. Jerome of Detroit, A group of Boy Scouts of Troop, sister Junior Lavey is visiting his aunt,' Jj former rector of St. Stephen's Epis- tf0. 5 of Ann Arbor spent last week' j ell visitor Tuesday. if'Mrs. Mervin Niles and family of, Boice o ^iopal church at Hamburg. Dan J. camping on the lawn at Mr. and Mrs. j Mr. and Mrs. Virtfl week. copal cnurcn at namourg. u<*" o. camping on tne JBWH UI. mi. uuu.Ttm. i mi. o»i« >. ---^--. „ * »«„- ' Jackson this — —„... ^ _ Koeker, with Mrs. Nellie E. Haight Arthur Rickels at Bob White Beach,' Owosso were guests x>f Mr and Mrs Helen Lavey returned to her h o m e ' s E v e r v c o t n r V A U . » «.• L • L . S M a t the organ, sang two selections, strawberry Lake. Scoutmaster Bob L. N. McCleer, August ytn. tver "My God and Father While I Stvay" wisler was in charge of the troop. Miss Ruth Whitehead * a s home , in Jackson, Sunday and Lois win = y color you may wwh u here, and our orices 5 and "Face to Face." The pallbearers Those in attendance were: Wolvcr-lfrom Pleasant Lake, Wednesday, 10 F j spend this week with her. 13 w : n : „ * ^ ^ A § were G. Roy Merrill, Frank Bucka- ^ Patrol, J. A. Enlemine, . patrol, attend the community picinc. W l U m t e r e lew, Dan Dickerson, Ruby A. Kisby, leader, Arthur M. Rickels, assistant] Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Barnes oi The 20th Hadley reunion was held I * t YOU. | present Mr. L. &. Hadley of this g Floyd Worman and William Parkin- p a trol leader, John Richardson, Hugh Dearborn were week end visitor^oi Mrs. Saturday at Portage Lake with 78 • 3 the latter's parents, Mr. and place is the eldest member of the S son. Burial was in Hamburg cemc- Cooker and Eugene Halstead. Eagle Glenn Bishop. tery where burial rites we.e conduct- patrol, John Holland, patrol leader, 'g an family. Mrs. Peter Reechko entered ed by Hamburg Hive No. 31)2, Lady a n f j B 0 D Henderson. for Maccabees, of which Mrs. Smith was Mrs. Stephen Prusha entertained Ann Arbor hospital this week The ^rice of the Dispatch during 5 4 OMpnber. / a company of guests at her home at the removal of a goiter. Mrs. Fannie Boyce and son, Floyd August for new subscriptions and re- \ s : Among, those from away who at- p 0 b white Beach, Strawberry Lake, v tended & • funeral, were Mr. and Tuesdav, the occasion being her and grandaughter, Dorothy Boyce, newals is $1.00 per year. Now is the Mr*. A ^ e y Reynolds, Virgil Rey- birthday anniversary. Dinner was with Mrs. Boyce's daughter, Mrs. time to get your subscription fixed up. Will Plummer, attended w e McCurA card received from H. C. Vednaids and Mr. and Mi's. Cleo Rey- gcrv^j. dy reunion reumvm at *»i> MHan *»»»••«»»« last »**"" -Sunday. ^ - - - ^ ^ . i der announces their arrival in Washn o K / o f Middleton, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs, Smith Martin, in ay Mrs. Ckve Poole visited relatives m g t o n | j>, c „ and that they expect A n e e of Perrington, Mr. and company with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mn. BT Smith of Royal Oak, Mr. Foland of Brighton, attended the an- in Detroit from Thursday evening to gx> to M t Vernon. Included in his party are himself and family ao4 •MMiiillMiiiiiiniiimin'"*""''"' md MX*. E. Smith M a n d Kenneth Q a a j reunion of the Htynei school until Sunday night HAULING- TRUCKING ?•-•* i \ IT • H* MEYER Chubb's Corners Paint Up Now Gregory i / . \ • Hamburg were Mr i^^Sr^^X-?B^^sr f _ i - **'** °- iBradley We Sell KVroman Paint . — ° — - . lJ TEEPLE HARDWARE Sm « t W ^ f I SU^M VM>7, AMI Feifjr, S^Hftfi «^ j#jtVi.' , r f 'y, ftiWwXvM^^y* *W^WJ!?V mm ^w^m^mmmmm^m^mmKf^l^m i. , August 19, 1936 ie PhcEnty Dispatch* m Hie Hackney Dispatch Entered at the Fottotttc* a at Knckaey, Mich, u Second Clan Matter. flubaeriptloo |1.26 a yew m Advenes. PAUL CURLETT PUBLISHER GASH SPECIALS Raceland Salmon, Supreme Salad Dressing, Quaker Milk, Corned Beef, Jf SUN8RITE CLEANSER White Navy Beans. Shredded Wheat Fancy Blue Rose Rice, SUNRAY CRACKERS. 2 LB. PKG. Palrnolive Toilet Soap 3 CAKES M LB. CAN Hershey s Cocoa PINT CAN Fly Spray CHASE & SANBORN DATED COFFEE NO. 2 CAN RED PITTED CHERRIES "HUSKIES" WHOLE WHEAT FLAKE S 'CLEAN QUICK" SOAP FLAKES 11c 16c _8c .21c 25c LB. 2 for 2 for 5 LB. PKG 25c 25c 29c 19c JELLO 3 PKGS. POST'S BRAN FLAK....ES LGE. PKG. 17c G. H. K E N N E D Y Mrs. Louise Glenn was in Howell, Monday, on business. Marvin and Henry Shirey were in Detroit last Saturday evening. Jim Singer left this week for Bowl-1 ing Green, Ohio, to pick tomato^. Mrs. Hannah Halstead spent the week end with Jackson relatives. Carl Soper spent Thursday with his brother, Read Soper in Ann Arbor. Miss Mollie Wilson of Staten IsWherever you go, or even right at hpfiie, you'll find land, New York is the guest of Mr and Mrs. L. E. Wilson. the need of a camera these warm days when everyMiss Kate O'Connor of Howell is thing alive is astir. Truly, if ever a season can be spending her vacation with Mr. and designated the ideal time is now. So haul out the old Mrs. C. J. Teeple. Harry Murphy has purchased a camera, or if it has snapped its last picture, see us new Ford tudor sedan of the Brightfor a new one. on Ford Sales Co. Miss Carmen Leland and Mrs. Mabl-3 Smith spent last Friday and Saturday in Detroit. James Martin and son, Robbie, FILMS — ALL SIZES — Any Kodak or camera that sptent Sunday in Howell wilh M*. takes a film can be supplied here. Make this your and Mrs. Francis Martin. Mr. and Mrs. Tony Herk and famFilm Filling Station and bring all films here for deily of Detroit were Sunday visitors veloping. at the John Spears' hom<?. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Benham of Birmingham, Alabama were guests of Mr. and Mrs. M .E. Darrow a couple of days last week. Saturday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Will Euler, were her brother, F. J. Hamilton, his son, Lafave, and Mrs. Stoakcs of Detroit. Russell West of Ann Arbor, Mrs. Kathl-en Crotty and daughter, NorV E R N COR.Y, Mgr. ine, of Howell, were Sunday guests of Mrs. Jame^; Roche. Bobbie Reid of Munith visited his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur I „ ,, T> , , , , , Bullis, over the week end. ' Kussell Read was home from Pitts-, Miss Dorolhv Carr was horn-.* from Mr. and Mrs. Ted Klein and family b m ' £e'v ?«»»-. over the week .-nd. ! Detroit over the week end. of Detroit were week end guests of . 5 ; ^ I o r f f I \ n u I h i l ' r i s ?!' I> ""born ; ^ . . a n d M r s > G e o R o c h e Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Reason. visited his mother Mrs. Alma Harris. S u l l ( J a y ( l i n n e r g u e s t s o f F r e < 1 C o w . Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Weeks and Monday. h a m i n ja<?kson> daughters of Howell spent Sunday Miss Constance Harrow j , assisting; M „ D u n n i n ? ,ind wif(l of D e . e n in w,th M r n d MrS Chff0Y d e rt D e p t l U t C l o m , n e C r a t l s f?l - T -?-. - ^ * V?.?. ..A ' » ' ; troit spent Sunday with Mr. and Mr*. VanHom Hartland. 1 N. 0. Fryo. Mrs. Win, C. Wis-^el and son, Em ^ ^ ^J. ^ v Mis. H. DcoliUlo and son, Jim-, . M oV i n e W ilson of Staten Isest, of Ingram, Pennsylvania, and m Jy'* ^ .,'( ^, ^ 1 % ^•^ "i'-'ui-in*r i ^i^New vr 7 i w . ivelativi's euuvts Mrs Roval Culver of Portaee Lake i ^ "»£ laial, York, a Tuesday Mrs>. rvo.\ai ^ u i \ e r or roruixe i^a^e S G V e r a j ( j a y s last week. , o f ^ , . „• « . was Charles Hullrt guest LnaiJe callers on Tuesday afternoon at, ., • ' .. ,, • r< * n: - »uiiw. \ \ were and Hollvlock Bungalow. Mr. ami Mrs. Merwm Camp bell,, ^ a n d e Mrecent ls D < mvisitors n i l l i n j ? n a m 0f Mrs. C. L. Sigler and Miss Nellie ! MlS!5 fc*thr>r Hose I-.i-rqui.-l aim br<>- j , ,,. |y W(j).t, m . p n t v i s j t o r s .,oche. t the Gardner were in Detroit, Saturday. ; ther, Earl ot Detroit, w.-r • ^ " " " V home of Mr. Mrs.Rudike Ceo. R,of PhilJinrioiand and Buddy Mrs. Wm. Brfrtwell df Tuston,'guests of Mr and Mrs. \\, .]. Nash adelphia are spending a couple of Arizona is spending a couple of, Mr. and Mrs .Mbrrt V vo I f<r wreks with their grandparents, Mr. months with her parents, Mr. and spending the week with thuir daugh- and Mrs. A. L. Nisbett. Mrs. Frank Johnson. iter, Mrs. F. Amburgoy and Mr. Am R. (I. Webb. Ross hinchey, his Jav DavenDort and Miss Grace burgey m Detroit. ,, <laughter, Thelma, and sons, M. L. Davenport of Toledo spent the week I Norman Reason and wile sprnt and Harold attended the Webb-Kuhn •'»nd with Mr. and Mrs. Orville Nash,' the we A er«d with Mr. and .M-s. Da Mrs. Davenport returned home with las Cox in Battle Creek. 1 heir grand , . „ ,, Ihem following a ten-weeks' visit daughter, Jackie, returned home ful-l ie union in the city park at Howell, here•** -,: i lowing a three-weeks' visit here. Jsundajr. Kennedy sDrugStore •iinuiuniiiiuiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiuuiiiiiMin £ We.Deliver Phone 23F3 MPUHHIMIWIIIIIIIIU _ ^-^ _ _ ^^ 3 REASON & SONS Leonard Devereaux "was home from Goo. Arnold of near Gregory was Detroit over the week end. • in town Monday. Miss Marilda Rogers and Mrs, Geo. K iMrs - Abel Haines and children YOU GET MORE OUT |! Butters spent Thursday in Lansing. • PeM last week in Clarkston, James Docking i$ tearing do..n hi'. James Lewis and Wm. Cone spent OF THIS BANK barn and will build a garage. a couple of days in Toledo last week. Carr I Mrs. C-ne Dinkel and Miss Carmen . . .Mr. and Mrs. Wayne . - ^ and son, LB. TIN M I Leland spent the weeK end in D e - | " h a e » a « camping at Portaga LuKe Than you put into it. t r oit " Stanley Dinkel is installing UP. autoI Mi. and Mrs. John Martin and ^ . w a t e r system for the Hoir Don't risk health! This is true in more 'Donald Babcock wore in Ann Arbor, w ™ 6 Use Crisco—the LB. TIN Friday. I ^ P u t y Sheriff Lorcn Bassett of digestible e l 1 wa in ways than the interest I Airs. L. G. Devereaux spent l a s t !u r^a'a v « town on business Satshortening '•week with her daughter, Helen, in Mrs. Lee Lavey and children called Ypsilanti. on Mrs. Mae White in Howell, Monyou receive on your de« treorge Clark sold his yellow Chev rolet sedan to Detroit parties i ^ day afternoon. CANS Mr an(i Mrs Wednesday - Frank Grimes spent posits. e< Miss Lua Kuivinan of Lansing was 1 fa^ . £ * S ^ , * ^ h e r a i s L e r a n d CROSSE P01NTE week end guest of Miss Feggy I ™?V »n Midland. Ml a n d Mrs A L Give us your account aStackable. I - - - ^i^bett spent Mv Q»A M» r\ TJ l I Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. Llm-er R1CHF00D and be assured of court several v days Mrs. last Oscar week with Mi. and Beckhi spent Sprintmort. s t o f f e r ixi pai Mr. and Mrs. Vern Walker of ents in Detroit. QT. JAR Howell spent Monday evening with Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Campbell and Mrs. Maggie eous treatment and ap= BOTTLE OF FRENCH DRESSING FREE Flintoft. daughter, Leona, were recent Ann Frank Kennedy and wife of Depreciative atten t i o n, Arbor shonoers. troit visited Mr. and Mrs. Patsy G n,,S> i 0f D€troit c lled LCE. PKO. » o \ M Kennedy last Wednesday. r ^ ^ ? i r s M iL n < 5 onJ l A ? ^ * ' °' ' Campoeli, Sun- J o ph ' h BBasydlo asydlo uunderwent nde^ an opwith the assurance of day afternoon. eration on his nose at the University Frank Kennedy and wife of De- hospital, Ann Arbor, Tuesday. helpful advice and sug- troit spent last Wednesday with Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bullis were and Mrs. Patsy Kennedy, Sunday dinner guests of Mr. . and Stanley and Charles Smoyer of AkMrs. Robert Mitteer in Stockbridgc. ^ gestions. ron, Ohio, spent the week end with Miss Ruth Devereaux spent lastlB Mr. and Mrs. Ross Read. week with her aunt, Mrs. Arthur Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Appleton of Forner, and Mr. Forner in Ann ArLCE, CAN NO, 2 CANS Brighton were Sunday afternoon vis- bor. C itors at the Fred Lake home. Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Plummer and Miss Ruth Corliss of Toledo is family spent the week end with his in Howell, spending the week with her cousins, brother, Alfred Plummer and wife in j Miss Helen Tiplady and brothers. LV:5. Bay City. Under Federal !1 Mi. and Mrs. Frank Reason and Mrs. Lee Lavey, her daughter, daughter, Helen, of Cleveland are Dorothy, and son, Robert, spent SunSupervision spending the week with Mr. and Mrs. day with Mr. and Mrs. Steve O'Brien Member of Federal Deposit In* I Wilf Mercer. in Stock bridge. SM. PKG. auranee Corporation. All de- ! Mrs. George Hendee of Perry is Fred Read, in company with Dr. several weeks with Mr. and Steve Brown of Detroit, motored to posits insured up to $5,000 for ji spending Mrs. John Chambers and other rel- Charlevoix the last of the week for each depositor. j atives here. a few days fishing. LB. TIN Mr. and Mrs. Rob Kelly had as Extensive repairs are being made Sunday guests, Miss Delores Walsh, on the residence of the late Mrs. AgMr. and Mrs. Jack McLaughlin and nes Harris on Pearl St. The barn u> 5 Mrs. Will Kennedy and Miss Bes- family of Detroit, also being torn down. sie Swarthout" were in Howell, Mon- Ralph Hall, Eva Smith and Dan Howard Elliott, Democratic candiCANS day afternoon. Van Slambrook accompanied Miss date for state senate*, and Mr. WilMr, and Mrs. Will Mercer were Geneva Hawley to her home near Hams of Lansing were callers at the Dispatch office Saturday, Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Cincinnati last Monday Bud Dilloway played ball with the Mrs. Mark Allison. • Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. ORIENTAL F. E. Bowers and wife spent Patsy Kennedy were Mr. and Mrs. Hudson softball team last WednesThursday with Mr. and Mrs. John Laverne Kennedy of Detroit, Irvm day night. The game started at 11 p. m., the teams playing under arc Moran near Webbervillc. Kennedy and wife of Howell. CROSSE P01NTE Mr. and Mrs. Jack Nanry and fam-! Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Clinton had as lights. ily and Miss Agnes Roche of Ann week end guests, Mr and Mrs. Olin The Pinckney fire engine was called Arbor were Sunday guests of Mrs. Fishbeck, their daughter, Dons, Mr. to the Joe Fitch farm by a marsh OZ, BOTTLE PT.. Ella McCluskey. and Mrs. Lawrence Knesey and son, fire Monday afternoon but were unMrs. Lillian Wylie returned home Ronald, of Lansing. ' • able to do anything as no water was from Whitmore Lake Sunday where Sunday callers at the home of Mr. available. Tel. Bourbonnais, Jr. returned she spent a number of weeks caring and Mrs. 0. L. Campbell, were Mr from Hemet, California, where he CROSSE POINTE and Mrs. Wm. Kring and daughter, for Mrs. Chris Bro;>gan. has been spending the summer with Helen, of Onondaga. Mrs. Knng Mr. and Mrs. Dean Reason and his father. He hitch-hiked there and daughter, Sally, of Lansing were was_ formerly Miss Alice Barton. I ICFrUAug- 21 1 CASH SPECIALS 21c JEU-O '"•vm-. Sal. Aug. 22 \ Any Flavor 59c 3 s E E 5 25« 3 | C$mpbel!'s Tomato Soup Mustard ] Salad Dressing 27c 10c Ifr | Kellogg's Corn Flakes i FIRST NATIONAL BANK I Ovaltine Tomatoes 2 15 Velvet Pastry Flour 5 9c LgePkg. 39c 3 Oriental Bean Sprouts 10c Mr. and Mrs. Myron Eley and back, the return trip taking 8 days Saturday visitors at the home of Mr. daughter, Charlotte, Mr. and Mrs. 1 by way of Arizona and New Mexico. and Mrs. L. E. Wilson. Jack Clevinger and children of Ann! One car in which he was riding ran The price of the Dispatch during off a bridge Into a river, but he esAugust for new subscriptions and re- Arbor wire Sond^v afternoon visit. caped with a sprained wrist, Hii faliewoU U $1.00 per year. Now Is thel ort at the home Q* Mr, sad Mrs. M. ft* wiQ rejoeja fe California ^toftl7ww*#^tioflft^op. B. P^rrow, 29c Kafiee 'Hag 22C Tomato Juice 59c 25c Show U Sauce 6 Apple Butter Aunt Jemima Pancake Flour, FHONfiMP* ., .•*,' 'J All Prfcee Svtjeeft la Mttea, »% Sake Tat . _.., ', t\ ,* H , .••; :'" .*.* •"fcf v-:-'- * - > - • : & - -..- a\ • & ' - ' ; "- ',-•• ,''*s,"' ""' ' •' '' " ('' v'A- - • . • - . / . * ' , • , ' •."•*• . . * ' " ' •'' ' ' '<'.)'}''>''* '-?.'-•:( 1196 strains from all of the standard whole-hearted support last year, and varieties grown in Michigan. A1- it is receiving i t again in 1986. i s uicc h ^ i S J l f ^ 6 » u t h <> r i * t<» make I though 85 per cent of the melons in « ^ * * registration and t o swear audi State officials a r e to be commend[ the state are produced in Berrien ed for working out this tax plan and Tuesday, S e p t , 1 5 , 1936. | All the provisions relative to Jig»county, growers also are expected giving it educational publicity. To the q u a k e d electors of the aeration m Townships and cities shall from Ingham, Monroe, Wayne, JackDon't forget to do your part, Pay Township j t Putnam, Precinct No. J | W f r . •*<* be in force a s to registm*>n. Van Buren, Saginaw, Bay and your second installment of taxes beState of Michigan. jtion in Villages. ^ ^ Livingston counties. fore September 1st, it you have come Notice is hereby given that in conP . U L ~ _ • * » * . . M In the tomato yvork^ three i>rojecte under the plan. I f you haven't formity with the "flichigan Election ^ A n*o t&WM p ^ - - ^ will be explained to commercial grow * P™*»ct V * * Earl, .variety trials ^ n d e ] £ ? afford & £ y T i o A " t £ Z Law," I, the undersigned Township 1 Clerk, will, upon any day, except . ' testing of 86 variety strains for field a t this time, ?© i t ™ u ^ r t l l a v e production. Another portion of the materially in interest charges and Sunday and a legal holiday, the day .Any, registered and qualified voter tests compares southern grown plants you will have one less economic wor- of any regular.or special election o r w ? ° i H REMOVED from ONE from Georgia, Kentucky, Tennessee ry on your mind. primary election, receive for regis- SELECTION PRECINCT of a TOWNand Illinois with Michigan grown trafcton the name of any legal voter , H I P to another election precinct of plants. Canning trials for yields in said Township not already ^ same TOWNSHIP shall have the KIDS BEAT CAMP B1RKETT comprise another part of the experiregistered who mav Apply To Me r i £ n t » ° n any day previous to elecmental work. Personally for such registration. Pro-. tion, ? r primary election day, on apvided, however, that I can receive no plication to-Township Clerk, t o have Through co-operation with the agThe Pinckney juveniles won from ricultural engineering department a t Camp Birkett a t Silver Lake last names for registration during the **• or her name transferred from the Michigan State College, discussions Wednesday night, 11 to 10. The time intervening between the Second registration book of the precinct Saturday before any regular, special, fr°m which he or she HAS REon irrigation for truck crops will be features of part of the program. 0 . E. Robey . w , , home runs by Francis Shehan a n d ! ?dft ' o f f joc afl 8 UPCrn"nary election and the MOVED to the registration book of of that department will offer informa- I one by Joe Lavey; also two fasti TX,h e l a s t d aely*ction. the precmct in which he or she THEN tion on motors and pumping equip- double plays by Amb. Kennedy and' t r a t ,i o n d o e s n o t a ' o lry General RegisRESIDES. Such elector shall have to ment suitable for economical and Jake Haines. The score was tied u p ! P P persons who the right to have such transfer made Firestone Tires Standard Gas practical field irrigation. to the 5th inning when Pinckney Y° t ee i" 1 **' the Absent Voters' Law. pn any ELECTION or Primary elecscored the winning run. Beattie of *PfT Registration by Affidavit,) ,tion day by obtaining from the board Alt Cars Serviced USL Batterie Notice is hereby given that I will of inspectors of such election or pri Camp Birkett also hit a home run. LIVINGSTON CO. RECEIVED be a t my home o r Darrow Barber |mary election of the precinct from . Shop, which he or she HAS REMOVED a $140,101.00 IN HOLC FUNDS WRECKER SERVICE DAY OR NIGHT Pinckney CERTIFICATE OF TRANSFER and I WED., AUGUST 26, 1936 A B ' K H PO A ^ the twentieth day preceding said presenting the said certificate to the Residents of Livingston County re-i p flint/m * a. 4 0 1 4 0 OF ELECTION INSPECTeeived a total of $140,101.00 from: Darrow 8b %"" 2 1 0 2 0 J election, from 8 o'clock a. m. until BOARD RS OF THE PRECINCT I N the Home Owners' Loan Corporation}! Kennedy, 2b .*" 3 1 0 2 2 2 8 o'clock p. m., for the purpose o f | 2 during th£ three-year of refin- p Haines, p, 3b 2 2 1 1 1 J Reviewing the Registration and Reg-J WHICH HE OR SHE THEN RE ng tna tnree-year period pe ancTfigop^ations which terminated M. Lavey, rs .... 3 3 3 0 0 \ istering such of the qualified electors SIDES. June 13, 193bT~arcording to final fig- Shehan, ss 3 2 3 0 0 J} in said City as Shall Properly Apply Lulu Darrow, Township Clerk, ures furnished Abner E. Lamed, J. Haines, l b .... 2 1 1 4 0 JJ therefor. Dated August 1st, A. D. 1936. State Director for The National Shirey, If 3 0 1 1 0 J ! The name of no person but an j Emergency Council. This sum repre. 0 J. Lavey, cf 2 1 1 1 0 JJ ACTUAL Resident of the precinct at, ED. PARKER, Prop. SALES & SERVICE Phone 54F3 I sented 61 individual loans, Martin, rf 1 0 0 0 0 JJ the time of said registration, and en- ; I A total of 81,280 distressed home Strasser, rf titled under the Constitution, if reNEW! Next Sunday and Every 0 0 0 0 0 JJ u owners in Michigan were extended maining such resident, to vote at the; oSunday, 30 Full Size Comics in Celr aid in the sum of $240,014,129.00. | next election, shall be entered in the j «*<* a Complete Novel a $2 J30 Camp Birkett Of this money, it is estimated that registration book. I Best Seller with NEXT" SUNDAY'S CO. FARM AGENT'S LETTER AB R H PO A E STACKING BEANS $$19,820,000.00 went toward the In any Township, Village or City ' CHICAGO HERALD AND EXAMIN2 1 0 2 0 .0 CUTS CULL LOSS payment of taxes and assessments, Hopler, rs ER in which the clerk does not maintain | Order Your Copy TODAY! Treat S e e d Grain Beattie, p 2 3 2 0 2 1 the estimated average of tax and as regular office hours, the township Copper Carbonate Dust Treatment 0 Crandall, Is 3 0 1 1 Growers of beans in Michigan re- 'cessment payments per loan in Mich- y ^ r ok <i 1 2 2 21 0 board, village council, or legislative Use a full-strength copper carbonr^Sn ^ 9 1 1 0 0 0 body of said township, village or city, SCHOOLS TO RECEIVE ate dust (about 50 percent copper), ceive nothing for cull beans and in igan being $244.00. may require that the clerk of such STATE SEAL COPIES harg manufactured especially for seed fact are docked for the labor charge According to 1930 United States w i i « « f t 3"QK o2 0 0 2 0 0 township, village or city shall be at b in hand picking. Census report^ there were 542,154 5 ^ k ^ ' Because many cul) treatment. Apply at the rate of 2 nocKre in, cf 3 2 1 1 0 0 C to 2 ½ ounces per bushel of well- beans are the result of conditions owned non-farmed homes in Michi- Stofflet, l b designated place * l n o r d e r that the official seal of 1 8 0 0 f?r !hl UL!^S 1 3 prevailing during the first two wee!:* gan. The Home Owners' Loan Corcleaned seed. Mix the seed and the m 0 0 3 1 2 Lake, c 2 dm?; in a tight mixing machine until September when beans are har- poration refinanced mortgages on 15 Summers, If 2 0 1 1 bl u n e s stack ta< «„ ~, L.„ ««I ic +u^°„„w„ „^, v.^i vested and m in tthe W 0 a every kernel is thoroughly covered i? * J*™ * for *»* curing, percent of this number. Home runs : S h e-han, 2; ,f Laley' &&*t**3ffi ^£& t & l w ^ A ^ B ^ The total number of loans made in with the dust. Seed thus treated : £ 'f a ** Fettigrove, assistant professor ble plays: Kennedy to » g f ^ / ¾ ^ ^ ^ £ S ^ . ^ h a s ^ a u t h e n ^ copie^of Beattie. Doubl may be stored indefinitely until sown | " r ™ c r o P s a t Michigan State Col- all States, Puerto Rico, Hawaii and J. Haines, 2. Struck out by Haines, 1 Notice is hereby further given that reproductions of the seal are approwithout injury to germination. With j M compiled ai new bulletin, Alaska was 1,021,817, involving the 4 sum of $3,092,870,784.00, making > Beattie, 3. Umpire—jNelson 1 f r M , a n Reans coloied t 0 brin —o this chemical, care must be used to I ^ , ¾ ¾ ^ xT ±£ L T L o \ a t & t y u r Z ! e A ^g a T i S S ? tpul r^east e lsy ecifie * ™t the P ?Iaavoid damage to the grain drill. ! ^ ^ 1 B l J ] l e t ^ N ° . 276, available the average loan $3,027.00. f r L a S M ? S 5 ? M ^ « > i Iv P <i by the legal descripPLAIN FIELD BEATS k t i o n o ft h e seal The c i b Sometimes there is a tendency for ™ n a f e w da V? by writing the o PINCKNEY 8 TO 7j ^MW w L e« fj liS. «gv^ S w ? So°Qfl°f ' SProprlate for " ° P i e s wby » each « 1 PINCKNEY. S TO ' ^ a e p ^ ^ , ^ ^ ¾ framing the treated seed to cake in the drill, ' P " " " " foom, Michigan State Col- GETS INTERNAL REVENUE APPOINTMENT when standing overnight, or longer, school. used by bean „ Pinckney lost to Plainfield in a and from 8 o'clock A M., until 8 in damp or wet weather. In such lege, East Lansing. Actual distribution to the some shippers Stanley Hall, principal of Marine softball game there Thursday night, o'clock P. M„ on— "Pick and is the term in this state to cases it is advisable to rock the drill growers 6,000 public schools of the state will wheels back and forth before start- designate cull beans," says Petti- City high school the past two years, 8 to 7. It got so dark in the last two { SAT., SEPT. 5, 1936__LAST DAY be handled by Dr. Eugene B. Elliott, ing in order ta avoid breaking or grove. "The term includes foreign has resigned and accepted a position innings j t was hard to see the ball.'. For General Registration by Per State Superintendent of Public Inbending the working parts. All work- material and all diseased, discolored in the Internal Revenue Department. Pinckney outhit Plainfield 10 to 8, • sonal Application. struction. The reproductions will be Registration by Affidavit ing parts of the drill should be kept and damaged beans. The average Mr. Hall will serve as an inspector in but made 4 errors to Plainfield's one. 1received C W 1 ¥ C U in the near future, with dis* well oiled. The treated grain should pick on Michigan beans from 1914, the alcoholic division and left Sun- Joe Singer got 3 hits in four times' Sec. 10__Registenng of Electors: tribution of school supplies by the ,be well cleaned out of the drill when to i.)o4 was 8. J 6 per cent. Obvious-' dav for the upper peninsula, where aUP <""<* M a r < * Ledwidge, 2 hits and Any absent voter, as defined m this s t a t e s c h o o ] h e a d < Distribution to act, who«e name is not registered and the approximately ft 00 parochial walk in three times up seeding is completed to avoid corro- ly pick is an important' factor in he will serve as a traveling inspector jwho shall clam the right to vote by schools In Michigan, will be handled bean prices and bean profits. (for a few weeks. He has been in our sion of the parts. Seed treated with j absent voter's ballot at any election by John J. O'Hara, Auditor General. i schools for nine years and married copper carbonate should not be fed Pinckney g or primary election, may at the time to farm animals. (Mis. Edna Baird, daughter of Capt. AB R H PO A The drawing of the seal from Q of making application for absent vot- which the official reproduction was and Mrs. John D. Baird. jJoe Singer, Is .... 4 3 3 1 2 —Marine Citv Independent. Jim Singer, cf .... 4 0 0 1 0 j er's ballot, present to the township made, was prepared this summer unState Fair Mr. Hall is the son of Guy Hall of A. Singer, 3b .... 4 0 2 1 JO 0 clerk an affidavit for registration d?r the direction of Dr. Louis WebThe people in Livingston County Pinckney and graduated from this Ledwidge, If 2 1 2 10 Q | which shall be in substantially the ber, Deputy Secretary of State. The ' are extremely fortunate in their lohigh school and Michigan State Nor- P. Singer, p 3 1 1 2 2 Q following form: move was decided upon by Atwood Q Affidavit For Registration cation with respect to the State Fair. mal. His many friends here will be. VanHlaricum. c 3 1 0 4 0 because of wide-spread laxity through This is one of the leading agriculturpleased to hear of his advancement. (Reason, l b 3 1 1 5 0 01 State of Michigan many years, in the printing of re2 County of ss. productions of the seal for various al exhibits held in the country- Last 1 Hainps, 2b .... 3 0 1 2 0 F being duly official USJS throughout the capitol, year a number of -our growers ex0 j I CIVIL SERVICE EXAMINATIONS J. Haines, rs .... 3 0 0 1 Q sworn, depose and say that I am a on stationery and forms of various hibited agricultural materials at this 0 — (Dillon, rf 3 0 0 0 citizen and duly qualified elector of kinds. For ordinary use, reproducshow. We are-hoping thnt we may The United States Civil Service the precinct of the have a greater number of exhibitors tions of the state seal are not sufCommission has announced open Plainfield of in the county of this year. ficiently large to permit Inclusion of coinpeticive examinations as follows: AB R H PO A E and State of Michigan; that my post-. many details One item that has always attracted provided by law. Public health nursing consultant,' u , 1h 4 1 2 5 0 1 office address is No street a considerable amount of interest is I of various grades, $2,600 to $4,600 £ e° in,z£ ' .,,: o • 1 0 0 1 0 0 or R. F. D. No P. O ; the county woo] exhibit. Last year a year, and public health nursing as-- Folkler, ' 2b HOME LIGHTING 0 1 1 0 Livingston County took second place ' sistant, $2,000 a year, Optional sub- H. Simmonds, 3b 33 2 1 3 2 0 that I ori not now registered as an CAN BE SCIENCE 0 elector therein and that I am voting in the State with their fleeces. j j e c t s for the consultant positions arc: Wasson, cf 1 0 1 0 0 by absent voter's ballot at the elec-j Our 4-H club entries are rapidly / i ternal and child health, general pub- C. Jacobs, c ... 3 Prevalence of much eyestrain and 0 1 7 0 0 tion (or primary election) to be held 3 filling up. We believe that this is lic health nursing, and orthopedics; Brotherton, 11 the need for wearing glasses is proof 1 0 0 1 day of... ,19.... an opportunity for the adult as well i'ov the nursing assistant position, the N. Jacobs, rs . 23 1 0 0 0 0 upon the of tY.2 importance of t h e slogan, 0 the application for which ballot ac as the boys and girl* to compare th-ir B e U e r Li subiect is maternal and child health. that""l " . S»t for Better Sight," sug0 0 0 3 0 0 companies this application; products with those from other part^ Junior agricultural engineer, 2,000 J ' S 0 1 " 1 ' ' gests Miss Helen Noyes, extension 2 2 1 2 3 2 make this affidavit for the purpose of of the State. a year. | m„..,_ I, specialist in home economics at Mich0 1 1 1 3 procuring ^ ^ my registration as an decHorticulturist, of various grades, Taylor, rf igan State College. Stacks such as this used infie. Three-base hit, Jacobs. Two-base tor in accordance with the statute; d , $2,(100 to $4,000 a year, Soil ConFly-Free Dates "When you buy a lamp," Miss ,hits curing beans the first two weeks in . s •rrviHrni ^nnnVp npmHment of Atf» J o e S i n R c r - 4^ Singer. Struck that I make the following statements Noyes advises, "look for the tag I do not expect that there is any1 September reduce hand picking ric-ulturc. immediate need of giving fly-fre: If.™ ° U S c n i t e ' "epaitment o^ Afc o nt bb ayl lgs i onf f S i2n . rD o n o1h u De >o n 6 h. Bases i n compliance with the Michigan w,hl(. , , „ ,. . i U T ^ „and mean beiter premium prices to'; Soil tochi ,n1fi.r,\-t of virion* t r n d e J L e f t o n b a s c s - ^ » * ° H-e ' h-i Election Law: I fwhich dates for the planting of wheat for e ^ ° says: 'Compliance with I. E. S. iff ' P i n ^ n e y , 5; Pla nfield Age ; Race ; Eirth-• f.!? < Srowcv*. 1*2,600 to $ 00 . v n the ground is in a condition now 0 pecifications'. The letters stand for *' Umpirea_Doyce and Kenzie. ; „ . Da^e of Natural!-1" p ,ace where it would be practically im„ . . . , —' 'servation Se i c e ? D e;p o n e n t 'of Agrs r c minaung P^ngineeiing Society, ' o • ! or afflmv that the answers given to * "ilich makes a careful test of possible to prepare a seed bed. HowA typical transaction shows why 'riculturo. bulbs ever, in some areas people may have a reduction in pick is worthwhile to i B a nk note designer, $3,200 a year, BEETLES BATTLE shad ,the questions concerning my'qualifi»nd ^ to determine which give a ORCHARD carried on a practice of summer fal- '• grower. Take a price of $3 per Bureau of Engraving and Printing, be sults TREES'cations as an elector are true a n d ' ? , ^ J« the amount of light low and are waiting for enough mois- j nunaredweight for choice hand pick-.Treasury Department. a t h e ea se n (correct to tho best of my knowledge " ? < 4 ; ] treatment of the eyes, lure so that they may plant wheat. ^ ^ a n s . ror eight pounds of culls Full infoimation mav be obtained Taken, subscribed Weather Necessary According to the entomology do-1 t h *' r c vv<>uld be a deduction of three from the Secretary of tro United . - . Maktt * .It ^ . ~ to «. \*nrl h^lipf ° j "A coat of whits paint on the will ineyes and incidentally me day of....!!).... save you monoy abefore n er this Combat Pest with Extreme Care partment of thr Michigan State Col- \ cents per pound because of loss in States Civil Service Beard of Examby giving more light Brush Fires Are in Order, But Dry Signed ° _°fii '_.. v _„. :u .., RM m t o ' s i d e of a dark lamp will do wonders in Burning Dead Wood. J lege the fly-free dates for this sec-1 J,e» weight, or a KHS of 24 cents. : j n P r s a t the post office or customfor energy burned. -.«11 A for tthe h e electric~ " '--.--1--^.-11My commission expires 10.. tion arc from Sept. 15th to Sept. Inhere would be,a cull picking charge; house in anv city which has a post shade must give 75 per cent of the Notary* rublic Public in _ ,, A . ... , . _ , , Notary 2(Jth For further infoimation on I of nve c?nts per pound for labor, or Office 0 f the first or second class or light from the bulb through the shade the Hession flv, write to the county I'^c-ther deduction of 40 cents. Sub-1 from the United States Civil Service Fruit trees m Michigan weakened? d f s a i d C o u n t before it merits the I. E. S. tag." gtatc. f Mich. J igan. office and ask for Circular bulletin | tracting (,4 cents from the $3 quota-! Commission, Washington, D. C. Therenecnon reflectionoiof lightis isoest bestirom from as in preceding seasons, need extra. . ' xne nent by adverse weather m 1936, as well itpaT1 y t f guch affidavit i n JW. 39. tion, the grower actually would re-t protection against the fruit tree bark t h ^ cin,d herein, the clerk ight-colored walls and ceilings, which 0 spC ceive but $2,36 cents for the hun-ljjQN'T NEGLECT YOUR beetle which thrives and breeds m ! g h a I 1 w r i t e in the registration book I e a £ s t o t h e suggestion to keep all drcd-weight." TAX PAYMENT recently dead and dying wood a n d ; ^ ^ " ^ ^ Secdingr walla and ceilings'light for economy and; + v- „ „ „ « At *v„ »KL«i^r,»,f *rt«.otvla». l wall Weather conditions are not subject Under the terms uf the soil conriddles twigs of vigorous and healthy L ^ t h e o t h e i . i n f o ^ . t i o n r e quirod n h ^ h t i n J ? ^ 5 1 for _ b e t t € V preservaservation program, people were to to human management but harvest September 1st is the deadline for t»«»M ns well .. . . . , , , , nVTrar^ tion.. of eyesight. By the use of v pucam b u ) b s c f 1 0 Q t Q 1 5 0 w a t t g a T i d a ^ are, insays The 1 receive soil conserving and soil build- practices method used "thePcttigrove. harve-t enn d , the paj-ment of the second annual i n - l ^ ™oiXg out August as or,3 of shall ^ ^thereupon J ^ ^ ube^deemed J ^ J to^ be .duly °~°: ing; payments based upon the amount r t a , 1 n t f and properly registered. Jiectiing bowl, accordingto Miss Noyes ^ 8 U M C r t h e M l c i j l " the two breeding seasons for the of land that was seeded to some hay much to wer m ? the S A nfit ^ . g u n ^t e n e a°r ^ ,an i,1an Note^ If this acknowledgment is the lamp with a light shade gives ' ->' P. - J / P ™ ^ ; beetle, Ray Hutson of the entomology crop during th? year of 193«. So of unfavombL wVVher taken outside of the Stnte, the Cer- maximum light in a room that has pt far this year it has been practically A fuH decrintion with i l l u , t r J o w n e r s h t t V / a ! r e a d ^ " l c t u t h e i r . ° , b h - department at Michigan State Col- tificate Sufficient of the Court that the person light walls and ceiling. includes details with of using the impossible to do any seeding alone. tions light with no bulbs in sight is the A tun descnption illustint e c t l d their r i g h t s . | * ^ suggests burning brush piles ffations a n d p r o l e taking the acknowledgment is a noMany people are asking whether or! McNaughton system of stacking, minute rushthey and have congestion of counrecommendation of the I. E. S. incidentlly avoided the last j f pruning, taking out dead or eft rom tary must be attached. not it will be possible to collect a. {which is one of the means which ty treasurers' offices. No longer does the modem homechard any of the larger pieces dying blocks trees and removing from or Registration of Absentee by Oath soil con-ervinVr payment if the s-ed-1 Pettigrove suggests for cutting the ak r Officiate of the state in conducting of dead wood that may have been I f any person whose name is not ™ * shirr navy blue georgette over ing is made Iher^S™t. 1. We have [percentage of culls. The result would this year's educational campaign " r e i g n e d Sor firewood. Burning brush rnse registered shall offer and claim the J . «»k foundation and sew-heavy nad no definite instructions on this be better returns from the bean crop endeavoring to bring home to t h e : p j j e s m u s t be carefully guarded, of n b ttom U e right to vote at any election or p r i £ " S « ?/? ' V ^ ' -J* vH nows particular question, but as soon asa m which MwhigAn ranked* flwt in property owners that to carry out the course, because of the dry weather ro er mary election, and shall, UNDER sP. P illumination, says Miss Noyes, we receive anv information we will quantity in l»3o in the nation. he ma terms of their agreement they must 1 ^,^ hazard, we rec H A T H e ^ t * t w h^ nr sh P is a resi. y . P a i n t t h e dark shade white 1 be sure and make this second pay {or pass it on tothe growers of thLA ONCE PAMPERED BEAUTY "I. T h 5 t ? 0 . * ^ ; °{ i n j u r y / J l a i i e ^ dent of such precinct and has resided socra l\00 new lamps which 1 bear the y o) f ment by September 1st. i inciuae injury TO trees oi iow vuai. .* TWTHSITV nAYSl I include to of low vital- f t ^ TWENTY DAYS axiproval of the hghti ng socicounty. FINDS A PAUPER'S GRAVE . , , by the Urntun- ^ . ¾, , ¾ ^ ^ K ^-ji W, J. S, S. ,f -Jity t y . tthat h a t are easily killed by,the ^ ^ „ ^ ^ ^ ety. p vho d l dn o tc o m e n d e r t h l 8 ler Insulated Milk Tank 1Z, * w ^ « fi^i r ? S'*la-deling of the beetle during breeding, An article reporti mary election, designating particu_ _. . , . . . . . According to the rules and reguVC in 1 9 3 n d 0 S0 8 yfiar G v oif th r S h e ? " -iU ^ V 1 . v ^ j : T h e other injury is caused by tHe has fallen larly the place of his or her red-' ° Frtzgerald has been making as lations. laid down by the Board of, curtain ha. fallen on t h e ^ S ^ | P r o v f a i o n is made for this action and b ^ t l e s boring into healthy twigs and Old Kat who i t m a y b e teken a t v e r y ^ ^ i n t e r . fc f f e e d i n g o r b ] breed- dence and that he or she possesses £ his chief campaign claim that he Health it will be neces,;sary for milk [ rags drama « the other qualifications of an elector h.as+ balanced the rbudget and got the o .. install in™nlace. then leaving to find producers that wish to ... new dropped from stardom into the gut- t c o s t ing place, then leaving to find lessu t o f th ed inff n i a c e w e n ieav,n w under the constitution; and that ow2 ? * ° ?„ J * ^ * amo«nt cooling tanks to use an insulating ma-' ter but . . w l u i r W 1 „ w vv _ insulating ma-'ter but never lost her courage and Incidentally, returns indicate that vigorous - wood when «the trees count m five ing to the sickness or bodily infirmity %\ *° * millions of dollars. Now terial in the construction. We have j is mourned by London beggars and a considerable number of property e r 0 ttack with a flow of gutn. of himself or herself or some member. State Treasurer Fry says the goverone such tank built in the county, aristocrats alike. This article is one owners are paying up their entire; ^he fruit tree bark beetle also fs all wet, and instead of there Thte tank was constructed the early of many human interest articles m back tax assessment, thereby saving p r o v e g a pest in related ornamentals of his or her family, or owing to his £<? or her absence from the.... : on beingcasJ on hand, the state budget «art of August on the farm belong-! The American Weekly with next Sun- considerable money in future interest gUC£ ^ flowering crab atnd quince, l s 111 public business or his or her own ^ $438,000 in the red. The goving to J. G. Hays. Any one interest-.days Detroit Times. ^ charges. j ^ h e beetle is about one twentieth of ernor ; business, and without intent to avoid f t his figures from the state There is no more pressing govern- a n | n c n ] o n g, i t is a dark brownishor delay his or her registration, he accountants. Auditor Gen. O'Hara, tfWtffS™ Sffi&X. CANTALOUPE - °TOMATO SHOWm-ental problem today tharr the ques- bj a c k jn color and is believed to be or she was unable to make applicafurther complicated the situation by tion of past due taxes. Both t h e 0 f European origin. When the bark ivin ou an For additional information, a bul. tion for registration on the last day f & ^ entirely different set of propertv owner and the various de-j: 0 f trees has been punctured, the res The lette dealing with milk house and] Commercial growers of cantaloupe provided by law for the registering of S p j . « governor has called all tnilk tank construction may ba ob- and tomatoes are invited to the first partments of the state are vitally af- t ^ t l e and larvae are revealed by these jiuuk MMM» . j^Melpn and Tcmato Day" to be held electors preceding such election or different bookkeeping departm county office, fected —« - tained a t down the bark carefully with ! £ £ £ " 5e7tion, thin the nami of ™ n t s together and told them to r e . at Michigan State College, Saturday, to ted. The state, needs thei revenue . , -ooperate in the interest of IU citiJ C o m m e r c i a l L ^ c h a r d Inch w r / o T s h a l l bTreSstered, and cao nt cr lul ee their figures; that he want, s h a r p kn if e . August 22. C. H. Mahoney, extenzens and the property owner wants o p e r a t o r s are warned by Professor S ^ r ^ ™ shaH^then & wrmrtted to statement of the flnancial Mr. and Mrs. F . E. Bowers were sion specialist in horticulture, is plan- to save his landed possessions. s I»rr.-— *-clean i ^ . - ««. .K««^/%T,^ or*r. °e or sne snail men om permiviea WJ In How«li Monday. 2 . I Hutson t o up abandoned vote at such election or primary f i ^ o n . Figures a r e a strange ning the program. While Fred Campbell and wife of Ann vT- ,. - , « ^, TT«J«? other v « i « states omvw were rrcic flounder-' fX^y.J hlocks t o protect adjacent election. If such applicant shall in 5 I n * They never lie, but unfortttnA«to* .gajB| Thnwday. evening with m . ' w ^ i J l i Z J a « r e 8 . 0 { . m ^ 8 . a £ J ing around with the problem, Mich- gsat&y pioSucing orchard*; Branch- said matter, witfully make any false • S j J S " J S ™ : w « « ? » « " j * 1 mwk Of JU CampbfH Enjoy the Lowest Cost of Operation with "<> Chevrolet $ Cars and Trucks The Only Complete Low-Pnced Car h Let Us Show You the New Maytag Electric Washer Parker Chevrolet Sales < t it£ IT t V itotemtnt, i% o? liSi.ihal} be (Teemed 2¾¾¾ 4 M ^ ¾ ¾ ¾ ½ &0* -V The Pinckney Dispatch, Wednesday, August 19,1136 i DRAGONS DRIVE YOU By EDWIN BALMER Copyrlfht by Edwin Balmar WNUSarvic* I CHAPTER VII Jeb laughed- again In his warming way. Too would. Did you wonder if I wanted you to stay»—Hey, you!" he called to the boy. MCome closer 1 Catch 1" And Jeb chucked a goldpiece which the boy caught, calling out loud thanks. "All through." Jeb dismissed htm. "Now, old top, are you going to stay?" "I'd like to, Jud." Anchor was up; and they were moving, with deceptive smoothness, out of the harbor on a limpid, lasy lake. The brothers sat down to breakfast opposite each other at the gay little table at the forward end of the diningsalon. Rod had learned that the guests for the day would be picked up at the Gleneiths*. In the shining, perfectly appointed galley, Imlo was cooking, but a steward, new to Jud's staff, was serving the table. For the first time the splendor and extravagance of Jeb's establishment wrung a remark from his brother. "Doesn't this all cost a heap, Jud?" "I'll tell you the truth, Rod," Jeb confided. ''Expense doesn't make any difference to me any more. Money doesn't mean anything. I can make whatever amount I want. That's an absolute fact. A lot of men are past that point, Rod. The city—the country—civilization's in a new era. We've got the production problem completely licked. . . . " —13— ' Bodney Braddon returned to Chicago from Rochester early on Sunday morning just eight days before the dais set, on the calendar of the criminal courts, for the trial of Myrtle Lorrie for murder of her husband. Bod was Ignorant of that date, and Ids arrival was without reference to the trial. He had come back to see bis brother—and Agnes—before leaving for Germany. He had remained at Rochester much longer than he had planned. It was after breakfast when RodHe had been almost happy there. ney asked at last: "How is Agnes?'' That Is, he had found more to absorb "She's all right," his brother rebim, to interest and excite him in his turned. work, than ever he had before. Hap"When are you marrying her, Jnd?" piness for Rod did not depend upon "When that damn trial's over. That sensual satisfactions; he consciously was the rottenest piece of luck for •ought none of them, except music, me. We were all set, Rod; we went sometimes. His sole excitement "was to* that building to look over an apartIn his work and study, which occu- ment, when Agnes opened that pied him hour after hour; then he damned door, and—" would go off on long, swinging walks Rodney, listening, sat still with difalone. He kept his spare, splendid ficulty; he held himself quiet by gripbody in vigorous condition with swim- ping tight the arms of his chair so AS ming, when near water, or with tennis. not to betray, too clearly, the tumult Rod played, in fact, to tire himself within him. He had had no idea, unout, when he needed It to beat down til just now, that Agnes was not his the longings within him — and his brother's. . . . loneliness. Ten people came aboard the boat Sometimes he could ward off the spells by exhaustion; at other times, when it lay off the shore opposite the they surprised him unprepared. Rod Gleneiths': Agnes and her mother and would come "home" to his dreary ho* Beatrice and Davis and another young tel room bringing with him new medi- married couple whom Rod had never cal reports upon which he expected met. The others were paired, also; to pass the evening, and he would but they were not married: two girls never return on the light, but sit mis- whom Rodney vaguely remembered, erably and uselessly Idle in the dark. and two boys, whose names he knew. They were pleasant, casual, unimHe missed his brother. To be sure, pressionable young people before whom when they had been in the same city, Rodney felt odd and old and awkward. days passed without Rodney's seeing They looked him over, and their eyes bud; but he was there, and on such occasions, Rod could go to him instead traveled to his brother, making comof seeking his own lonely room. And parison; but what they said to Rodney recently, he had been able to go. with was carefully polite. They made no real difference to Rod. Jud or alone, to the Gleneiths'. Hut Agnes was near him; and if he had now that was lost. not. known that his brother must have Rod had made friends among the failed to establish possession of her, doctors at Rochester. Not many now he have discerned It— friends, to be sure, for Rod was no though shewould plainly mixer; but he had found a few con- paired with Jud. was supposed to be genial men whom he liked and reShe was In white, with a bit of blue spected, and whose lives served the slashed in the cool silk which clung to same purposes as his—understanding her as the made a breeze; and «f disease. But he could not feel she cast off boat her hat and let the sun like seeking them when his spirit burn her till Rodney drew her back dropped low. They were too like him- under the shade of the canvas over the self. His brother—and Agnes—were forward deck. They remained there utterly different. while the others stayed nowhere; and He had expected—and half feared, after a while, Rodney and Agnes were *aif hoped it—that he would have de- alone far forward. stroyed his power to retain Agnes in He did not talk much to her. What ails day-dreams. Losing her, he had had he to say? He sat in a striped supposed he must lose the delight of canvas close to hers, and felt •his dream of her; but this had proved engulfedchair in a content could not not so. When his loneliness assailed continue, he knew, but which which was comfolm, and he sat in the dark, he longed plete for the moment. tor her—her. Separate as he had kept looked at him and smiled, not himself from her, he had never been at She him but with him, in his content; so close to another girl. Now she and always, when they would lose •was his brother's, he believed. So he must imagine her his own no longer! But it had been futile to forbid this to himself. And here he was again in -Chicago. . . . Rod had not wired his brother; ana so, while dressing as the train entered the city, he weighed probabilities of Jud's whereabouts. It was a warm, steamy June morning —- so it was probable that Jud iwould be up early for a long day on the water. Having no rooms In Chicago, Rod checked hit bag at the station and jphoned his brother's apartment Noibody answered, so Rod took a taxi and 'told the driver to hurry to the harbor. His brother's familiar boat was not jln sight, but when Rod inquired, a Iboy in a launch said yes, Mr. Bradidon's yacht was at anchor. That was 'it, there. Rod stared at a new motor-cruiser {three or four times as large as the .boat he had known. It looked ninety Ifeet long; with graceful clipper bow and a line of brass-bound portholes to cabins, and with gleaming salons above-deck. The boy ran Rod out to it; and on the quarterdeck stood Jud. He was bareheaded and wearing flannels without a coat Mo guests were in sight, and Rod 8he Looked at Htm and Smiled. was glad of that, though he was sure that guests must be on the way or something If their eyes lingered on each were to be picked up at some port or other, she looked away over the water; pier. Jud never planned a Sunday on and as never, never before, Rodney 'the water without a party. longed to keep her close to him forever. Rodney hailed: -Jud! Hellor And She wasn't Jud's yet, whatever the his brother saw who was in the launch. papers, whatever Jud himself, had said. He stood stock still with surprise; Might she soma time in some way be and then Bod saw him laugh and run his? to tits boat step, and he caught Rod's Rodney faced the breese which was band tad hauled bis brother aboard. blowing her dress against her slight "Rod!" said Jeb-and Rod felt his body. The appeal of her loveliness, [brother's arm tighten about his shoul- the allure of her beautiful body, was (dors, l i k e the skiff, old skater only an adjunct to that quality of hers Rodney obediently glanced about which had caught him long ago and «*t looks great, Jud. I didn't know it would never release him. was yours." had never had to explain himself "Good Lord," said Jeb, "It was In toHe Agnes; and she, without speaking of an the papers. Why's he waiting V it, had stood him and the Job leaked at the launch, "Forget to world of others.between How he needed her! pay hlmr How much more than did Jud! How I paid bim," said Bod, "but told as could work, what enormous research Ida to wait* he could accomplish, if sne were Ms wife to hold In his arms, when he dropped his task; if she would share with him the evening \and hours of night, aid meet, for hlmVs the world by day. ^ Now he had talked to her of his work at Rochester, and of himself, as he had to no one else, not even to Jud. "Rod," she said at last, after one of their long silences, "I've something to decide. Help me. It's about the trial. They say that what will happen to Myrtle Lorrie will depend on me. I can free her—or convict her. Do you believe that?" "I don't know," said Rod. "But Jud thinks so." He saw her color quickly deepen under her sunburn. "So Jeb's told you." "Yes; he told me, Agnes." "What, especially?" "That you took, from the first, the side of the defense. He—" "What, Rod?" "Can't understand it" "Yes, be can, Rod. That's the trouble." "That he understands it?" "He knows I'm going to do what I am bound to do, because I believe"— Halter Neck, Princess lines, Capes Polka Dot Tunic for You to Sew at Home By CHERIE NICHOLAS party dress this time of ANEW year brings two - fold joy. Thty Discussed Agnes' Coming Ordeal. She stopped and caught her breath before she said it—"Martin O'Mara." "O'Mara," said Rqd. "The lawyer you called." "Yes," said Agnes. "I'll tell you about him. He—" Rodney, attending, tried to keep his mind on what she said; but his feelings made it utterly impossible.. Fled far from him was his hour of false content. A new despair seized him. He knew now that madly he had Imagined that perhaps—perhaps—It had been some lellc of memory of what he had done and said to her before he had gone away, which had Interposed Itself between her and Jud s completer possession of her. But it was not that; It was something which had to do with that lawyer whom Jud had damned aloud—O'Mara. CHAPTER VIII The Monday of the trial dawned hot. The sun rose yellow and dazzling out of a lake that lay like a pool to the horizon; the faintest of breezes moved from off this endless mirror. At Agnes's wide-open windows the frail net of curtains barely quivered. Ordinarily the sun, striking Into her room, did not awaken her; but this morning she had seen the last stars fade and the first fingers of day grope over the edge of the waters. The robins and the wrens chirped at the light; a wood thrush awoke, and gay little scng sparrows. After a while Agnes' mother came In, and for a short time they discussed Agnes' coming ordeal. Then Mrs. Gleneith left Today, Myrtle Lorrie must go on trial for her life, for the murder of her tvgshund; and soon Agnes Glen eltb must go on the witness-stand for her. No, not for Myrtle. There was no point in being dishonest with yourself. She was taking the side of the defense because of Cathal Martin O'Mara, who had come to the house again on Sat* irday morning—the day before yesterday—to go over her testimony once more. Mr. Nordell and another attorney for the state had conferred with her twice; and she was subpoenaed as a witness for the state as well as for the defense. But Jeb had said to her: "Nordell told me, Glen, you seemed to belong to the defense, body and soul. That's the impression he got. Are you crazy?" "I'm going to tell only what I saw and heard." she had replied to him. "But how are you -going to tell it? Nordell knows; and he's not fool enough to call you for his witness. You'd never be his. If be put you on the stand, you'd go over to your shyster friend O'Mara. So hell let O'Mara put you on the stand—and then the state can get after you. Be CMara'i witness, and see where yon land t Good Lord, Glen, what's got into you?" What was this which was In her, and which, by its recurrent excitements made sleep impossible and unthinkable after the dawn of this day? There was no use in disguising this to"herself; when she should go on the witness-stand, she would declare by her Implications, If she were forbidden to state it In words, that Myrtle Loff rie had killed Justifiably. Had sbe? (TO BE COHTINVED) There's the fun of rounding out the summer season of social activities in lovely array and then when midseason dances and dinners are over, its off to college where the fun begins all over again for your dress will take on new glamor in new environment. Wherefore, it would reason out that a party dress bought now is not an extravagance but an economy since it provides not only for the present, but for the future as well. The gowns pictured have smart features that are scheduled to carry through into late fall, since their styling is decidedly advance. The skirt of the lovely flowered chiffon dress on the seated figure is that full and billowy it floats beguilingly with every move of its f a i r wearer. The halter neckline is especially significant together with the Margot ruff about the throat. The halter neckline is appearing right along on incoming fashions. Designers are all enthusiasm over the new princess lines that are destined to play an outstanding role this coming season both for dresses and coats. The charming gown centered in the picture adopts princess lines that develop into a full hemline. The perfectly gorgeous mousseline de soie that fashions this delectable gown is in an appealing shade of blue with huge golden flowers artfully widespaced as are most of the more formal prints this season. This handsome quality-high silk mousseline confirms the message from fabric headquarters that silks of extreme luxury and elegance will triumph in the coming modes. The flair for all white in the evening is reflected in the ensemble to the right. An alabaster white silk sheer was the choice for this supremely lovely costume created by Reville. The waistband is FOR SCHOOL WEAR B? CHERIE NICHOLAS fastened with a silver Grecian clasp. The prestige of capes in the evening mode is noted, and knowing style creators declare they will continue to play their triumphant role as the new season comes on. The word that fashion is reviving the use of ostrich is confirmed in the opulent banding of white South African ostrich feathers that embellish this cape. Not only, according to indications, will ostrich appear on hats but a lavish use will be made of it for costume accessories and other adornment. In fact the trend for fall and winter apparel for the social season is toward superbly rich effects in every direction, especially in the new silks and metal weaves of classic tone. Jewelled and beaded embroidery will glitter on crepes' and other gorgeous silks. The newest gesture is handpainting done in silver and gold and bronze, borrowing ideas for motifs from Chinese, Persian, Egyptian and other Far East art sources. A theme of absorbing interest is the new gowns fashioned of black satin for dinner and evening wear. They are in decided contrast to the fluffy ruffles type of shimmery and sheer frocks. The idea is to make them up classically simple. Of course, the satin must be of sterling pure silk weave to successfully sound the luxury note. A favorite styling is similar to that of the flowery silk mousseline gown just described as being cut along princess lines that assume a wide flare at the hemline with the neckline emphasizing the very new square cut. With these satin gowns most glamorous bracelets, rings and clips are worn, withholding ornamentation of any other sort. If you would be "first in fashion" a black satin dress of this type will assure you this coveted distinction. Pattern 1927-B Even the slenderest of clothes allowances will permit including this clever tunic frock in your wardrobe. It's the very dress you've been wanting . . . so perfect for town, country, commuting and vacationing. The tunic has a blue polka dot on white ground and flares partly from a tiny waist held by a patent belt. The lines conform to the current wide shoulder vogue while puffed sleeves push up at the shoulders a la Margot. You may wear the neckline open having revers in the same or contrasting color, or buttoned high and ornamented with a clip pin or bouquet. Your friends will succumb to the charm of your black and white shantung model, polka dotted satin, pastel sheer splashed with crisp white, or any favorite shade or material that expresses your personality, making this ensemble yours alone. Barbara B e l l Pattern No. 1927-B is available for sizes: 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20. Size 14 requires 2 3-4 yards of 35 or 39-inch material for the tunic and 2 yards for the skirt. Send 15 cents In coins. Send for the Fall Pattern Book containing Barbara Bell w e 11 planned, easy^to-make patterns. Exclusive fashions for children, young women, and matrons. Send 15 cents for your copy. Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept.i 367 W. Adams St., Chicago, 111. © Del) Syndicate.—WNU Service. ® Western Newspaper Union. HEARTBURN FROM OVEREATING? FEATHERS IN YOUR Hurried or overeating usually cause* heartHAT THIS AUTUMN burn. Overcome heartburn and digestive distresses with Milnesia, the original milk Now comes a word about fall hats. of magnesia in wafer form. Thin, crunch?, Higher crowns and off the face deliriouslytiavored,pleasantto take. Each lines in brimmed style are being wafer equals 4 teaspoonfuls of milk of shown. One advance model devel- magnesia. 20c,35c & 60c sizes at druggists. oped in black leghorn for late summer, and in velvet for fall, has a WNU—O 34—36 turned-up brim, cleverly slit at the back and trimmed with a dark gray ostrich feather. Feathers are coming into the ^conversation, too — and how they will increase our vocabularies I Our plumage, it seems, is to be one of our most important autumn features. We'll be using the term "Coq feathers" again, and "coquille." The former are the tail feathers of a rooster, and the latter is a short body feather of a goose. There are "Palette" and "Satinette" and a lot more to learn with the new season, along with the fact that we'll be formalized by ostrich plumes. In every back-to-school wardrobs there should be at least one dress of light weight wool. Light in weight but warm enough for coolish days, the sheer wool used to make this beautifully tailored twopiece frock makes h equally acceptable for business, campus or spectator.sports wear. A two-color print chiffon scarf tucks inside the high round collar. The front closing Is achieved with composition buttons matching the shade of the Buttons Now Offer Style Touch for Any Old Costume Seekers of the latest in accessories for the modern well dressed woman are missing an important bet if they don't make a special point of keeping close watch on the button market Every trip to the stores should Include a stop at that most fascinating of all counters where buttons of all colors, shapes and sizes are tucked away in hundreds of little drawers. Since color is so important in accessories, buttons of the new vivid scarlets and blues, emerald greens, and lemon yellows, or of the multiple other intriguing colors, might be jfcist the proper touch for the revivification of last year's clothes. HOTEL SHERMAN 1700 RO0MI 1700 BATHS IRIVI YOUR OAR RIGHT IN HOME Of TH! COLLEGE INN : M i :, AG 0 * rc*£. *# •W v-1 *¥ : 5^;: •*jr ^¢: v^^%' v. TKe Plnckney DUpatcH NOTES OF THE CAME / 3$ * We3net&y,J HI-LAND LAKE STORE _ SPECIAL _ "Hall" Sandwich* Served Saturday Evening and Sunday Dixie Hamburger 10c Roast Pork—15c and others im3B PINCKNEY WINS SECOND CAM . . . . AFTERWARD The significance of fine funeral direction is tel* *°w appreciated at the time of need. It U after the need has passed and memories of loved ones have become all that remains, that the perfection of our services is fully appreciated. Investigation will disclose that the beauty and dignity of this service is within the reach of any family. The Ann Arbor team is discourfaged, only having won two games in ^ ? n a r f J W Z*10* played at Pinet! 15 starts. Most of their losses have Tney 'on Friday night, Wndtney 4»» been by one run. Hamburg beat feate* Hainfleld W fa ¢ 7 ^ - ^ ;them twice in ten-inning contests. mtchers, Dinkel a n d . $tytk!er The Ann Arbor linkup is familiar. batted freely but Pindtnay nvifej -O, to get the most hits. Roto** Smith and Mercer used tin play with VILLAGE TAX NOTICE Plainfield hit a• home run, $Ut Dexter. Jaffee played several games 1 will receive the Village Taxes at t """'£•« «** « ™ » . w » with Pinckney two years a*o. »*,„ » ™ - / « 'niiti^i/v. 57,^«» T«K/ test Pinckney could do to Chas. Bennett, Burnstrum a n d 1¾ h A 0 . m i „ ? n . P o , ^ ^ l v F u r l n g J u l y , w e r e triples by Dinkel i n d P a u l Todt of Hamburg were there to see and August to Sept lStfi. er. Signed: the first game, the Hamburg-Saline Pinckaegf Blarche Martin, ViL Treas. contest not starting until 3:00 p. m. AB R' H PO tThey did not seem to get much kick out of Pinckney's victories. Joe Singer, ss .... 3 8 2 1 $3000 Don Searles is in the northern part CRUISERS .' swartffi, 3b2h. I of the state for a couple of vueka, "LUXURY but is expected back in a week or so. * j VanBlaricum, c 1 Jack Dilloway hurt his foot in the jR. Reason, l b ...• 3 third inning and this made a shift in I Dinkel, p 3 the lineup necessary. Maycock went A. Singer, 2b, If 8 to short and Henry Skowerski to the 'Jim Singer, cf .... 3 outfield. Henry is not familiar with J. Reason, rs .... 3 10 N0 this position and let two flies get Clark, rf 8 away from him in left field. The last Dilloway, c 2 -muff let in two runs. Then he was F. Haines, 3b .... 1 U; shifted to center and caught two flies PUBLIC EXECUTIONS right off the reel. Yefitr^ ago hangings were a big ocPlainfield Clare Miller ran about a mile and A E' casiq*r-4ft merry, old, England. All AB R ! caught Mercer's high fly behind se- Offering: 1 1; executions were public and people G. Simmonds, c 3 cond base. 2 came from miles around to witness Taylor, 3b 3 Dutch' Wilson, former University 1 them. Samuel Peppys, in his famous MILES OF COMFORT 2 2 Donohue, Is 8 8 2 player, is a pitcher, but went behind 0 diary, relates getting up at 4:00 a. FOR RENT Furnished home, on hill Holmes, lb ... the bat and caught a good game. Everyone would like to Brotherton, 0 m. to get a good place at a hanging north of railroad in Pinckney. Mod1 2 If Haines did not give Ann Arbor 0 and the pleasure he derived fiom it. em as a city home. Also a cottage 0 0 many good balls to hit at. His at own a $3000 car—but don't Kenzie, rs 0 Only a few states have capital pun- r.t Portage Lake for the last week in 0 0 tempt to work the corner continually' w o r r y if VOU h a v e n ' t One* N. Jacobs, 2b 0 ishment in this country and in these August _ or the first week in Septem3 1 H. Isham, rf ses was res'pfciisib'le for his five bases 0 the executions are usually private or j her. George Reason. 1 0 | You can ^get the same com- ] FoikW,c p 30 0 on balls issued. 0 limited to a very few. That the peo- { The game was played at Wes.tPark fort and safety in SHORT-' ^ J J j Jf 0 0! pie have not entirely lost their taste j FARM :\ £ 0 FOR SALE_U40 or 250 in Ann Arbor, one of the best 0 0 j for the gruesome, is shown by the acres 0 k runs" WAY'S radio-equipped luxj c.^aoobs* c"".Z" 1 o Electricity available. A sacmonds in the state. A creek runs" Home run, Holmes, ^-base hits,; execution^ in Kentucky" TasVweek "of S i c e ' baT^in Terms or will trade through the outfield. This used to u r y Cflli&ers* Dinkel, P. Singer, .Brotherton. 2- a negro boy. ° — - ** ««* « ,rmce oaigaui. be a favorite place toH^it home runs. Lefty Reason claims he once stood A n d o f COUrse S H O R T - base hits, _ out by Dinkel, 14; folkler 5. Urn- cution. This was evidently made still knee deep in it and caught * fly sev- \ i / A V»C .»~ -«. j more interesting by the fact that it'FOUND—A. good hunting dog; Red eral years ago. However, the boys V V A I S COUIteoUS a n d C a r e - p i r e ^ R . Singer. was handled by a woman sheriff, who Bone. Lucius Doyle. Tel NoT 42F2 released the death trap. Just why did not get their fc?t wet Sunday ^ful drivers will bring added it was necessary to make this execu- FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE_Whi(,e to your trip. as the creek has dried up. ' comfort tion public and give it so much pub- enameled Red Star gasoline range Lefty was not on the job Sunday licity, is a problem. . for Eloctrochef. Phone 12, Pinckney to patrol the creek. We wonder why? Try a SHORT WAY ride Mich. The Pinckney baseball team has been selected as one of the teams to for real enjoyment. FOR SALE A Jersey cow with calf play at the Northville Fair. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Metzgar called j by side; also a good work horse, o • CLARENCE MARONEY on Mr. and Mrs. Paul Landing at]George Griener. Low Fares — Ann Arbor, Saturday evening. Clarence Maroney, 77, died at the Miss Mildred Jack' of Howell was FOR SALE_Eating Potatoes. Frequent Schedules Of Chelsea private hospital, Tuesday, af-1 h?r ParentS V6r the weTk I n d ! ^ ° ! v i r k SmitX 3 miles north of Pinck ter a three weeks' illness. Sui-viving are his widow; a son, Paul, one broMiss Dorothy Carr of Detroit called n e y * ther and two sisters. I on h£r sisters, Mrs. Robert Jack and m c wnvrnv TI ..V J ^ He was a life member of Olive. Mrs. Harry Lee, here Saturday, and L * b S F ^ " ?L00 l 0 ^ ¾F n¾A SET Ho1 Lodge, Chelsea, No. 156, F. & A. M. ! spent Saturday night and Sunday l js t£e £i n c™ £ tJ**' J> ' George Greiner. ' a w o r s a l e 1 He served as master and had been with her parents at Portage Lake. J secretary continuously for the past Mr. and Mrs. B^et and family 34 yea>\ ! called on Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Euler WANTED A milker. Steve Murf* ka. Lapham farm. (during the week end. He was well-known to Pinckney! Mrs. Redding and daughter were! Masons, having visited Livingston 1 DEPOT AT Howell shoppers Saturday. j W A N T E D Farmers or Farmers Lodge a number of times. i Mr. and Mrs. Mylb Kettler and' sons over 21 years of age with good o family called on Mr. and Mrs. Leei cur to travel in the country. Steady The price of the Dispatch during work. Write for particulars. and Mr. and Mrs. Jack, Friday. August for n?w subscriptions and reG. C. HEBERLING CO. Mrs. Gerard, who ha^ been in the newals is $1.00 per yefir. Now is the! Dept.-1213 Bloomington, 111. hospital suffering from a broken hip time to get your subscription fixed up.' Phone 53F3 injury has been removed to her homo; _ __ *>•/•,r, * i and Mrs. Jack Vanderwall of Lake-I WANTED TO EXCHANGR-An oak land is taking care of her. \ tuff1fc f o r a dresser* C' E ' B u c h e r » Miss Viola Pettyi was a Howell]Pinckney. caller and sVpper Friday. .,,^,, „ M ^^^ « » . ! • - . « i_, >» Miss Yvonne Kettler and Roberta \HOUSE FOR SALL_Reasonable if Jack are returning to Yvonne's home SQIJL at once. Write or see owner, in Howell where Roberta is going to 28710 Greening Road, R. No. 1, spend a few days. Farmington, Mich. Mrs. Anna Meyer Club Toledo, Wentertained -dnesday. herj FOR SALE—8 pigs, six weeks old. Mrs.frontMcFadden Mrs. Lester La Valley attended a Eli Aron. U>irthday party in honor of her husCandidate for the |1band Friday evening at Grosse Isle FOR RENT OR SALE—280 acre Country Club. Republican Nomination for Dairy Farm on milk route, 3 miles Mr. and Mrs, Miller of Detroit a r e i north j ( w 4 _ of Pinckney; electricity; good Livingston spending the week at their cottage j build'im^ Inquire Pinckney Disat Fernslands. natch The Lakeland King's Daughters J held their meeting at Miss Viola Pet-| ' ty's, Tuesday. The meeting previous-1 GLENN FAMILY REUNION ly was to bo held -it Mrs. Harry Lee's but due to her illness, Miss Pettys i Your support will be appreciated at willingly took the_ meeting. I The annual Gbnn Family Reunion j was held at Perry Noah's Landing at the Primary, S. pt. 15, VJ'66 MASON OR KERR DOZ. North Lake on August 13. About Fair Outlook Bright ""Qf ' ' ' '•• fiOO attended. Talks were given by Webster Pearce of Marquette and MRS. CORA SOWDER Rev, Harvey Pearce, DOZ. Success of the Michigan State The reunion nexi year will be ; Mrs. Cora Sowder, 74, died at her Fair this year, September 4 to 13, held the same place on the third home in Fowlervilk ; Monday njght. depends solely on "a good break in Thursday of August. The funeral and burial will be held PT. CAN at Fowlerville, Thursday afternoon the weather" according to Secre- 'af" at 2:00 P. M. The deceased is the tary George A. Prescott. mother of Mrs. Guy Hinchey of "Every facility and requisite for Established 18C5 1 LB. PKG. Pinckney. making this Centennial fair the I 0 Incorporated 1916 greatest in Michigan's history has I CARD OF THANKS practically been laid in our laps," , CANS We wish to thank our friends and Prescott said Saturday, "and ap- I the people who so kindly assisted us in our recent fire. Your labor and parently there is nothing to fear j save cold or rain;' weather. sympathy greatly appreciated. GAL. I Mi. and Mrs. Mark Swarthout. "The automotive and other indus* i trial concerns are renting space j lien Cole of De.\ter is in St- Jo- and arranging for exhibits far be- j LB. PKG. seph's Hospital, Ann Arbor, as the result of an auto accident at Base yond any of their previous efforts. Agricultural and livestock exhibits Lake, Saturday night. will top any achieved in other Charles Monroe of Howell wag in QT. BOTTLE town on business Tuesday. years »» Ov«r Sixty Eight Y u r i LB. SACK of Saft Bulking ; HuilCKN& ** n '^S^lttWt J> "V* • w*' *--« :Ui SI -•" FOR S A L E & BXCHANOPr > * • • dark, i*5«sr::«™*.i^-su _ f f u ^ S W f ^ ' * ES «"£t «"SS — t h s t rs ft i> w £c c u ; Let as ihow ya J *hy il'r -> !»*! ••: l!ra uuo aw*t dealers elfcr:• itiii h'ghest prkw. B P^THFSSBr-:5? 'Ice 30r.3 CI. 4,40.21 t :,SJ 4.75-19 5.00-.9 5.95-^8 19,70 5.50-r; \ Oihcr :Vi»s In ^ropcirt'on LEE LAVEY, Dealer Lakeland Kennedy's Drug Stoie I '£ ! l| <^HARbBS P . Specials Hamburger, Jar Covers liHANSON We Grind It While You Wait County Treasurer Kerr Lids Fly Spray, 0. K. Soap Powder Dotj Food, Rixey> Vinegar, Extra Strong Noodles Ammonia, Corn Meal Ritz Crackers, tf£ Broilers, McPherson State Bank Vacation Time] Is Here Is Your Car Ready? PKG. 2 1-2 to 4 lbs DRESSED YOU'LL GET BETTER MEATS AT CLARK'S Clark's as; Tbon«51 ?-<*-• THE HOME OF HIGH QUALITY ME4TS ;$&£"' ~\ '•>C >^ PINCKNEY, MICH. :*.*#t<«_"^ We Deliver at allf Times Vacation time U at hand and it behoove* the vacationist to have his car put in first class order for the long trips ahead* Bring it in and let me look it over and put it infirstclass shape for the many miles ahead of it. Then your trip will be made a real pleasure—with your car running smooth and pretty. WILLARD BATTERIES FOR SALE Charles Clark* A. A. At Service Station Th« Mid«»ummtr Outlook Since early July the drought has had the lime-light in the news. Now we find figures published on Industrial Activity. And we discover that Jie heavy industries, building and iteel, are the leaders. They are operating at a percentage of capacity which is higher than at any time in the last four years and equal to the 1929 pace. This news means that the farmers' market will be broadened through better industrial wage* and greater -empioynient. According to a noted economist we have climbed back to a normal state of business activity and are ready for a new period of prosperity. All accounts up to $5,000.00 insured by our membership in Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, McPherson State Ink e