LUng.b» County, MicUg*. Wednesday, August 25, To Offer ScholarsKp^j Catholic Chard, Service To Rural Teachetl

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1 OUR MOTTO S: "ALL THE J1EW* THAT'S FT TO PRNT' Bnrtutcp Bspatrtj OUR SUBSCRPTON RATE $1.25 PER YEAR '^Ht V-7 «$ ' "m'\ V Warnng To Delnquent Tax Payers Audtor General George Gundry Agan Remnds Taxpayers That Sept. 1, 1937 s the Last Day They Can Avod Havng Ther Property Sold for Taxes, ssung a note of warnng to deln- t tax payers, Audtor General George Gundry agan calls attenton to the fact that after September 1st the taxpayer wll automatcally come under the provsons 0¾ Act 28, passed by the 1937 legslature, and act whch leaves no opton to publc offc s on the matter of property delnquent for twees. After September 1st, Mr. Gundry ponts out f the 1936 taxes are not pad n full, and f the matured nstallments of 1932 and pror years have not leen p< -1 n fuu and f the frst nstallment of 1933, 1934 and 3-= LUng.b» County, McUg*. Wednesday, August 25, 1937 More Federal Money fj ~ Can't Somethng Be Done About Ths? [ For County Roads More Federal Money s to be Avalable Soon for Roads. Countys are to Match Federal Money Varnum B. Stenbaugh, deputy of state hghway commssoner chef engneer, announced ths week that the U. S. Bureau of Publc Roads has approved fjjal regulatons coverng the Mchgan secondary road constructon program. The program provdes for a maxmum expendture of $1,557,412 a year durng the current bennum for the goverment of secondary trunklne and county roads. The federal government has made $778,706 avalable for ths work n Mchgan whle the same amount must be furnshed by the state and countes. 27 per-cent of the program funds wll be expended on trunk lne constructon and 73 per cent on the county system. Stenbaugh sad. The 1935 taxes have not be>en pad, (pror to September 1st) the tax payer has j state wll be requred to match funds completely lost hs opportunty to take expended for trunklne work whle the countes must do the same for the county road mprovement*. The entre program wll be under the general supervson of the state hghway department. State specfcatons wll rule. Projects must be approved by the department and t wll award fnal contracts. Stenbaugh sad the next move eto get the program under way wll be the allocaton of mnmum funds proposed for expendture n each of the 83 of countes n Mchgan. " Scyme of the countes wll not want to match these funds.' Senbtugh sad. ''Others wu not be able to do so. n such cases, addtonal work wll be avalable n other countes. Thomas Mc Donald, chef of the U S. Bureau of Publc Roads, has suggested that some countes may want to jon together n a brdge mprove* ment program on county roads that extend through two or more countes OEOROBT. GUNDRY A CELEBRATES 88TH BRTHDAY advantage of the ten payment plan, Mrs. Sarah J. Carr one of the oldest "f payments are madu beo<e Sept resdents of Pnckney celebrated ho. 1st there s & savng n fees amountng 88th brthday Sunday at tho Carr :v*- to 34 and one half percent on 1933 den<:3 on Mll etreet. Tab.ee were tax, 29 and one fourth percent on eprer/ for 28 ncludng chtdern the 1034 tax, t.nd 16 and one fourth grand chldren end great grand chldren The out of town relatves nclud percent on the 1935 tax, The penjuty for default of any nstallment U that the entre balance Mrs. Francs Carr, Mr. and Mrs, Jas. ed Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Carr, Mr. and ef, the tax U offered for sale at the Greene, of Lansng, Mr. and Mrs. W, next tax sale, whch s n May D. Carr and son of Detrot, Mr, and County treasurers, contnues Mr* Mrs. Donald Carr of Detrot, Dr. an, Gundry are greatly encouraged by the Mrs. Karl Znn and son Frederck of response to the state and county ad- Battle Creek, the Msses Helen and vertang concernng delnquent tax Barbara Jean Can and Mr. Robert collectons and t s antcpated that Nydaggen of Detrot. Mrs. Carr was by the tme Sept, 1st s reached that the total delnquency for tuxes wll be substantally reduced, GRAND JURY TO NVESTGATE STREGHF.R CASE On March 8, 1935 the body of 7 year- o:d Rchard Strecher of Yps» lantl was found stabbed to death and crowded nto a culvert. Although numerous suspects were examned no arrests were made and the murder s as much of a mystery'how as t was on the day t WQB commtted. Judge SamplO of Washtenaw county and on the approval of Attorney General Starr has ordered a grand jury nvestgaton n whch all of the evdence wll be revewed, The petton or the nvestgaton was Bgned by Mr* and Mrs. Henry Baker of Yps the recpent of many useful and beautful gfts n token of the occasson and a very pleasant day was spent wth fond hopes of many returns of the annversary* MASONC, O. E. S, PCNC The Masonc and Eastern Star Lod ges of Pnckney wll hold a jont vcnc at Newport Beach, Portage Lake on Frday, September 3. The Masonc and Eastern Star Lodges of Dexter wll be ther guests on ths occason. Newport Beach was chosen nstead of Cedar Lake on account of ts easy accessblty There wll be a pot-luck dnner at noon. AH Masons, Stars, ther famles and frends are nvted as well as members of other lodges. There wll bo a program put on con. sstng moaty of athletc: events, Przes wll bo gven for thorn. Thenars neghbors of the Strechers. Assst-, as fomowst sut Attorney Generals Jejmes Stew- Tug of War. Pat Man's Raoe Ladart and Albert Wng wll conduct the es Race, Relay Race, Quot Con'testa, hearngs before Sample. About ffty, and a soft ball game-dexter vs wtnesses wll be subpoened. The n- Pnckney. Other events may be added (jury wll last about a week. Anyone wshng to go and who has Prosecutng Attorney Rapp of! no way should bt at the ha'l at 10:30 Wafehtenaw sad he had no knowled- A. M.-and there wll be cars avalable ge of such nqury and regarded t as 1 seesc and a waste of money unless the grand jury had nformaton whch was beng wthheld from hm. Ths was a case whch attracted natonwde attenton and every effort should be made to solve t. There are altogether too many unsolved" murder" mysteres set the present tme. The dead boys parents now lve n Grand Rapds. NOTCE The Ladles Ad wll hom a sale n tfc Pnckney.Electrcal Shop n«* Saturday a* 10 o'clock. Brng dona*. ons Mr fc. T L j KKvtff.* for all who wsh to go, MARRAGE LCENSES ll w The f)->llo*7ng marrage ttcenss* have been ssued n ths county by John Vgman County Clerk. Wayne Peterson, 28, Fowlervtte, Mary Fnlan, 4. Fowlervlle. Florentne Strobel, 26, Howell, Barbara Peek, 25, Fowlervlle. Wm. 0. Rchards, 2, Howell, Audra May Lounsbarry, 82, Howell Carres W. Pogtte, 44, Detrot, Dorothy Pope Wlson, 29, Pnckney Joseph Basydlo, 22, Pnckney, Mavs Chaney, 20, Powlervlle. Mr. and Ma. George Bleed ad Mss Vta *tl9#«t todaju*! To Offer ScholarsKp^j Catholc Chard, Servce To Rural Teachetl Owng to Scarcty of Rur*l Teachers the Teachers Colleges Wll Offer e Number of Free Scholarshps See Your School Supt for Detals. Because of the shortage of rural teachers, scholarshps wll be offered to the teachers by the teachers colleges of Mchgan. The scholarshp wll be offered for the comng two year perod, a commtte of the state Board of Educaton and teachers colleges of Mchgan decded today, Doctor Sangren sad. They wll be granted to hghest rank ng hgh school students n the feld of rural educaton, the course headng to a lmted certfcate for teachng n rural dstrcts. Those granted the scholarshps wll pay only due local fees of the school they attend the state tutton beng waved, Doctor^ Sangren explaned. The canddate s to complete the course. n case the quota of a county s > Rev. James dtrolaa Masses: 8:00 and 10)80, Deleton to Our Mother of Perpetual Help, Saturday at 700 P. M. tonfeaaons 7:90 P. M. Saturday. L-' Baptst Church Don Patten Supply Pastor Servce! eaeh Sunday Mornng worshp M. 4M. 10:80 Specal and separate servces for the lttle folks. Sunday School...* Classes for all B. Y P. U. _ «V:00 Bvenlng Worshp... m 8:00 Thn, evenng prayer servce M 8:00 Congregatonal Church Rev. C. H. 2fee% Mllter Mrs. F. E. Beufta, Organst Sunday Servces: Bble School for everybody... 11:30 A. M. Mornng worshp wth sermonette for the chldren; followed by a sermon not flled on the bass of one scholar- shp for each 12 rural teachng pos-j for adults, by the Rev. Lannng of flons other countes wll be granted, Detrot, at 10:30 A. M. <he prvlege of namng addtonal Mr. Lannng wlt speak on the subject recpents. «< " Wh y beleve the Bble to be the The applcatons now n the hands Word of God." of county school commssoners must Specal musc wth Mss Dorothy specfy whch teachers colleges the 1 Wlson sngng applcant desres to attend and must Everybody Welcome also e endorsed by the commssoners WRGHT'S CORNERSand hgh school prncpals Doctor CHURCH OF GOD Sangren. AV applcaton^ muslt be n the Sunday Servces: hands of John Emens assstant state superntendent of publc nstructon before Sept. 11. n announcnr; the decson to award the scholarshps n the hope of easng the shortage n ths feld Doctor Sangren cted ah analyss of the demand for rural teachers n a state whch shows a need of 900 such teach era every year County normals provde 450 and teachers colleges 200. MRS. EMMA LEMON Mrs. Enunu Lemon, S6, ded at the home ol ner swter, urs. auney Lyon* n harc.uad baauay. ^hewtu unner* ly «mma -mv-tce ana was mameu W Kev. &.. *-» Lrane wno vras pastor ef Ue ttnchuvy wong'l cuurcn aoout 60 yea^»... -mowng hs retrement an,...»"- Mu»,ery they purcnasea the puw*.ww occuped oy k, b. Oataton and lved there for a nmrfber of years. Rev. Crane ded about 30 years ago, Later she marred John Lemon, a druggst and lved n Detrot and Brghton. Mr. Lemon ded several yrs ago. Mrs. Lemon broke her hp twce n recent years but on both occasons recovered and was able to walk agan The funeral was \ held at the home ths afternoon. Lyons FREE DANCE ST. JOSEPH HALL Welcome frends! Here we are a- gan to greet yom at the openng of a new season of partes at St. Joseph's Hall n Howell. S^ay School 10:30 Preachng 11:30 a. m. Preachng 1:00 p.m. Y. P. Meetng 7:00 Rev. C. B. Detrck Pastor NOTCE There wll be a fre drll on Frday nght Stanley Dnkel, Asst, Fre Chef CHANEY- -BASYDLO The marrage of Joseph Basydlo to Mss Mavs Charvey, Fowlervlle, took place Saturday (mornng at St. Mary's church, Pnckney, Rev, James Car olan offcatng. The couple were attended by Stephen Gerycs and Mss Helen Petras. Only mmedate frends and relatves were present Followng the ceremony a weddng breakfast was served to the weddng party and guests at the Lakeland Country Club. After a short weddng trp they wll be at home at the home of Mr. and Mrs Clfford E. Van Horn n Hamburg. 1 Joseph Basydlo came here when a small boy and made hs home wth Mr. and Mrs. Bernard McCluskey. He The brde s a graduate of Fowlervlle hgh school. n behalf of ther many frends we extend congratulatons. On Frday evenng September. 10 M _ «_ we are havng an apprecaton end j ^ Mon^ ot Bay C tjr WM m town you are all nvted to attend at Fret Tuesday Admsson. Thnk t over and plan to Jon ll your frends. Washngton News Letter By Oongresaran AaeVew Trantae Congress Adjourns Congress adjourned last week to provde the bggest, although antcpated news of the week m Washngton. Whle Senators and Representves were leavng the captol the chef tem of" speculaton was whether Presdent Roosevelt would call a specal sesson n the fal to consder mportant tems of legslaton pertanng to labor and agrculture that are now lsted the unfnshed busness category and certan to get mmedate attenton as Congress reconvenes. Word wenry after eght months of legslatve debate and argument, the congress termnated the frst half of the 75th congress wth a rush of busness that requred three ngft sesons for the House last week. On the fnal day both houses agreed upon a conference report of the slum clearance and low rental bll retanng most TO? c urren T omtnen Presdent Roosevelt made a quck comeback when hla Ootm^nNtlon oh Senator Black to the supreme court was confrmed by the overwhelmng vote of 03 to 10. Ths t, one of the smulest ^.negatve vote** on record. justces Hughes and Bmndteu each hud more votes cast aganst ther confrmaton. n van Senator Copeland am others wave! the bloody shrt and bnought up the Klu Klux Klan ssue Even Senator Borah condemned the latter charge statng tlat not a bt of evdent*.: wo* j,temed to the judcary commutes to prove Black was a klansman. Wc wonder what Dorothy 'hompson, Kent, r'oote, Lawrence, Lppman and other stooge wrters who berated the nomnaton of Senator Black wll have to say. However they probably won't bother to explan any more than they dd last Sal after the Roosevelt Landslde, Rep. Elton Eaton of Plymouth who ntroduced the revoluton provdng of the amendments suggested by the for an nvestgaton of gamblng s house Bankng and Currency Comm- angry because t n beng had behnd ttee. Durng the week the Senate con flnmed Senator Hugo Black a±* a member of the supreme court and Mrt, Dxe Bbb Graves wfe of the povernor of Alabama, was apponted to succeed Senator Black untl a specal electon s held n Alabr.ma next sprng Both f Houses passed a compromse sugar bll that Restrcts mportatons from Puerto Rco and the Hawaan slands untl 1940 wth the fate of the measure uncertan -when t reaches the Whte Houne. Presdent Roosevelt sgned the D. of C. tax bll wth the far trade practce bll hooked on closed doors. Ths annual crusade ag* anst gamblng s lke sweepng the ocean back wth a broom, Gamblng n human nature rrnd has cxhted snce the brth of humanty. You.may pass nl the laws you desre and conduct all the nvestgatons under the sun, but when t all smmern down those countes whch want gamblng wll have t and thono who do not want t wll be wthout t. Every HO of en n ma>-< murder U uncovered and thfl ^npva thought s, ata rder! He sadhe nopevthe"rmate! hcm d _ d :^«^J-'or g Pt away for so proe (mantenance bll wouldn't prove too expensve to consumers and scored the devce of attachng unrelated rders to mportant and vtal legslatve blls. Commttee Bural Bured n the House rule*, commttee wag the wage and hour bll that ha* been passed by the senate and approved by the 1 Jo use Labor Commttee wth a few amendments All efforts to.-uuwe He labor legslaton proved 1'Utle when nne members ot the rules commttee ncludng fve Republcans and four Southern Democrats refused to gve the bll the rght of way although t was conceded that the majorty of the House favored legslaton to elmnate sweatshops and chld labor. Your congressman & other majorty members called a specal caucus to devse some method of pettng the bll to the floor ofl the House but the caucus purpose was defeated when a bloc of Southern Representves refused to answer the roll and thereby prevented a quorum that would have allowed the caucus to take offcal acton. The Southern objecton was that the wage legalatlon would be detrmental to the wage and hour bll whch wll be one of the frst blls on the Calender next Janurary. Under the rules of the Houae another 30 days would have been needed to get the bll out of commttee by pet- Won. Although your" congressman and others nterested n humantaran legslaton were wllng to stay n the Captol untl the bll was passed the coalton oprosed to legslaton that would beneft the workng people of the naton prevented ths plan. Modern Macule?! Durng the week Presdent Roosevelt made hs frst rado address snce the defeat of the Court reorgansaraton plan sponsored by the Admn- (Contnued on last page) ANN ARBOft PLAYS HERE The Pnckney team wll play the Ann Arbor team at Pnckney next graduated from the COunty normal Sunday at 3:00 p. m. Ann Arbor wll and taught school for several years. have Rusa Dobson the speed ball U. For the past year he has been employed by the Ford Motor Co. at Rver great record ths year. EtJher Hanes of M. ptcher n the box who has a Rouge. Ths year he wll teach n the or Skowerskl wll ptch for Pnckney. Hollster school r»ear Whtmore Lake. p 0 ow ng ths game Pnckney has on Mr and Mrs Joe Gmbs of Detrot were n town Thursday The Y. t C. A. Camp at Slver Make ths t real reunon dancng & t nm c \ 0$t(1 4 fter 4 two week to the musc you wll all remember perods, A total of 160 boys tamped from «M o out forme* popular oft&v then, U Y. W, C A flltl WW»t -j# *. ly three mo*e contests left to plsy. Hamburg plays here Sept. S. On the 12th Pnckney plays Salne there and Dexter ends the season here on Sept. 19. n other games Sunday Dexter beat Ann Arbor 4 to 8 and Salne got boaten by Hamburg d to 8, & wthout detecton. Cmonnatt has arrestpd one Anna Mane Hahn a.*u year od honde, ex school teacher and charged wth posonng two eld cr'y (Jrnman nvn. Shos al^o suspected of the death of!> otlvr men. t s clamed she won tlor frendshp and ther dwlh soon followed and n nearly all ca^s Mrs.Hahn benefted flnawal'y. &ho denes her gult but the authortes sorm to be wavng a tght nm around hor.ytar- a;:o a woman, Belle Gunne.*.-. perpetrated another such >ch me n nd na. Shf; advertsed for a husband.v, hen a canddate arrved he was asked to make a money settlement. When sho receved ths hs death soon folo ved. Ray Lanphcre, a sutor of hor.s and also an accotmp'ce qurre! d wth }\cr and klled her and burned the f:n-m house He was arrested and admtted the numerous murders. Nearly all the vctms were found bured on the farm. The farm unon whch was organzed some years ago for the purpose of gettng the farnur.s ther just rghts seems to have splt nto two part radcal and conservatve. The radcal group wshes an nllance wth the CO whch the other oppose*. At the pcnc at frandvlle recently whch was attended by some 20,000 the radcals were n control. The chef speaker was Homer Martn, presdent of he UAW. Others on the speakers platform were Roy McDonald and Rev, Chester Grrham, both classed as radcals. The presdent ra Wlmouth of Adran was not asked to apeak at all. For the past two year* tr*? Farmers Unon has battled for contro 1 of the Mchgan Mlk Producers Unon but has not qute been able to get t. f they could have done ths ther strength would have undoubtedly become very great, Of the amount of money approprated by the state of Mchgan by the legslature for all purposes 52 percent was for educatonal purposes $ 122,000,000 was approprated and Of ths the schools get»56,000,000«although the above amount was apr* roprurted the revenue of th«state «estmated at only $107,000,000. Ths amount for schools also does not take nto account what s rased by dstrcts by local taxes, You have probably heard "the sayng that a person was mean enough to steal pennes from c blnd man, You probably regarded t &t A fgure of speech yet Detrot polce arrested a man for that very crme, He was gven a sentence of do days n the rouse of correcton by Judge Scallen Tne records tevea'ed he was placed on probaton n 192S on the same charge. Hs method was to drop a penny n the bllndman's cup and take Sunday guest* of Met Cnalker were Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Wau and sons of osco, Mr.snd Mrs. Henry Collns and daughter and Mr. and Mrs, Harold out SOo, Ths he had dona twce boyftwu luwrf^-. M llvj sjfagejsjjsj

2 ' WU^^P'Wff? 1 -^ :.7 ngton **N The Pnckney Dtopatch, Wednesday, August 25, 1937 THE Fne Feathers for Three ',^,* ^S>*' tftrrrrrrefrj By WLLAM BRUCKART ' ^jp^r*-*- fc/n CSH?.«N A loka 'K[ '-> H 1)(-, *AS:.uJ >N fl Washngton. Some years ago, when New England's sharp-tongued... George H. Moses *»*«sat n the presd- Old Tmet ng offcer's char as presdent pro tempore ox the senate, used to marvel at the speed wth whch he <ot rd of legslaton. The Republcans were n control of the senate. The late Senator Charles Curts of Kansas was the Republcan leader. Between the astute Curts and the nmble-wtted Moses, the senate many tmes really ran n hgh gear. To me, t was remnscent of the old days, therefore, when watched Vce Presdent "Jack" Garner operate n the senate the other day to get the judcary reform bll through that body wthout permttng a del* uge of debate. thnk Mr. Gamer performed on that occason wth even greater fnesse than dd Senator Moses because Mr. Garner dd not wat for cues from the floor of the senate; he smply took charge and, knowng what the job was, saw to t that thngs were accomplshed n record tme. But the sgnfcance of ths ncdent should not be overlooked. t was noteworthy, of course, that the senate should pass the court bll and send t to the house n a total of sx hours. t was noteworthy that the Vce Presdent establshed a precedent by grantng permsson to senators to nclude n the Congressonal Record speeches they would have made f the debate had been prolonged. And yet t was the mplcaton of the senate acton that seems to me to be the most mportant phase of that stuaton. The way see the pcture s ths: The ease wth whch that bll was put through demonstrates that those who opposed the orgnal bll to add sx new justces to the Supreme court were objectng only to the court packng and not to the reforms n procedure. The bll as t becomes law provdes for a number of changes n court procedure to the end that adjudcaton of controversy can be accomplshed much more quckly than has been the case n the past. t does not nclude any addton to the membershp of the Supreme court and t does not nclude any provson for sendng hand-pcked judges nto the varous crcuts and dstrcts as the Whte House and the Department of Justce may decde, n other words, the new law leaves the judcary system ndependent and agan establshes t as a coordnate branch of the government, equal n all respects to the legslatve, whch s congress, and the executve, whch s the Presdent and the executve departments. There can be no doubt that ths pece of legslaton s worthwhle although to the layman the benefts may not mmedately appear. t must be regarded, however, smply as a pece of legslaton that cuts much legal red tape and those who must aval themselves of the courts or those who are forced under jursdcton of courts wll come more nearly* obtanng justce than heretofore.. have sad n these columns before that when the senate refused to accept the Presdent's orders and pass legslaton that would permt hm to appont sx new justces to the Supreme court at one tme, the Presdent suffered one of the worst poltcal defeats he has ever encountered. He probably wll never meet wth another such dsastrous setback. t was obvous to the vast majorty of senators and representatves and to observers here wthn sx weeks after Mr. Roosevelt submtted the court packng bll that he could not force t through. He refused nevertheless to admt defeat. n consequence, f took nearly sx months of btter and futle wranglng n the senate to convnce the Presdent that he was on the wrong sde of the queston as far as publc sentment was concerned. So, congress has wasted nearly all of the 1937 sesson on a proposton for whch t was not responsble. t may be sad that congress should reman n sesson under those crcumstances and gve all of, the tme that s necessary to delb- " oraton of measures before t. Yet, facts* must be faced. One of these facts s that through all of the months pror to adjournment scores of members were wearng themselves down fghtng aganst a proposton wth whch they could not agree. la the meantme, Washngton's summer settled down. Washngton's summer s a completely hot and humd summer. Most of the members of the senate and house are no longer boys of college age. They cannot wthstand the physcal rgors of heavy work under weather condtons that preval n a Wash* ngton summer. Thus t s not strange at all that as July passed and August wore on, most of the members wanted to go to places more comfortable than the Captal cty ah that consttuted a terrfc mrge to gat rd of whatever legslaton was before them wth the vary mnmum of effort. n consequence, there has been some very bad legslaton and congress s now wholly to blame for t A frend of mne, a well-known doctor, who s not a poltcan, x v u knows nothng New Tor** about poltcs a Fght man, n short, who mnds hs own busness and tres to do the best job of whch he s capable, asked me a queston the other day that precptated ths dscusson. He asked me why the newspapers throughout the country were gvng so much space, frbnt page space at that, to the poltcal fght over the Democratc nomnaton for mayor n New York. My doctor frend observed that whch s true, namely, that the mayor of New York s only mayor of that cty and has no jursdcton or power anywhere else; he observed as well that New York Cty s smply a subdvson of the state of New York and that New York state s only one state out of forty-eght n our naton. Further, he suggested that he, and he beleved mllons of others, could not possbly have any nterest n whether Tammany or the New Deal facton of Democrats n New York Cty should wn the nomnaton and ther mayoralty canddate. Superfcally, the doctor was rght. Hs thoughts, however, do not touch the root of that stuaton. Fundamentally, the battle between Tammany and the Democrats n New York s a battle between the old lne, conservatve Democrats throughout the naton and the New Deal facton of tne party whch s headed by Presdent Roosevelt. t s vtally mportant also to the Republcans for the reason that the Presdental electon of 1940 s almost certan to be a campagn n whch we wll fnd conservatves from whatever party algned on one hand and radcals from whatever party algned on the other sde. To that extent, the New York prmary and mayoralty electon s the begnnng of the 1940 presdental campagn. The btterness that s gong to preval from here on has been gven somethng of a prevew by the charge by Senator Copeland, the Tammany canddate, that Presdent Roosevelt was nterferng n a purely local fght. Senator Copeland's actvtes n the senate have been almost wholly antagonstc to the Presdent and the New Deal generally. Where the Presdent has been sound, as the conservatves recognze sound polces, Senator Copeland has fought alongsde of the New Dealers. Otherwse, he has not concealed hs opposton to radcal New Deal proposals. Thus, when Senator Copeland broke openly and accused the Presdent of stoopng to local poltcs, he opened the way for conservatves everywhere to strke back at the poltcal machne managed by Postmaster General Jm Farley n Mr. Roosevelt's behalf. As one house member suggested: "Senator Copeland has put fre nto the fght." The selecton of Senator Copeland by the famous Tammany organzaton n New York Cty was the sgnal for the New Deal facton of the great cty to take off ther coats. They promptly announced selecton of New York Supreme Court Justce Mahoney as ther canddate aganst Copeland. There are four burrough organzatons behnd Mahoney. There s only the Tammany group behnd Copeland. On the face of t, t would seem that the senator cannot wn. The fact seems to' be, however, that there wll be a rather close race for the reason that some of the four organzatons behnd Mahoney may not be able to control the Democratc votes n ther balwcks as entrely as Tammany Hall wll control Democrats so long afflated wth that organzaton. Certanly, accordng to the best advces can get, the Copeland charge aganst Mr. Roosevelt s lkely to swng a good many Democrats to the Copeland tcket. Ths wll be so because New York Cty always has resented outsde nfluences n ts poltcal battles. Senator Copeland can be counted upon as well to broaden the charge so that Mr. Farley's tentacles n New York Cty poltcs where he has long been actve wll be made to appear lke the stranglng, crushng arms of an octopus. n other words, the conservatves who are supportng Copeland wll not let the charge of nterference by the Presdent become of less consequence any tme t s retold. True, Secretary Marvn Mclntyre of the Whte House staff dened that the Presdent had talked poltcs wth the Mahoney leaders. But the denal was not accepted by Copeland as beng sncere, for he added: " am not afrad of Mr. Roosevelt's reprsals. The Presdent enjoys a great personal popularty, but hs poltcal popularty s swftly dsappearng." Western fetnpsper Uafee. Ste of Amerca's Frst OU Well. The Thngs That Last Are All n Pennsylvana Sad Kplng Prepared by Natonal Geographc Socety, Washngton. D. C WNU Servce A FTER havng vsted the sx- L ty-seven countes of Pennsylvana, trod the streets of all ts teemng ctes, gazed on ts noble mountans, sauntered through all ts glorous hghland valleys, motored along all ts fne rvers, traveled through ts dense, young forests, nspected ts fnest farmng areas and studed ts amazng ndustres, t becomes easy to understand how Kplng, after a transcontnental trp, could wrte: "They are there, there wth earth mmortal (Ctzens, gve you frendly warnng); The thngs that truly last when men and tme have passed, They are all n Pennsylvana ths mornng." From the heart of Market street n Phladelpha to the famous "Pont" n Pttsburgh and Logstown down the Oho; from Easton and Bethlehem to New Castle and Sharon; from busy Chester on the Delaware to thrvng Ere on the lake; from Matamoras, farthest east communty, to Greene, the soutbwesternmost county; the hstorc, the eye-delghtng, and the ndustral are bound together n every prospect. Where the commerce of Phladelpha throbs, Wllam Penn lved; Benjamn Frankln wrought and phlosophzed; the Declaraton of ndependence had ts brth; and the federal Consttuton was created. Where Braddock fought and was fatally wounded now lves a teemng populaton, and hard by are some of the prncpal ndustral plants of the world. The Edgar Thompson Steel mlls, the Westnghouse Electrc, and scores of others stand on ground that was wthn earshot of the fateful battle; and t s slated that a heaver tonnage moves wthn twelve mles of Braddock's feld than n any other area of ts sze. Vast ndustres Are There. The coal that comes down the Monongahela; the ore that moves from the Great Lakes; the ron and steel fabrcated n the Pttsburgh dstrct's scores of mghty plants; all the commodtes bound east and west and north and south by ral and rver all these, the most concentrated tonnage n the world, pass by or wthn a dozen mles of the spot where the hostle savage turned back the Englsh forces. On the Oho between Economy and Baden, where Dam No. 4 stretches aoross the rver, s the vast plant of the Byers company, manufacturers of wrought ron. n front of the plant offces s a marker whch proclams the ste of Logstown, where George Washngton, carryng the greatest "message to Garca" of all our hstory, negotated and barganed wth the Half Kng and hs confreres for an escort to Fort Le Bouef. Across the brdge, a stone's throw down the hghway, s a smaller marker proclamng the ste where Gen. Anthony Wayne had hs wnter camp. n sgnt across the rver s the factory-studded area where Queen Alquppa had her cornfelds. Here where ndan conferences created trbal agreements and wampus belts sealed bargans between redskns and paleface, gant furnaces and mlls now mx slag and purfed ron and produce more than half of the naton's wroughtron ppe. Almost Forgotten Romance. Everybody knows the stores of Gettysburg and Valley Forge, but how many know the story of Ole Bull and hs castle n the wlds of the bg woods of the Kettle creak country? Every travel folder and hstorcal map tell of the chef ponts of nterest n Phladelpha, Harrsburg, Pttsburgh, and Ere, but who hears of the brth and boyhood days of Robert E. Peary spent at Creson, of Prnce Galltsn's superb work n the heart of the Alleghenes, of Horace Greeley's Utopa, or of the French settlement at Asylum? Lkewse, everyone knows somethng of the ol romances of Ttusvlle and Ol Cty, but how few know of the rejuvenaton methods n the Bradford feld now n full swng 1 The story of Ole Bull's hapless adventure n the heart of the Bg Woods, where the Vkng vrtuoso dreamed hs dream of "a new Norway, consecrated to Lberty, baptzed wth ndependence, and protected by the Unon's mghty flag," s one that strs the heart of every admrer of the artst. Durng hs concert tours through the South, Ole Bull had encountered many of hs countrymen, whose efforts to acclmate themselves n balmer areas than the lands of ther brth had brought them prvatons, hardshps, and ll health. Ther appeals had touched hm. Later, when tourng northern Pennsylvana, he found n the heart of Potter county a large area remnscent of Vkng land tself. He bought t and started to buld there hs "new Norway." Some 800 of hs countrymen flocked to hs haven n the heart of the mountans. Three hundred houses, a store, and a church were bult. For hmself, he erected a rustc castle of unhewn,' unmortared stone on a lttle bluff overlookng Kettle creek End of Ole Boll's Colony. n the ntervals between concert tours, the volnst would go among hs people. There he would seat hmself on the ramparts of hs castle, and "reproduce the rush and roar of rapd streams, the frolc of the wnds through the rocky glens, and the tempest's crash on the mountan top." To ths day as one motors down the hstorc old Coudersport and Jersey Shore turnpke, past the hamlet of Oleona, one may see the remans of the old castle and fancy he hears Kettle creek and ts rocky glens echong back the musc that mtated them fourscore years ago. All went well wth ths new Norway of Amerca untl one nght when Ole Bull was entertanng some frends n hs castle. A messenger rode up and carred a notce from the actual owner of the property. The men who had sold t to hm had< no ttle. The real owner was a Phladelpha merchant. For fve years Ole Bull fought a losng battle n the courts aganst those who had sold hm land they dd not own, earnng the costs of hs sut by hs concerts. n the end he got small damages. But meanwhle the colony had pershed. Prnce Galltzn's Msson. n the heart of the Alleghenes, hgh above Johnstown and Altoona, there are markers, memorals, and nsttutons whch preserve the memory of a prnce who elected to become a pauper n order to serve the cause of Chrst and to carry Hs message of benevolence and, brotherly kndness to the humble mountan folk of the regon. Prnce Demetrus Augustne Galltzn was born n Holland n Hs father was Russan ambassador to the Netherlands and hs mother the daughter of a feld marshal of Frederck the Great At the age of seventeen he pcked up a Bble n a bookstore and began to study t, wth the result that he became a convert of the Church. Later hs father sent hm to Amerca for a season of travel. Once here he decded to spend a season's theologcal studes n Baltmore. Then, after ordnaton n 1795, he started out as a travelng mssonary. Erectng a log church on the wast slope of the Alleghenes, he traveled far and wde, vstng homes where bare floors were hs bed, hs saddle a pllow, and hs food the coarsest mountan fart. Prnce Galltzn lost he all Hs father left what was to have been hs patrmony to hs sster. But he used the money hs mother gave hm for hs mountan msson work, and at Loretto that work s stll carred on n the fne mssons, ffhfft 1^ ^*d churches ha founded* S EW-YOUR-OWN wouldn't be An all-over suntan s her forte, your weather prophet for the and many sunny days are ahead world, but you know, Mlady, and so does S-Y-O, that t's always far weather when good fashons get together. Whch brngs us to today's three sparklng new frocks a whole crowd of style for the pretty part of any man's famly. A Fun Frock. Ran, nor gloom, nor a fat tre ^ether knd), can dampen the sprts of the grl who wears ths buoyant, young sports frock (above left) on her daly rounds be they on the farway, the campus, behnd the counter, or merely from pllar to post. Here's to Mothers. Sew-Your-Own loves nothng more than caterng to mother's wardrobe needs. The frock above (center) s for all mothers: old sweet ones, young darlng ones, yes, even for mothers-to-be. t s easy to run up, easy to do up, and best of all, easy to look at. Smart smple lnes make t a favorte of women who demand more than a You'll Do t T^HERE are thousands to tell * you t cannot be done, There are thousands to prophesy falure; There are thousands to pont out to you, one by one, The dangers that wat to assal you. But just buckle rght n wth a bt of a grn, Then take off your coat and go to t. Just start n to sng as you tackle the thng That cannot be done, and you'll do t. New York Trbune passable appearance when they're "just at home.' Lttle Brown Grl. for young Mss Fortunate whose mommy chooses to nterpret the fetchng model at the rght. A scallop-edged wast front accentuated by frou-frou trm s rght down her avenue, and a gored skrt, that's second to none for class, fts nto her scheme of thngs to a T. Mother, why not make one dressy verson, as pctured, another fnshed dfferently for school? (Perhaps wth a smple brad trm) Rayon prnts, gngham, or sheer wool, wll do ncely as the materal. The Patterns. Pattern 1249 s desgned for szes 14 to 20 (32 to 42 bust). Sze 16 requres 4¼ yards of 39 nch materal. Pattern 1207 s desgned for szes 34 to 50. Sze 36 requres 4½ yards of 35 nch materal. Wth long sleeves 4¾ yards of 39. nch materal. Pattern 1366 s desgned for szes 6 to 14 years. Sze 8 requres 2¼ yards of 39-nch materal plus 1¼ yards of machne pleatng. Send your order to The Sewng Crcle Pattern Dept., Room 1020, 211 W. Wacker Dr., Chcago, 111. Prce of patterns, 15 cents (n cons) each. Bell Syndcate.-WNU Servce. o What You Seek Have you ever thought how many objects you pass wthout even notcng them; how many voces and sounds fal to regster wth you? t seems that one usually sees what he s lookng for and hears that to whch hs ears are attuned. Perhaps ths s what Emerson had n mnd when he sad tha* nc one brngs back from Europe anythng whch he dd not take over wth hm. (Excludng merchandse of course.) Oho Farmer. ELECTRC TUNNG sssw^*** * 8^^ ^8¾¾.. -: H' 11-Tk-Moael UK ONLY 15«DOWN for BeetrtoTaeaf * * & SETS FRO $2445 RCA VCTOR NO DAL TWSTNG NO GROPNG NO GUESSNG Never before could you tone wth such amazng ease, such absolute comfort, as wth RCA Vctor Electrc Tunng! Tune whle standng or sttng. Thrllng new Straght-Lne Dal lets you easly see the statons you want! Ths outstandng new rado brngs you countless statons, domestc and foregn, wthfner tone, ncreased selectvty! ts prce s sensatonally low. Lenent traden. See your nearest RCA Vctor dealer now! RADOS GREATEST VALUE Tf Or THt RADO ('OUM) <: r-. ;. O A M f! R ' A k.> *+>' *: / % V, ^2^&&^y^ *f *sx^^*: f-^^^^m

3 k)» ^ aate^b STOCK FOOD Co-op's. Ground and Chop feed 1 for Sale HAULNG-TRUCKNG LOCAL STOCK GRAN CREAM Produce of All Knds LONG DSTANCE WEEKLY TRPS MADE TO DETROT W. H. MEYER COMPLETE AUTO SERVCE Expert Work at Low Prces When You Brng Your Car n for Servcng at CLARK'S GARAGE AND SERVCE STATON All makes of cars are repared n our shop. You are assured the same perfect skll as you expect from factory experenced mechancs at lowttr cost All parts used n replacements and repar work are genune parts. We use no substtute or used parts. Charles : : Clark A.A, A. Servce Staton WATCH For Announcement of Openng New Electrcal Shop ntelephone Bldg. Shop _ 3-F2 Gregory Harold Hte Resdence Pnckney 3-F2 PROFESSONAL N. O. FRYE JUSTCE OF THE PEACE Pncknay, Mchgan Old Ago Penson Applcaton* Mada Out JAY P. SWEENEY Attorney at Law Offco at Court Howell, Mchgan HOUM PERCY ELLS AUCTONEER Farm flala* a Specalty Pbofcf Knaknaf 19'FH MARTN J. LAV AN Attornty at Law Phono 13 Brghten PLUMBNG ana HEATNG Wll b«lad to fva Mtmatat tn tha fbltownf nltalktottf Stokar Plumbnf Staaro or ho ar haatlnf Eaetre ptunst Watar ayatomfl Ol taraort oror 20 yoan axparanao GUS RSSMAN U E. Grand RWar, Mowtl Phon fowtll «10 CORNER DR. H. F. SGLER DR. C. L. SGLER Pncknay, Mchgan Offce Hours loo to 2t30 NORMAN REASON REAL ESTATE BROKER Farm raadantal property and Lake Frontage a Specalty. Alo Have Cty Property to Trade. DON W. VANWNKLE Attornty at Law Offea ovar frst ftata Savng! Bank Hawtll, Mahgan LEF LAVEY GENERAL NSURANCE Pbona S9*PS Plnaknar, Mchgan DR. a R. McCLUSKEY DENTSt 112H N. Mchgan Tuaaoay and Satnrdar gvtnng 7tOO SM Pbona 220 Ofeaa Phoma laj Rwdonat Howoll Mch. The Pnckney Dspatch, Wednesday, Augtut 25, 1937 Neghborng Notes Fowlervlle s n second place n the Tr- County League wth 7 wn.-, and 8 losses. Howell s n frst place wth 6 out o 8 games. Work has been commenced on a gas staton on the sue of the old Commercal Hotel at Fowh-vlle tha was wrecked some tme ago. Mss El ;' oher wll replace Mrs. Carpenter s* teacher m *.he Stockbrdge school. All the other teachers ol last yea- returned. Sherff Kennedy and hs deputes and federal mer rado anorher stll on the Damond farm n Green Oak last week Monday. Four men were arrested and a 3,500 st'l gnashed The stll had not yet started to operatons. The four men arrested were: Robert Jor.es, Frank and Clarence Dracka and Harry Brown are from Ecorse and Wyandotte. Three autowere confscated. The Detrot Edson Company have purchased the homes of Bert Hoff and Clarence Taylor n Howell. Ed Ml ls dstrct mgr wl 1 occupy the Hoff b!d>r Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Kennedy are vacatonng n the northern part of the state. ' Otto Frykman of Howell has been taken to the U. M. hosptal for treatment. Tranng rules evdently brng results. The Jackson prson ball team so \ far ths year has won 2f> games and lost b\t two. Luce Co. of Lansng and Tvol Brewng team of Detrot arc the only ones to beet them. Dynamte was uusucce^stvy used last Thursd 1 y n an effort to rase the body ol Duane Smth, 10. yean old youth who drowned n Clark lake n Jackson County last week. The artcles of ncor;-arut ;.on of the Lberty Lerjrue of Amerca ; n or^tn-. fc'ord Employees ha,s been rccepted by the securtes cotnmsor The Ford brotherhood a rval organ- snton sought to prevent L; accent-, Notes of 50 Years Ago '..y day on the ral road last Mon. Mr. Farnum shpped a load of hogs from here yesterday. Chas. Ha ky s preparng to ** m h.s frut evaporater. Th- base ball team went to Stockbrdge yesterday but the team refused to jl;y because Hanes of Maron?;»f to ptch for Pnckmy, South Lyon beat PJ rckney here last A Lvftgson county Veterans of Foregn Wars has been organzed aj Frday 22 to D. Brghton. R. V. Graham s command-} The attendance a*, the farrers pcer. The post has many Howell andnc at Whtmore Lake Saturday s Fowlervlle members. estmated at 15,000. Gov. Luce delvered a fne address, The Good Templars Lodge wll gve a pcnc at Slver Lake Frday. Thomas Turner has purchased the house of C. Lynch n the east part of town, havng sold hs home to Mrs. VoorheLs. Mr Lynch wll move nto the house vacated by W. H. Hoff. Det. Swarthout has been apponted hghway comm. to succeeed A. G. Lel and. Davd Roberts shpped 75 hogs from here- to Detrot last week. Pettons are beng crculated for t!v> appontment of Prof. Sprout as school nspector. A herd of mustangs were drven nto town today. They are for sale. C. J. Barton leaded not gulty to burrng buddngs, HJs -examnaton s s"*t for today. Lt'le Fred Toeple s bound to be a horse man. He s teachng hs dog tf trot and says he moves lke a Pas- Ded at hs home n ths vllage on August 20 of kdney trouble, Amasa G. Lc'and, GO. He had lved n ths secton snoe Survvng are 44 daughters and a son. A meetng of those nterested n Hv*!g, far at Fowlervlle was held Frday. $1,000 n stock was subscrbed. Another $1,000 fnust be rased. F'om one o; the proment motor vehc.e polce n an eastern stato the 'vnce. rfuj.etent came that the majorty of All Chelsea street? are beng coat-j accdents can be traced to the drver ed wth ol. Two carloads wll be used who s volatng the law. for the purpose. To sonc d tvev law observaab^does Wm. Dcknson who \va^ knocked } mjt seem to mean anythnhg^.at all. down and njured by an auto a fjwj 'j \:\> tyj-.e must be forced to obey the v. eeks ago s able to,tret around sg.nj lau 1.-. Kducaton has no effect on them Washtenaw county ffe and d nnj Ther cede s not r What s the law but orp of whch Day Brd s 'eader re-1 \Vh=*t can f?ec aw;y wth? t s the ently got second p'ace n Amercan, htter that the offcer refers to, no ^p-on conventon at Detroc j doub>, and ho s rght. Sut has been started n Washtenaw We need better law enforcement ounty aganst the board of county on ou hyh.vays. What would H'".ad comrnssoners to restran them' pen f our ralroads, steam shp lnes ; om dong any work codng over, and other companes were as weak n 500 Danel wthout B. Sutton, gettng former bds sherff on same! and, crf 0 rcmg safety regulatons a3 some a member of the legslature s the; on our hghways. olantff., ' The fo 1 lowng places haw boun > THE BALL GAME BROADCASTS desgnated by the federal jr 0 vernnent r.a places where pos't offces may be, bu'.t f the $70,000,000 buldng P'O-, grcm s approved: Mlford, ;<To,000' Farmn*ton, $70,000, XoUnV-, $75 000, and Dearborn, $7^,000.. Mrs. Margaret FHntoff and her daughter, Mrs. Eva Johns, vsted CVender, Ont, last week and saw four of the Donne quntuplcts. Notes of 25 Years Ago A cdl for a Bull Mocse county conventon to be he!d at Huwe Sept. 5 haa been ssued, t a sgned by Geo. Fsher pros, and Freeman F^hbeck. Georga Reason and famly of Detrot?.re campng at Baughn's Bluff. Jnc>gn county wll vote on local v'-pvon r.3xt sprng. ^.wcr^c Vj\n Horn shped 30 fne wcol s.oep t>> Texas last week. M:*s Knu^a Platz.valdt of Dctro 4. 8\:.2nt Sunday r.t the home of Wllam t Dunbar. A larga number of Washtenaw boy! scouts are encamped.at Slver Lake. Rev, Fr. Ryan py^tor of St. Joseph's church o Dexter has been tran 8ferrfc<l to Mt. Clemens. Wlbur Wnkelhaus 10, of Hamburg was accdently shot by Ohas. Hewtt 12, whle playng wth a jfun. C. W. Butler who owns a cott.ge at Portage Lake and hs wfe ded a'- an Ann Arbor lospta! last Wednesday from eatng polsonous mushroom Mrs. Fred Hubbard and son of He -vell also d>ed from the same thng. Ms3 Mary Sprout, ded at her home west cf town Sunday. Funeral at re- dence Wednesday wth Rev. B.-.!gooyan offcatng. Born to Wrt Barnum and wfe *u Angust 24 a on. Frank Kennedy hag gone to Detrot to work for an electrcal company. Hary Evert lott * cow Uat week The comnorcalnj; of rado broadc;j.>!.>-, c^pucally the bal game s beng );mned by the press, Certan br rkfast food concerns are payng pat of the cost of broadcastng and a * n^tng that ther products be r^tonod before, after, and all durn: tl.c ball gamrs. Ths s rather too jnuch commercalzng to sut the fans and th3ro has bet-n much comprnt. These advertsers should u.se the method of the old tme medcne show ' man. For about an hour he extro'led [ the merts of hs cure-all medcne and sold soap, etc. Then these were ; put away and the show went on wth no sales talk of any knd a'lowed to j nterupt t. The breakfast flood Co. should do ther commercalzng be- ' fore or nfter the ball gamfe. Also the testmonals from the ball players as to the merts of ther foods. t s c'a* ' med the players are pad $300 each [ for these. Hank Greenberg demand* ed $1000 so hs name was not u*ed. VLLAGE TAX NOTCE The vllage taxes ar«now due and rayable at my hame. 325 Man Street on Thursday's durng July and Aug. Blanche. Martn Vllage Treasurer HERB DOCTOR COMPOUND Ths ntw fractfc/ta ar«ryo/a t talkng About. SzetUent tot tutef. art from adgetlon, awy stomach, eonatl* patlon, ftanrauaamt rhaunate pan, haad* achat, other aommoa *8t8S?%2!& When you art) owcy, avod worry by callng home or offce to learn how thngs are golflf there. Note the low nch! and Sunday ratet for longdstance calls Sbted bslow. Rates to other ponts are proportonately low. PNCKNEY TO CATTLE CREEK CADLLAC CHARLEVOX Nght and Sunday tt*«on-to> Staton Ratt $ CHCAGO, LL.50 DETROT.35 ESCANABA.75 GRAND HAVEN.45 GRAND RAPDS 35 LUDNGTON 55 MARQUETTE.80 SAULT ST. MARML.75 TRAVERSE CTY 55 MCHGAN EELL f # 1 TELEPHONE CO. STATE OF MCHGAN Tha Probata Court for the County L.vngston At a sesson of sad Covr\, lcl< the Probate Offce n h.- <\ of at > \v ell, n sad County, on th*.- '0\\\ day of July, A. D present, Hon. Wll-. L. Ly>us,! Judge of Probate n th«matter of the Estate of V,rgnft Marth, Mnor. Lawrence S. Marsh havng fled n sad court hs annual ucro'nt from 1930 to the fth day of May,l:<37 as guardan of sad estate, and h.-: petton prayng for the allowance thereof. t U Ordarad. That the 30th day of August, A. D at ten o'clock n the forenoon, at sad probate offce, be and «hereby apponted for examnng and allowng sad account t Furthar Ordwrad. That publc notce thereof be gven by publcaton of copy of ths order for three successve weeks prevous to sad day of the hearng n Pnckney Dspatch a newspaper prnted and crculated n sad county. Celesta Parshall Wlls L, Lyons, l Wlls L. Lyon' Regster of Probate Judgr of Probate ""WANTED DEAD Oft DSABLED HORSES AND Horses $3 CATTLE Cattle$2 OTHBft ANMALS ACCORDNGLY MLLENBACH BROS. CO. PHONE COLLECT HOWELL 460 The Qrffttl C^n^n to P*y (or Out %\»k ARREST HT AND RUNNER J'H.1., l.,\ Royal Ock WM T'-., ' ; l-may afternoon at lake v r ;,';md Kapds and :r:cd o\ j \'> Lvjrson county of* <.;.-- c : :'>.. ; d' charjrc Ral was,) 'M»') < lrh fo Hd not fur-,' ).''tn -nlrd to the CU8- f>r. of L.r ;.., :; T. H.-- examnaton :.'../. 21. D:-p r. charged wt :: owner and drver ofl the and-nn" car whch StTUClC A. T. '.)'>'n\;ns>' ot Howell on Augu ' 10,-t (/j Crund Rver west of Tov.-f n^ \K )',':'-::;r? v.-.-:.- employed there b.:. \".rcre the road s b«* '. N '.' '[ '':-,' ca faled to stop af* -M-.kJu- th- arfrl Dolmr.fje but the >-M- f'."(-d \t< number. The ve* :'-n 'led after twn^ tak^en to the Mc«Ph'^raon ho.--.pt'l. }T~~1 -^ * n ^¾ > ^» f^t^lfw'»d om w.v* e* M w«w "U'.d frnnds ''>'< M,. Kt\'» -, AUCUSt V SfcV (1 cy-n*j at TtuBvula, Pau \ty Kudscn antacd /wovabo?! W K#w Amsterdam suttefw U««A \z '.he Englah and bdccfflw N*vr Yolk, lft64 4C~Kar.vo8 massaoad ot For Mmma, Ad., by the /¾ C:w»a ndanattll S Von Hndanbura «S> j- --d thar.uaskmkeee; n tha Botta o TesaS»' bu* 1314 l^tha lnt awcjrteaajhw, opened o VautAett *'A V\l»:;7 Mg jm M M^. Y^fy.;*- 'J> n <n»a«v ' j^t. v a- jn^^^^^n

4 y«, - v * >J*r. Howell Theatre Wed. Thur., Fr. Comedy Sat., Aug GENE AUTREY n Aug. 25, 26, 27 JEAN HARLOW n "PLATNUM BLONDE" wth LORETTA YOUNG Sport Lght a flootn-tootln-rhythm" wth SMLEY BURNETTE ARM1DA MONTE BLUE Comedy Sun., Comedy Mon., Aug. Newt FEATURES 2 Mat 2 P. M. 10c & 20c 29, 30 "BG BUSNESS" wth EDWARD EVERETT HORTON n OH,DOCTOR" wth DONRUE LECHTON EVE ARDEN News Mat. 2 P. M Con, JED PROUTY, SHRLEY DEAN, SPRNG BYNGTON Muscal March of Thn«News Tues, Wed., Thur., Fr., Aug. 31, Sept. 1, 2, 3 RUDYARD KPLNG'S Thrll-Packed-Adventure on NDA'S Untamed Fronter "WEE WLLE WNKLE" Starrng SHRLEY TEMPLE, VCTOR McLAGEN, C. AUBREY SMTH, JUNE LANG, MCHAEL WHALEN, CAESAR ROMERO News Comedy Cartoon < Corj'ng "Exclusve' Ever Sne* Eva" 'TheRoa Bads" smnhmu 60 BY BUS TO DETROT 3 9- s Trps Daly ONE = WAYS Only $1.45 $2.40 Round Trp -L.Nper>.;,rH t'.vcllord lke ths clean, o\y-.o>t (transportaton. W}^' ]'u" uy a bus rde on your n«xr trp.,v TU SV J n-,hor Lrsns: Planfed Mr and Mrs Fred Jacobs spent the week end wth Mr and Mrs VanSycle near Fenton f Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Knsey and Mr & Mrs Hj>sell (rosshaus left Saturday mornng lor a.-hort trp n Northern Mchgan Mr. Not man Jacobs s helpng n the Toppng stoc whe Mr. E. J. Knsey s on vacaton. Mr. and Mrs. CT-E. Donohue started north for a vacaton Frday and met wth an auto accdent n St John and returned home badly shaken up. Mr. and Mrs. H. Cone o* Detrot and sor.a were week end guests at Mrs Jesse Toppngs. Mr.*.. Cyn-. a Watters entertaned her eucher club last week Wednesday evenng. M. and M/', Lawrence Kellog of Fenton, Mr, and Mr*" Jame» Caskey fnd Joan of Gregory called on Mr. And Mrs. Ara Jucftbs Sunday. Mrs. F. K. Caus; wth Mr and Mrs Dan Lam s- end June Ttfc of Stockbrdge motored to Toledo Sunday as guests of Mr and Mrs. S. Leer. Elzabeth Ovosshau.-- s wth Mr. and Mr*. Duane Jacobs nnd Rchard Grosahans, hs aunt, De.a Kenny, of town Stockbrdgc whle ther parents are north. Mss Jnks of Landng vsted Mss Jfay Leach for the week end. M»* Donna Leach spent last week n lanafj. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Gladstone and t*? chldren and Mr. and Mrs. A. J Mr. and Vrs. Clare Holmes cf Lansng Mr. and Mrs. Albert Vogel of the same place spent most of last v/eek wth ther parents Mr and Mrs A. J. Holmes. All members of Planfeld Cemetery wll meet Aug 28 at 2 p m. at the cemetery. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Watters nf Jack son spent the week end wth Mr. and Mrs. F. O. Watters and famly. Janet Brotherton s vstng her grandmother n Whte Oak Gregory j»& & Harold Ludtke wll not return to hs work at Yps as he s represent ng the Lfe nsurance Company n ths area. Melvn and Harold Corser are spen dng two weeks n Conn, vstng relatves and frends. Edwn Brewster s vstng n Ann Arbor. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Barnum and baby wth her mother Mrs. Gen hop and chldren are enjoyng a trp through ndana where they wll vst relatves and greet old frends. Mr. and Mrs. Stanton Lnes, Detrot spent Frday and Saturday wth Mr. and Mrs. Fred Anderson. Wlfred nnd Mada McCleer of Detrot, and Maron of Owosso were at home wth ther parents Sunday. Norman Catrell, Howell s vstng hs grandparents, O. B. Arnold and wfe ths week. * Mr. and Mrs. George Arnold called on her uncle George Krkland Tues. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Watters of Holt called on Ernest Corsers Tuesday. Henry Stenbach and frends were n town Monday. Callers at the home of Mrs. Harrs and Eernce Sun. were Chrs Klen Mrs. Lucy, Henry Englehart and wfe Mr and Mrs Wm Beach sr. and Mr and Mrs. Devne and three chldren of Dexter wth Mr and Mrs. Rchard Henry and Mr. and Mrs. Erwn Henry of Whtmore Lake. M!M Roberta Shrley s spendng the week wth Mss Jean Hartely. Wm. Arnold of Mnn, s vstng hs cousns, 0. B.and Geo. Arnold and wves. Mr and Mrs C E Map** are vstng Mrs Lotte Farrell MRS. MARGARET YOUNG Mrs. Margaret Young, 81, ded at her home n Lyndon townshp Saturday. She was formerly Margaret Mc Guneas of Dexter townshp and was.marred to Thomas Young n He ded n Survvng are three daughters, Mrs, J. Bratel of Yakma, Washngton.Mrs. Franl: Danels, Howell and Mrs. Mark McClear of Gregory; two sons, James at home and Vncent of Gregory and a sster, Mrs. Mary Gorman of Chelsea. The funeral was held Tuesday at St. Mary's church, Chelsea wth bural n Mt. Olvet cemetery, Rev. Dorr offcatng. Mr and Mn. 0. R. Campbell and ^. 2 ^ ^ut * «' Mr and, dtujfctw M M ta Kf. art Ml ftt tjamd ftfllav of Lanna. The Packney DUptch, Wcn \ August 25, 1937 Hamburg The Hbllster school reunon was held for the 8th tme at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Hanes M<u3ch of Green j Oak Saturday. t was the frst tme n 8 * years that the weather man had been unk;nd,but n some ways the ran was a kndness because of the fact the reunon was-held n«de the new home of Mr. and Mrs. Musch. They stated that the new home had never had a housewarmng and so were glad to be gven one by the ds trct reunon whch they preceded to do. t s a beautful new hosne for the grand good people. Dnner was served caferta style and as usual was good and bountful. The presdent Hunter GaJatan of Pnckney.Mch. was n charge of the meetng whch opened wth sngng several old songs. Mrs. Musch gave the secretary's re port and read letters from the Vc resdent, Sopha Galatan of Phladelpha Mrs. Marshall of Kansas and, the n-ew teacher Joe Basydlo who dd v. rte that he would be unable to come as he was beng marred that day but he would see that t ddn't happen agan next year. Walter Scott of Brghton gave a hstory of the school; he spoke of one young lady teacher who was so afrad of lghtnng she took off her corset and put t n the wood box. Hanes Musch told of the contract for the buldng of the school house whch was very bref. t gave the dm ensons requred that good lumber be used and good glass n the wrdaws. A man named Sam Barbour bult t for $ Mrs. Lou^s Schlede of Ann Arbor gave The Golden Ladder and others rom away spoke brefly, The same offcers of last year were elected \ Followng the meetng all resorted to the cecream tubs and the 8th reunon became a thng of the past. 14a were n attendance among them beng peop.e from North Dokata, nd ana, Oho, and people from all parts of Mchgan. Mrs. Mldred Whtlock entertaned members of Hamburg Hv«No.392 of Lady Maccabees and ther famles at her home Locust Acres at a pcnc at her home Tuesday, the large screened porches makng a fne place for t A pot-luck dnner was served. Mesdames Haggadore, Buckaleu, and Ferman acted as commttee on entertanment. Nelan Navarre of Ann Arbor won the prze on a draw wth M,rs. Henry Fryer. Mrs. Mldred Whttloc;: Mrs. Jenne Ferman and Mrs. da Kna pp n guessng, what's n the box. Mr Navarre also of Ann Arbor was vctor n the potato race. Lotto was played by the adults and the young folk played ball. Mrs. Nelle Pearson, Mrs. Mnne Cooper and Wayne Wllams attended the funeral of Mrs. Pearson's cousn Mrs. Jule Jacobs n ndana, Mrs. Jacobs was the granddaughter of Mr.and Mrs. Chas.. Hankns eary settlers ol Hamburg townshp anc 1 was born n Hartland townshp on Au ust 5, She was unted n marrage wth Peter Jacobs who ded 24 years ago. She s survved by one of her daughters, Mrs. Ora Wllams who has lved wth her snce the death of Mr. Jacobs She has many frends here where she had vsted many tmes. Mss Dorothy Dshan of Homer has been spendng a few days wth her cou sn, Ray Haggadore and Mrs. Haggadore. Wayne Wllams went to Lansng Saturday and n company wth Alton Ochampaugh and four other boy frends are takng a motor trp n the northern pennsula. Mrs. Edwn Shannon sr. spent Wed nesday n Detrot the guest of Mrs. Vncent Rvard. Mrs. Curts Olsaver has been spen dng a week wth her nece, Mrs. Per* ry Grennan and Mr. Grennan n Ann Arbor. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Moon and her four chldren from Pennsula are ntertwnng a sster of Mrs, Moore. Mr. and /Mrs, Ray Haggadore n company wth Mr, and Mrs. Spencer Ttus of Pnckney enjoyed a pcnc on Huron Rver Drve Sunday. Mr, and Mr*. Harry Burgess Of Sagnaw have been spendng a few days wth Mr. Burgess' uncle, E. Clyde Dunnng and famly. George Hammel of Howell has been spendng the week wth hs grandmother, Mrs. da Knapp and Mr. Knapp. Mr. and Mrs/Clarence Grumley of Jackson are Spendng ther vacaton wth Mr. and Mrs. Ben Young. Mr. and Mrs. Henvel of Detrct are spendng ther honeymoon at Buck Lake. Mrs Eva Moon and son, Bert Moon, spent Thursday wth Mrs. Emma Larabee and famly at Jackson. On the return trp they called on Mrs. Moon AN ELECTRC RANGE USER SAYS: "Before we bought our electrc range, we had to decorate the ktchen every two years. bought my electrc fans sx years ago and have not decorated the walls snce. have 34 plants n the house, all growng beautfully. wouldn't be wthout my electrc stove!" THE ElECTftlC OVEN. Many women who us# «4«c* tre range* comment on the ease, and certanty of ovencookng. Whether you ore brolng a steak or bakng a cake, you wll be pleased wth the results acheved n your electrc oven. One housewfe says: "t s almost mpossble to pont out any one feature that lke better than the othsrs-unlos t t the oven, My electrc range s such a source of enjoyment to me!" * * * (See the new electrc ranges on dsplay at department stores, electrcal dealers and all Detrot Sdon offc.) ly at Detrot. Mrs. Walter Chapel and two sons' of Flnt spent a day wth Mrs. Chapel's aunt Mrs. da Knapp. Blly stayed for a few days vst, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Haggadore were guests of Mr. Haggfdores' uncle Walter Andrews and Mrs. Andrews at a Lake near Fenton Tuesday. J. Wm. Wnklebaus s qute serous, y ll at St. Joseph's hosptal n Ann j Arbor. Mr. and Mrs. AHeen Dunnng of ( Fort Wayne ndana, spent the week j end ""tl'mr. Alens' uncle Clyde Dun ' nng and famly. 1 Mrs. Bert Newman of Brghton has been vstng her sster Mrs. J. Wllams. n company wth. Mn. Wnklehaus they vsted Mr. Wnklehaus at Ann Arbor, ~ Lakeland The Happy Helpers Crcle of the Junor Kngs Daughters held a bake lau at the home of Mrs. Harry Lee Saturday afternoon. The cornmttm n charge were, Los McDonald, lrdne Blades, and Ann Martm Mss Madge Jack s how employed n the Audtors offce at Lansng. Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Burd'ck have 1 returned to ther home at Rversde Park after spendng a few days n Dtrot. r Mrs.M.Lee attended a county meetng of the Junor Kngs Daughters Monday at the home of Mrs. C. Kramer n Howell. Mrs. Wm. VanKleeck spent Frday n Howell. Mss Helen Mar* Beet of Canada s a guests of her aunt and uncle Mr. am Mrs. Bruce Euler.., Mrs. Mlo Case and Shrley spent: nephews George and Wtn. Thresher Monday n Howell. ' and famles near Grass Lake. 1. <Mrs. Wm. Stada and nece Mssl Ms Blanche Martn spent tae. week Ore** mp «t#«4 M«. fc*u«*4 wtt M, t*4 Un> ft, E T.WWWWWVa%*WW,VdWwywV^ l n*^wsv kwtar p«rtl,ht mum problems Of of redtrndng modernsng *»d ^ rattng r«frt your horn, * measure up to Today'* tartfard... ahd *e l nx Up & t ft ttn't Ttht n all a matter tf tfe& 6J6 fu; fll Varu A** A * *» meg" * UTtL& fau,t w!l d0 ^ A^mjj... wht Wll do tha work quldty ar.c e-f.jently. WNOS for many types of use. v.'j h more than sell you luch rtlejttwwa adva you as t«' * ^l^w to apply thtrn*. TEEPLE HARDWARE TryaDspatcnWastAd?,. * <.") m j * «n^'-»- J^L -.vu.. c»- **': "U. -&" y '* ' * * «*

5 tf'wwww.- wm The PncWrmy Dappfcr ^ ednesday, August 25, 1937 «< ' fx' THE RED & WHTE STORE CASH SPECALS for FR, SAT. AUG 27, 28 STOCK UP ON LFEBUOY AT THS HOT PfOCL HOT SUMMER SPECAL LFEBUOY «AUH»Afc 3 for 19 a LUX SMALL for 20c SZE 2 for LARGE, SZE PKG, Rnso SMALL PKG 2 for LARGE SZE PKG Spry The New Purer All- Purpose Vegetable Shortnng llb.cans 21c 3 lb. Can 59c Fancy Rce 3 lbs. 14c Gnger Snaps b 25c Corn Flakes ^Howell Flour 79c EXTRA SPECAL Frut Jar Rngs 2 Lge. Pkgs, Kellogg's Corn Flakes, 1 Pkg. of Navy Beans lb. Pep & 1 PkgOf Wheat Krumbles 48 c Value 35 c 'APER UTLTY BAG FREE Doz. 4c Frut Jar Covers Dozjgc flc Parowax lb. Pkg. 10c Catsup 14 Oz. Botle 10c We Carry a Full ot Spces for Pcklng G. H. KENNEDY Phone 23F3 ALL PRCES SUBJECTS TO MCH % SALES TAX We Delver The Pnckney Dspatch Entered at the Postoffee a at Pnckney, Mch. as Second Class Matter. Subscrpton $1.25 a year 1 ^ Advance. PAUL CURLETT Mrs. Tom Sheha Canada. rs. 1.. E. WLson son Frday. PUBLSHER s vttng n wa.s n Jucok- Mrs. Rob Kelly and son and daugh-1 ter were n Chelsea Saturday. Mrs. Roue Kejd o& Jackson was 4 guest of M*s. Ella McCluskey. The Msses Los Kennedy and Hetty Carr are vstng n Detrot. Mrs. F. E. Lowers spent a couple of days last week wth Detrot relatves. Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Clnt -n o( Unwell called on her mother Mr:. Wm. Fsk Sunday Mr. and Mrs. M. 1?. D.MTOW Mrs. Gerald Reason and daut'kto.- (.!» n Howell Monday. Mr. and Mrs. LaVerne Fsk and famly of Monroe spent Sunday wth Mrs. Wm. Fsk, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Brown had M Sunday guests, Lester Hunt and wfe of Webbervlle. Lester Swarthout and wfe of pet rot spent Sunday wth Mr. and Mn. S. E. Swarthout. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Brogrand of Pontac were week.end guests of Mrs. Franke Leand and Carmen. Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Cox and famly of Battle Creek were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Reason. Sunday guests at the home of Mrs. Elzabeth Curlett were Mr.and Mrs.H. Hauck of Rosevlle and Mr. and Mrs. James Curlett and son of Detrot. Dr. Bernard Glenn and wfe called on Mr. and Mrs. James Wyl's Sunday Mss Elzrbeth Spears was home from St. Joseph's hosptal, Detrot the Mss Ann Basydlo of Detrot was a week end guest of Mr. and Mrs. C. Van Horn. weekend. t Mesdamej Pearl Bowers,* Defne N'orman Mller pot nfecton n the' Dunn & Nes^a Curry of Detrot were leg he njured last week when he was jammed between a truck and a gravel box and was pretty sck the frst of the '.veek. He s better now*. Mr. and Mrs. John Sullvan of Chelsea, Mr. and Mrs. Genr^e Gronor and dauyhtrr ard son attended rhe funeral of Edward Ryan at the Church of the Resurrecton n Lansng Thursday. 1 Uoe and Jm Snger are workng for BudDll' way attended the Freman Bruce Euleu at Lakeland. Feld Day at Detrot Sunday, Arnold Berqust and Andrew Sn- Percy Ells and famly arc spend* ger are workng n Grand Haven. ng tho week n the northern ;>avt o Mss Wln Meyer and John Robert th state ' and famly of UnadJU art vrtng n Robert and Howard Read attended Boyne Cty, ^6 xposton at Cleveland over thsj Dr. and Mn. Gerald McCluskey * eek end - and daughters of Howell vated hs* M. - and <* Mrs. Henry Collns and mother Mrs. Ella McCluskey Sunday daughpr of Ypal wore Sunday guest* of Met Ch.lker. Mss Loretta Roche returned to her home n Lansng Sunday after a week Mss Madge Jack has accepted A vstng wth her grandmother, Mrs. poston nt he audtors generals offlea at Lansng. James. Roche.». and.'>«menr'- C-'mpbr'] >n t Erf;her Bnrqulrt of Detrot spent th<* week end n Pnckney. Dave Haley nnd sster, of Cleveland Oho, are vstng ther grandparents, Mr. and Mrs, C. E. Bucher. Saturday gucsls of Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Four Ford Motor Co. surveyors are Bowers. workng n t'ts secton. They are sta«junor Swarthout of Detrot s $ng at Dlloway's Tavern. spendng the week wth hs grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Swarthout. weekend wth hs parents, Mr. and Lorcn M.eabon of Pontac, spent the Mrs. George Meabon S. Mr. and Mrs Ben Whte, Mr and, James Martn and son Bob, who Mrs. Chas. Hurd and daughter were hnwe been sendng several weeks at Monday guests o Mr. and Mrs N, Crystal Lak* wth hs son, Edgar and man Whte near Fenton. famly returned home Sunday. Mr. and Mrs Frank Johnson spent Jake Hanes s workng n Hale for STEPS Sunday n Grand Rapds. a couple of weeks. Mrs. Tom Horn vsted relatves & Larl Baughn was n Detrot last frends n ths vcnty last wee'k Thursday nght. Mrs Vlla Rchards vsted Brgh- Mr. and Mrs. Glen Sayton havton relatves the frst of the week purchased a home n Howell. TO Mrs. Fred Read, daughter, and Ze- Dan Drver s workng on the farm na Pturame- spent Monday at BobLo of Dr. W. C. Wyle Dexter. Mr. and Mrs. Ford Lamb and fan- Junor Baker of Detrot s vstng ly spent Sunday wth relatves n hs cousn, Mark Beker at Bass Lake. SECURTY Pontac. M* M Mnne Abrahams of Brghton Mrs. Grace Crofoot of Howell was «Pt last week wth Mrs. John Horn- a week end guest of- Mrs. Hatte shaw «J Swarthout, Lucus Wlson jr. and Mss Loretu Mr. and Mrs. A H. Murphy and son *«*«of Lansn * were Pnckney cal- SAVNGS Dck spent the week end wth Mrs. W. l " SuJld f(' r T. E Murnhv Lavey and sons attended the Cascades n Jackson last Mrs. Frank Grmes and Mrs. Ezra Thursday nght. Take the Frst Step Today Plummer spent the week end at the Mr. an<j Mrs. rvn Kennedy were Nagara Falls. ' Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Patsy Harold Maycock, Pnckney short- Kennedy, stop expects to take unto hmself a Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Pdd of Dexter wfe ths week. > called on Mrs. Elzabeth Curlett Fr- SuncUy guests of Mrs. Franke Le«day afternoon, Open a Savngs Account land were Mr. anl Mrs. W. H. Hor- A. M. Roche had hs horses n the ton of Webborvlle. j races at the ona far last week but Mrs. Av. Mann and son George foled to wn. Hre of Detrot were week end guests of Abel Hanes and famly were cal- Mr.and Mrs. N. 0. Frye. j Jed to North Branch last week by the Mrs. Bert Hcks, Mr and Mrs. Nor- death of a nephew, man Reason spent laet week Tuesday} fm r, and Mrs. Roy Caverly and son at Dearborn and Greenfeld place, f Bll of Howell were Sunday guests Frank Wrght and wfe of Grooae 0f Mrs. C. L. Sgler. Ponte ware recent vstors at &e ( Bll Jeffres s buldng a grade door >no of Mr. and Mrs, Frank Wrght. 0Ver the outsde entrance to the eel- Mrs, Lllan Wyle, Mr. and Mrs. 1 ^. FRST NATONAL BANK at the school house. A.H, Nfbett returned home last week Mss Marpnret Curlett and frend N HOWELL from a months motor tr;,> through M^ f Under Federal Supervson r s Wllams of Lansng spent the west. the week end wth Mr. and Mr. P. W. Member Federal Depost la* suraaee Corporaton. Alt De» daughter M, md ad Mr* Mn. M, J, Mable Reaon Surdam and ther atbonded 1:he motorcycle clmb Sunday Curlett Mr. and Mrs. Bert VanBlarcum jr. poets lnetsred up to $5,000 fotl each Depostor. ne&r Sco on the Huron Rver. Mr. and Mn. S. H. Carr had as Sunday callers Mr. and Mrs. Doner pt<,0*1 Soper was home from Ann Ar*! Jackaon, Mr. and Mrs. Mylo Kettler of Detrot spent the week end wth hs parents Mr. and Mrs. Bert VanBlarcum sr. 1 Mss Bemadne Lynch of Kalamazoo s spendng her vacaton at the home of Mr. and Mn, C. H. Kennedy n Pnckney. Clyde Darrow, wfe and sons of Walled Lake spent the frst of the fcor the weekend, and daughter* ot Eaton Rapds, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lee of Lakeland, Mr. Herman C ark of Battle Creek was and Mrs. Robert Ackley of Howell. a Saturday dnner guest of Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. N. Paoey attended a Mvs. Bert Hcks. reunon of the Glkes at the home of week wth hs mother, Mrs. Flora Henry Kce, Mrs. Earl Baughn and, Glkes Famly reunon at the home of, Darrow* 'daughter, Betty, son, Nel, were n (Mr. and Mrs; Pacey were agan re- Lous Clnton has been spendng Howell Frday. 'mnded of ther 50th weldng ann- hlsvacaton wth hs famly at the Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gradwell of versary when they were presented a 1 Clnton farm south of town. They re- Chcago spent bet week wth-mr and huge cake and a beautful lamp^ tarn to Ontaro Thursday. Mrs Mke Lavey. 1 Paula Curlett entertaned a num-[ Henry Skowersk of Hartland spent Paul Burroughs of Yps s vst-'ber 0¾ lttle folks Saturday afternoon Sunday her* He wll return to Mch ng hs grandparents Mr. and Mrs. j n honor of her thrd brthday. They gan State College ths year for hs Charles Burroughs were, Mary Margaret Clark, Norma thrd year. Then he wll attend the Mr. and 2 xs. M. E. Darrow ware'darrow, Mke " Carr, ' Mary " Lou m " Slay ~"'u. of M, for four years n ths medcal Monday supper guests of Mr. and ton and the twns, and Janet Clnton. department there. Re was awar* Mrs. Myron Ely n Ann Arbor. (Dorothy! DaroAv MM Lavey and Junor Chen- Chan*[dad a Crouse scholarshp for seven Mr. and Bars. John Stran of Kan-'ault were unable to corns. The after- years wth all etpsaatj pad for beng sas and Mrs, Roger Wats of Lake- noon was spa* jfcjng pom t*4 a B student Henry tseadtu Ptoek* *t*d Oho wan bnabson gum tt ntostttttta wan wt* tatlft f ft* M*»*» m f*!* KUN as*. M 11-. w SMA aajm^aa. gg-wj BJAM UWW J aajajsa, fsj tfta kal lajau ^, E* ^7 ~T 1!BR xwsjff!^tu*hj W~ fw TWfRS K J 5 *****^ w«.?l JB* ".*^P 'At-. 'rt.": v*-xat"^'' ft>- * $W*J. *\«fluumnmmtmurumuum Phone 38F3 REASON & SONS We Delver " Frl. Aug. 27 CASH SPECALS Aug., Sat. 38 Cofee GROSSE r-olnte LB. TN Mlk Tomatees 4 Maryland Pack No. 2 CANS 27c LBBY'S OR MAS'ON 27c 3 TALL 20c CANS Catsup 14 OZ. BOTTLE 10c Cut Green Beans NO. 2 CAN 10c GOLD MEDAL OR PLLSBURY Flour $» SACK 26c Kellogg's Corn Flakes 3 SPRY LB. CAN 59c a Dn Pckles P,0NEER 2 GROSSE PONTE MarehmaUowt CAMPBELL'S Pork & Beans a ONE U, CAN 15c JARS % LGE. FKGS. 19c* HMHBY'ft Cocoa Bqttlsk LGE. PKG. LB. Pkg. 18c L «':. PRCES SUBJECT TO HCHlGAN AU TAJew>, r ONE LB, CAN 29c % 29c j.'j^h* 29c &

6 The Pnckney DUpalcK Wednesday, AuguM 25, 1937 PNCKNEY SPLTS TKHJBLE HEADER WTH CHELSEA FT ' 5>v V«JENNE M. EASTMAN Lvngston County Treasurer Act 28 P. A MAY CAN FRUT V/rtHOUT SUGAR Frut cannng n the mdst of a large Mchgan harvest can be accomplshes wthout tc use of sugar untl later, but the frut wl* not hold s co'or, rape or flavor as well. Ths s the explanaton prepared by the home economcs extenson servce of the Mchgan State College. Unsweetened canned'frut s useful for po.makng and also n the det of those who nave dabets. Jucy fruts should be canned rn ther o./n juce rather than wth water, wh?n no sug ar s used. The process s not dffcult. A new wrnkle suggested by thosu who have expermented wth frut cannng s the dea of addng oxtn juce. Extract the juce from the rper fruts by crushng, heatng and stranng, Pack the remanng fruts close'y nto glass ja*o or tn cans wthout preheatng and add enough water to cover. Partally seal the jars or.exhaust and then sea! tn cans. A hot water bath s then used to process from 5 to 20 mnutes dependng on the densty of the frut Stll another method s to preeook tro frut 2 to 4 mnute? dependng on the densty of tho frut then seal. Less jucy fruts canned wthout Sugar. jt.re water. These nclude npples peaches and pears. Only the smallest amount of water necessary should be used, however, n order to keep the natural flavor af the frut. Conservaton Dept.. Notes 40,000 acres of state owned land n Bay, Clare, Otsego, Roseeommon Lrawford, Aenac Gladwn and Mdland countes wll be offered to the publc when the ol drllng rghts are sold at aucton on Sept. 3 at Lansng. An 800 acre tract of land n the townshp of Grant, Clare county, has been desgnated as a wld lfe sanctuary and closed to huntng and trappng lor 5 years. A hog nosed snake 30 nches long whch was tryng to swallow a toad was cal.ured by Conservaton Offcer Gaehl near Gladwn recently. Mchgan pad bountes on 57 coyotte pelts last July. There were also 24 bobcat bountes pad. Under the new law more bobcat bountes wll be pad. Orla Hayner of Munth s one of the sx master trppers apponted by the cc-nse vaton commsson. They wll nstruct farmers n coyotte r.nd wolf trappng. ( The law has caught up wth the hunters who smer.red ther deer tag wth mud last year. t has been changed to read legble as well vsble. Otto Hall, a CCC engneer from Gaylord s workng on the Dead Rval floodng project near Houghton. Here 2,000 acres wll be flooded for wld c".nmals and fowls. DUE TC 3E.SNAGGFD The Department has purchased 723 more acres of wld land for game pro- Suspected bootkyvgng of pas and probaton from the $1.60 deer leother knds of tav.'e- motor fuel n onsc fund. to the state of Mchgan, s due to Startng Sept. 1st 1937 one mlreceve a blew us a result of operat- lon copes of the new game laws wll on of one cf the nctj of ho regular, be gven out. sesson of the l'j37 legslature. j The trout season has been the most The statute makes' t mandatory satsfactory n many years. t closes that all motor vehcles engaged n the Labor Day. busness of transportng any knd of The state game farm at Mason wm motor fuel, must bear permanently keep all female Hungaran partrdges panted n a eons^k-bus place on ts whch lad over 30 eggs ths year to body, the name and r.ddre.-.: of ts serve as brood stock. The others wth owner. Leon. D. C\\*e, Secretary of the male brds wll be planted n df- State has notfed all concerned, that ferent parts of the state. these letters must not b? les.- than 41 The conservaton dept. now prenches hgh. n the cr.e of wholesale sents a program each Wednesday on d'trbutors the trucks must also show Staton WWJ, Detrot. Ths wll conthe "gas tax" lcense number, nde- 'tnue \nyll Nov*. lothv Tle Pncmey Tr-County League team playe ts frst double header of the year vth Chelsea Sunday and splt even losng the opener 4 to 8 and wnnng the last game 4 to 1. The boys played a nce feldng game but Lefty Barth of Chelsea was hard for them to ht n the opener. Henry Skowersk p'tched the frst game for Pnclaey and only allowed tnre«.. the frst fve nnngs. n the 6th the Chelsea team ted the score on a walk two hts and an error and scored the wnnng run n the 7th wth two out when L. Novss sngled to center scorng Edde Kolander. Skowersk got 11 strkeouts and got two of Pnckney's 6 hts.pnckney scored all ther runs n the 6th when Smth sngled, Hanes batted for Young and walked and Maycock scored both on a ht to center after they had pulled x double steal. Skowersk ht towards frst and was safe when Barth who took Kolanders throw. <}ropp«d t, Maycock scorng, Lamb endng the nnng by lnng to thrd. Pnckney AB R Lamb, 2b 3 0 G. Ward, c 8 0 Smth, 3b 3 1 Young, cf 2 0 Hanes, cf 1 1 Dcknson, lbl 3 0 E. Ward, f 8 0 Maycock, as 8 1 LaBelfe. rf 1 0 Baker, rf 1 0 Skowersk, r 8 0 H PO Chelsea AB R H PO A Crger, 2b P. Novss, 3b Bush, ss L. Novss, cf B. Barth, f 3 Heeler, rf L. Barth, p Jameson, o Kolander, lb Two base ht Barth Novss. Struck out, Skowersk 11, Barth 8, Bases on balls, Skowersk 1, Barth 3. Left on bases, Pnckney 7, Chelsea, 6, Umpres-- Whte and J. Curlett. n the second contest Novss was no problem to Pnckney who threw away several scorng chances by takng too many chances on the bases. Pnckney scored flvo runs the frst nnng when Lamb sngled. G. Ward got walked and Hanes and Maycock also ht safely. n the thrd Skowersk got a double and Hanes and Smth each trpled. Hanes was called out for not touchng second and only one run resulted from all ths sluggng. Pnckney's last run came n the 5th when Ward sngled got around to thrd on Skowersk's ht and scored on an nfreld out. Chelsea's run crme n the 4th when Novss sngled, stole second and scored on Parson's ht. Chelsea got two men on n the 7th nnng on a base on bulls and a felder's choce after two were out but Jameson ended the game by foulng out to "Dcknson. No catcher beng avalable G. Ward donned the armor and went behnd the bat where he dd a credtable mtaton of Pudy York. Pnckney AB R L* r mb 2b 3 1 G. Ward, c 3 2 Skof.vorsk, rl'\ 4 1 Hanes, p 4 0 Smth, 3b 8 0 Maycock 8 0 Dcknson, lbl 8 0 Young, cf 3 0 E. Ward, f 8 0 Chaltaa AB R ated by the letters, <'GT".. [ More than 300 wld ducks and 371 LaSavage, 3b 2 0 The purrcse of the act s to mrke Canadan geese^ have been reared Parson, cf 8 0 jwtce detecton easer v.here t s be- at the state game farm at Mason ths Polck, rf 2 0 Heved an attempt s beng Vna.e to year. Of the ducks 250 are gray ma!- Uvlng motor fuel nto the state wth- lards 51 wood ducks and 36 blacks. out payment of the state's three cent So for ths year there have been to gallon gas tax for sales rrtes that 898 forest fres and 13,304 acres recognzed reftalers could not meet, have been burned over. Joseph Had r oy Drector of the Gas The season ths year on mgatory tox Dvson of the Dept. of State s fowl s from Oct 9 to Nov 6. pontng out that recognzed dealers Effectve Oct 29 s a law forbddng fn a?l phases of the ol and ges ndus- the huntng of all smal' game.before try, who have always co-operated n the hour of sunrse. Prevously only observance of ts gas tax collecton pheasants had been so protected, law, wll be benefted by operaton of An ncubator used at the state farm the tatute. The act was mmedately ct Mrson ths year to hatch pheasants effectve, but reasonable tme for ob-' produced an 82 percent hatch of the tervmce s beng permtted by the strongest chck*. Dept. of State. Mrs. Edna Spears was n Ann Arbor Y'e nerl of beng too cnrcfl wuh Thursday.. : enpw. A story of a man who tred hs* Norbet Lavey and wfe of Detrot to play safe wfh love, and how * were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. llfcvfaatfon ltd to half mllon dollar Mke Lavey. n «W Amtrean Weekly, the! The Msses Franc VanderWall A l*e dtoerlbuted wth Neat SUN-' Mary Spears were n Grand Bapd HSBAU) AND over the week oad s fmeu f»*> '*«Kn, fmk lft)** H PO / H PO A L. Novss, c Kolander, lb Jameson, lb L. Barth, ss 3 2 P. Novss, p Bahnmller, l Beeler, f Crger, 2b Three base hts- Hanes, Smth; Two bsse hts-skowersk, E. Ward. Struck out, Hanes, 7. Novss, 2 Base on balls, Hanes, 2 Novss 1. Left on bases«-pnckney, 6. /CElUfc'6 Umpre-Whte. ZD ^tammm* Battng* Averages AB Skowersk, 9 Edsl Meyer 15 Smth 46 Lamb 42 Young 12 Maycock 16 Grant Ward 44 Wayne FerreU 24 Earl Ward 46 Dcknson 15 Bud. Dllowty 81 ft H Pet ,800,190 M Place Your Orders Now for COAL Before Prces Advance Hard Coal, Pocahontas, Coke Stoker Coal.Get Our Prces Delvered drect from the Cars TERMS-CASH Thos. Read PROPERTY OWNERS %^M ^ F YOU ^^NOW 0*0* Accordng to Enrolled Act 28, passed by the Mchgan Legslature n 1937 All 1933,1934 delnquent State and County Taxes and specal assessments, may be settled on ths plan, durng the month of August, PROVDED 1936 taxes are pad N FULL; Prevous unpad taxes for 1933, 1934, 1935 and moratorum payments due and unpad n 1935 and 1936 moy be pad on a TEN YEAR payment plan.?«7* Only 6 10% before September 1st, 1937 \0% annually thereafter NO NTEREST-NO PENALTES 2% Collecton charge on total tax pad s the only added charge. Falure to pay these taxes, before September 1,1937, automatcally places propertes on sale n May 1938, for taxes due, plus penaltes Ond nterest. By Oro'tn HATE ADMNSTRATVE BOARD GEORGE r. GUNDR*, Audtor General PftANK MURPHY, Governor More Days To Save Your Home! See Your County Treasurer Tocfoy»P Dspatch Want Adv.»- LT* ^ fo H :' * V:, V.^j? '" f' : MklM "/ V < -» - ; Lf<4 *an - a

7 F^: ' * >, ;,;\ A Crocheted Rug j s a Lfetme Joy J Ths rug that you can so easly crochet yourself wll be a lfetme joy. See f t sn't! Do the stunnng medallons separately they're juat 8¼ nch squares and keep jonng them tll you've a rug the desred sze. f you lke, make Pattern 5855 each flower center a dfferent color, keepng the background unform. Rug wool or candlewckng make for a sturdy durable rug, or otherwse useless rags wll also serve the purpose. n pattern 5855 you wll fnd nstructons for makng the rug shown; an llustraton of t and of all sttches used; materal requrements; color suggestons, a photograph of the actual square. Send 15 cents n stamps or cons (cons preferred) for ths pattern to The Sewng Crcle Household Arts Dept., 259 W. Fourteenth St., New York, N. Y. Please wrte your name, address and pattern number planly. Ths Expandng Unverse Be the earth great or small what matter s that to manknd? t s always great enough provded t gves us a stage for sufferng and for love. To suffer and to love, these are the twn sources of ts nexhaustble beauty. Sufferng, pan how dvne t s, how msunderstood! To t we owe all that s good n us, all that makes lfe worth lvng; to t we owe pty and courage and all the vrtues. Anatole France. HELP KDNEYS To Get Rd of Add and Posonous Waste Your ddney help to keep yoq-wtd by eontantly flterng waate matter from the blood. f your kdaeyt get fractonally dsordered and (al to renov* exeeea mpurtes, there may be tamng of (he whole system and Kdy-wlde dstress. Burnng, scanty or too frequent urnaton may be a warnng of aome kdney or bladder dsturbance. You may suffer naggng backache, persstent headache, attacks of dtunesa, gettng up nghts, swellng, pufflneaa under the eye* feel weak, nervous,- all played out. n such eases f. la better to rely on a medcne that has won country-wde acclam than on somethng less favor* ably known. Use Dean't PUt, A multtude of grateful people rtcoauuttd Don's. At* tour ntohbcrt DOANS PLLS WNU O GET RD OF BG UGLY PORES HMY Of DATES N0W...DWT0r«FACAL MAGNESA MADE HER SKN FRESH, YOUNG, BEAUTFUL Bonaaoe hasn't a chance wken bo ngl? porw spol tkn-tcxrure. Man love the soft smoothness of a frank young complexon. Denton's Fedal Magnesa does mxcks far unsghtly tk. Ugly pores dsappear, safe beoosmsfrmand smooth ft* frst lew treabmeml wtadoata'slmal Memale saak* rasmkabte llfhrsn Wttk Wttt tsw rvnaatl V^'sBttruty Jew ahto ferttaam xnuordnaky ormt - yy ran mmmt fcgsjw Cwstfljart** S) plm» t toomk* amad 1 5» coast? * Jflker ^y^-efammv^llw^aw^.wat t Doaj'taSa out oanas teeaeskahea ees. DENTON'S Facal Magnesa ^rvpsssv e#ssvsnms%e«eu*«*««>«>a>aa»«e>ab'e>«sbb> 5 s»sw»bwaw«mpb«swam The Pnckney Dspatch, Wednesday, August 25, 1937 WTH BANNERS SYNOPSS Brook*, Reyburn vsts the offce) of Jtd Stewart, a lawyer, to dscuss the terms of aa estate the baa nherted from Mrs. Mary Arnuada Dane. Unwttngly the overhears Jed tabdnf to Mark Trent, a nephew of Mrs. Dane who has been dsnherted. Mrs. Dane had lved at Lookout Rouse, a huge structure on the sea. bult by her father and dvded nto two, for her and Mark's father. Brooke had been a fashon expert, and Mrs. Dane, a "shut-n." hearng her on the rado, had nvted her to call and developed a deep affecton for her. Mark dscloses that Mrs. Dane had threatened to dsnhert hm f he marred Lola, from whom he s now dvorced. Be says ha does sot trust Henr and Oottlde Jacques, Mrs. Dane's servants. Be says he s not nter* ested n aa offer of Brooke's to share the estate wth hm. Leavng her department store Job, Brooke refuses aa offer to "go steppng" wth Jerry Held, a carefree young man who wants to marry her. At a famly conference she learns she must lve at Lookout House alone, snce Lucette. her younger sster who s takng her Job, her brother, Sam, a young playwrght, and her mother plan to stay n the cty. Jed and Mark are astounded when they hear from Mrs. Gregory, a famly frend, that she had wtnessed a htherto unknown wll wth Henr and Oottlde two weeks before Mrs. Dane ded. Brooke bad arrved Just as she was leavng. CHAPTER m Contnued "Destroyed t? But how could Brooke Reyburn have known what was n the frst wll? Perhaps your aunt had told her that she was to be resduary legatee t doesn't seem probable, but women do fool thngs." He grnned. "Of course men never do. We've got to get busy. f t sn't destroyed, that wll may be at Lookout House; you've never lked the Jacques and you say that they hate you. have an dea. Open your house. Lve there. Get frendly wth the grl." " would feel lke a sneak to go there to spy on her." "You suspect that she may have nfluenced your aunt to make a wll n her favor, don't you?" " do," "Then gve her a chance to prove that she ddn't. Take a couple of Japs and go down and lve next door." C " won't commt myself to that proposton n a hurry. f decde to do t, wll you come wth me?" "Sure, 've been hopng you'd ask me. Phlo Vance s my mddle name." Stewart pcked up the note lyng on the desk. "You'd better open the nvestgaton by acceptng ths." "The Reyburn grl's nvtaton to dne on Thanksgvng day? would feel lke a spy, a trator. The turkey would choke me." "Do you want the truth about ths wll?" "You bet do." "Then go. Don't wrte. We never send a letter when we can send a man. Phone the nght before that you are comng. She'll have less tme n whch to thnk why you are acceptng." Brooke Reyburn stood n the doorway of the lvng-room at Lookout House. Behnd her n the hall a graceful crcular starway wound up and up. She nodded approval. The room was the perflct settng she had vsualzed fqr the duchess of Argyle snce the day she had known that her father had wlled her the portrat. The green of the walls and trm repeated the color of the satn gown of the woman n the dull gold frame whch hung above the mantel of carved black talan marble, repeated also the shade of the feathers of the dozng parrot n a glded cage, threw nto relef dark polshed surfaces of mahogany. She had had everythng that she thought belonged to hs famly stored n the apartment over the garage. Curous that she had found so lttle slver. She looked at the door whch Mary Amanda Dane had told her opened nto the twn house. Somethng uncanny about t. Whenever she was n the room t drew her eyes lke a magnet. Mark Trent's house was on the other sde. t had not been lved n for years. What a waste. Had hs wfe refused to lve there? Hs wfe? She couldn't thnk of hm as havng had a wfe. Why thnk of hm at all? She resolutely swtched her thoughts to her surroundngs. Ths was the same room n whch she had frst seen Mrs. Dane n her wheel char, but how dfferent. Then t had been drab and heavy; now t glowed wth toft color. She would never forget the pathos n the woman's eyes as they had met hers, nor the eagerness of her greetng. She had regstered a passonate vow to make her lovely and attractve n approprate clothes. That had been her job then and a thrllng job, too, to help women make the most of ther good ponts. How Mary Amanda Dane had fooled her about money. The crppled woman had kept her feet frmly on the ground when t came to spendng. Plannng nexpensve, attractve clothes for her had been an exctng challenge. She had succeeded. The frocks had been charmng, and wth her drab wardrobe the nvald bad shed much of her crabbedneea. Lovely clothes dd that for a woman. Pty that more husbands ddn't realze the fact New the was gone and had left a small fortune behnd her. Why had the dened herself so many of the luxures of lfe? Brooke blnked long wet lathes and sad aloud, aa she bad sad many tmet snce she had coma to Bvt at Lookout House: By Emle Lorng to T.»wn» Lorng. WNU Servce. "Thank you for everythng, Mrs. Mary Amanda. Thanks bllons." She swallowed the lump whch rose n her throat whenever ahe thought of the woman's ncredble kndness. Hardly the tme to go sentmental when at any moment the famly mght burst n on her. They were on ther way to spend Thanksgvng. For the frst tme they would see the changes n the house; she had postponed ther comng untl t should be n perfect order. The honk-honk of an automoble horn outsde was followed by voces sngng lustly: " 'Over the rver and through the wood, Trot fast, my dapple-gray! Sprng over the ground. Lke a huntng hound For ths s Thanksgvng day.* " The gay chorus was followed by laughter and vocferous cres: "Whoa there! Stand stll, Lghtnng! Whoa!" Laughng, Brooke dashed for the front door. t was so lke the Reyburn famly to dramatze ts arrval. n a rush of cold ar and excted greetngs she ploted her mother Laughng, Brooke Dashed for the Front Door. and sster to the lbrary. The startled parrot shreked, "Stop! Look! Lsten!" "Boy, you don't need a burglar alarm wth that announcer. You ought to loan hm to a bank.". Lucette made a gamn face at the parrot as she slpped out of her ocelot coat. She dragged off her hat and patted the swrl of her dark har. Brooke hugged her mother. "t's wonderful to have you here, Cela Reyburn, and aren't you devastatng n that eel-gray ensemble!" "Not as devastatng as you are n that shmmery whte, daughter. t brngs out the copper lghts n your har." Brooke laughed. "We are lke two dplomats exchangng complments, the dfference s that ours come from the heart. Where's Sam? Don't tell me Sam sn't comng!" Lucette held a lghter to a cgarette wth a fant hnt of bravado. "Don't cry, darlng. Sam came. Ddn't you recognze hs voce sngng as f hs lttle heart would burst from joy as we approached ths baronal hall? Doubtless he s kssng hs peachy convertble goodnght n your garage. He's crazy about that coupe you (gave hm, Brooke. He has named t Lghtnng. And can t go! Who's the tall gent wth the undertaker expresson who pulled our bags from the car as f he were extractng upper and lower molars?" "Henr. He and hs wfe, Clotlde, worked for years for Mrs. Dane. kept them on to help me settle. They take a lot of handlng, beleve t or not." " beleve t. Ths room looks lke part of a House Beautful exhbt. t's corkng." "Wat tll you see the rest of the house, Lucette. Here's Sam. would recognze hs bang of a door f heard t n Tmbuctoo. Welcome to Lookout House, Sammy! t's wonderful that the theater closed just at ths tme." "Yeah! t's all n the pont of vew. There are thera who thnk otherwse. However, 'm not kckng." He caught Brooke n a bearlke hug. He kept hs arm about her at he looked around the room. "Swell jont you've got here. lke the greenhousey smell from those plants. Say lsten, we've nutted yotr lke the dckens, haven't we, Mother?" "We have, Sam." Cela Reyburn steaded her voce. "We'd better 'stop emotonalzng and get ready for dnner. have kept house years enough to know that promptness at meals helps to keep the homemaker's lfe's walk easy." "You would thnk of that, Mother. t sn't dnner to nght. planned a buffet supper, not beng sure at what tme my relatves from the bg town would arrve. Come upstars and 'll show you your rooms." A famly mght get on each other's nerves, as of course t dd at tmes, but there was nothng lke t, Brooke concluded fervently, as after supper on a floor cushon n front of the lbrary fre she leaned aganst her mother's knees. Lucette burst out nervously: "f Sam can stop that nut-munchng marathon, perhaps he'll announce the latest Reyburn news flash." Brooke sat erect. "What news?" Sam took careful am at the parrot's perch. The nutshell struck ts bullseye and roused the dozng brd. "Hell's bells!" he croaked, and ruffled hs feathers. "Looks as f he were caught n a typhoon, doesn't he?" The laughter n Sam's voce vanshed. "Mother has been nvted to spend the wnter n England wth her frend Lady Jaffrey." "Sam!" Wth the exclamaton Brooke was on her feet. "Do you mean t? How perfectly grand! She lves n an old castle, doesn't she?" "Hey, ppe down, Brooke. There's a ngger n the woodple. Wat tll you hear the condton." "A condton n Lady Jaffrey's nvtaton, Sam? can't beleve t." "Be quet, chldren. Let me talk." Arms crossed on the back of the wng char n whch she had been sttng, Cela Reyburn faced her famly. Her cheeks were pnk; her eyes, as blue as her son's, were brllant wth exctement. She clasped her hands tghtly as f to steady them. "The char recognzes the lady from the bg cty," Sam encouraged wth a grn. "What's the condton, Mother? Don't you want to go?" "Very, very much, Brooke, but shouldn't enjoy a moment of the vst f left your brother and sster n that apartment alone. Perhaps 'm a selfsh woman, but would lke to and wll go, f my mnd s perfectly at ease about Lucette and Sam. f they wll come here to you, and f you wll have them " "Have them! Mother, don't be foolsh! have been rattlng around n ths bg house lke a dred coconut n a shell. Of course want them but wll they come?" "Who's beng foolsh now?" Lucette flung her cgarette nto the fre. Her cheeks were almost as red as her 4 panted lps. "Of course we'll come, Brooke Reyburn. Of course we'll play ball Mother's way. Sam and aren't cold-blooded fsh. f takng to the stcks to be chaperoned by bg sster wll make Mother's vst happer, we'll settle down here wth bells on. She's earned all the fun she can get She'll have one grand tme and mow those stff Brtshers down n swaths and come home Countess Whoost, or mss my guess," "Lucette!" Cela Reyburn protested ndgnantly. "Don't mnd her Mother," Broke reassured. "By the tme ytm return your younger daughter wll have acqured all the socal graces " "Just a mnute! Now maka a condton. come only f keep on wth my job." "t would mean early and late commutng, Lucette." "'ve thought that out. n Sam's convertble we can make t." "But you and Sam won't be comng down at the same tme, and " "Don't be so sure, Brooke." Sam amed a nutshell at the parrot. "The theater has closed permanently and 'm up aganst one of those smple economc problems, where's the next job comng from? 'll go to New York to see off Mother and take my play. Now that producers have begun to snff around for bargans, may get my chance." "Sam dear " Brooke attempted to lghten her dsmayed voce. Bad enough for hm to be out of work wthout havng her turn sob-sster. "You'll fnd somethng. read the other day that the theater s on the up-grade. f you don't oh, Sammy, what a chance for you to wrte! Why not gve your play a try-out here? We'll do t for the town's welfare fund, n the Club House theater. What a chance to try 'slands Arse' on the dog!" "News flash! The Reyburns stage a play!" Lucette cut n. "Why not?" Brooke perssted eagerly. "Most of the summer homes are to be kept open durng the wnter and Answer the phone, wll you, Sam? Take the message for me. 've been pestered to death by tradespeople and nsurance agents wantng to sell me somethng. Tell them 'm out of town for the evenng anythng." The slence of the room was broken only by the snap and hss of the fre as Sam Reyburn put the recever of the handset tor hs ear. "Hulloa. Yet. Mss lekjrburn t out of town for the oveeaag. Sure, she'll be back tomorrow, Oh, t s! Yet, 'll gve her your message. She'll be pleated purple. get you. 'll tell her. 'Bye!" He lad the phone on the stand. "Who was t, Sam? What wll please me purple?" Brooke de» mended uneasly. "A party by the name of Trent" "What dd he want?" "Not much. Only to say that he accepted your nvtaton for Thanks* gvng dnner wth pleasure." TO BE fontmued) Ask Me O Another 1. What s the largest lner that has gone through the Panama canal? %. How many of our Presdents owned slaves? 3. Who frst dscovered the prncples of magnetsm? 4. What aae the elevatons above sea level of the Great Lakes? 5. How much space does a ton of gold occupy? 6. Roman senators were apponted for a term of what duraton? 7. Are all eyes of the same sze? g. How s salt secured? Answers 1. The Panama canal offce says that the Empress of Brtan was the largest lner to pass through the canal*. t was also the lner to pay the largest fee, whch was $18, Ten Presdents owned slaves: Washngton, Monroe, Jefferson, Madson. Jackson, Tyler, Polk, Taylor, Johnson and Grant. Lncoln never owned slaves. 3. Dscovery of the smple prncples of magnetsm possessed by magnette, or loadstone, was made by Chnese n 1400 B. C, or years before magnetsm was known n Europe. 4. The Great Lakes have approxmately the followng elevatons above sea level: Superor, 602 feet; Mchgan, 581; Huron, 581; Ere. 241; and Ontaro, 246 feet. 5. A 14.1 nch cube of gold weghs a ton. Soya: Lesure s a Stmulant Effcency whets the appette for lesure. And the latter stmulates the former. Folks who ht the hgh spots are presently gong so fast that the hgh spots ht them. He who borrows and never repays s too great a coward to steal. Country people envy the cty people and move to the cty, but n later years, rememberng the free, happy lfe of the country, they pty the chldren they have to rear there. A bald-headed man never knows whether to take t as a complment or jest when he s spoken of as "a polshed gentleman." That, Too, Can Hurt Many a man s lable to thnk hs character has been defamed, when t has only been defned. Change the daly schedule of your lfe f you want to break annoyng habts. One may make a great mstake "lookng on the brght sde" of thngs" n the presence of people who want to mourn. Men frst learned n a barber shop the courtesy of "watng ther turn." To reman young n thought doesn't mean to turn handsprngs. When One Can Thnk One may lke to travel fast, except when he s on foot. Personally, one of our besettng habts s saunterng, but that's how thoughts keep up wth us. Satan fnds some mschef for dle hands to do wth the ardent assstance of the owner of the dle hands. A query s prnted n an exchange askng what s the dfference between "farther" and "further." Why doesn't the querer look n the dctonary? That's what t's for. A Quz Wth Answers Offerng nformaton on Varous Subjects 6. Roman senators were apponted for lfe unless expelled from offce for some dshonorable cause. 7. Contrary to general opnon, says a specalst, there s no small eye or large eye. All eyes are approxmately of the same sze. The reason for the apparent dfference depends upon the orfce or aperture through whch the eyes are seen. t s the varable dameter of ths openng that creates the erroneous mpresson of dfferent szes of eyes. 8. There are three ways n whch salt may be secured: Frst, by mnng; second, by evaporaton of sea water; and thrd, by dggng wells untl a salt ven s struck and then pourng water and pumpng t up agan as brne. fowejold e Queston? mprovng Canned Grapefrut. The flavor of canned grapefrut can be mproved by aeratng t, that s, pourng t from one contaner nto another several tmes. «For Bathroom Curtans. Terry cloth or towelng makes excellent bathroom curtans, easy to wash requrng no ronng. To Prevent ron From Stckng. A lttle salt added to starch wll prevent the ron from stckng. * * Rhubarb Batter. Cut rhubarb nto peces one nch long. f stcks are large splt them lengthwse as well. Fll a buttered freproof dsh three parts full wth the rhubarb. Beat together one ounce butter, two ounces granulated sugar and one egg; then add two ounces flour and beat agan. Add enough mlk to make a thn batter, pour over the rhubarb, and bake n a moderate oven for 30 to 40 mnutes. Serve wth cream. For Roly-Poly or Suet Puddng. When makng a roly-poly or suet puddng, nstead of usng a cloth wrap the puddng n double greaseproof paper and te wth strng n the usual way. The puddng wll be much lghter and there wll be no greasy cloth to wash afterwards. * Fresh Peas, French Style. One quart shelled peas; two small onons, whole; one bunch parsley, lump of butter, one tablespoonful salt, outer leaves of lettuce, onehalf cup cream, n a saucepan put peas, onons, parsley, butter and salt. Add enough bolng water to cover bottom of saucepan, cover wth lettuce leaves and cook untl peas are tender. Remove onon, lettuce, parsley, add cream to peas and heat untl scaldng hot, Retanng Vegetable Flavor, Vegetables wll retan more of ther flavor f put on to cook n water that has already been brought to the bolng pont. Otherwse much of the flavor soak nto the water. Hangng wll Mrrors. Hang the mrror where t adds to the sze as well as attractveness of the room. A couple of well-hung mrrors can do wonders to the small lvng room. WNU Servce. 666 LQUD, TABLETS SALVE, NOSE 0R0PS CHEW LONG BLL NAVY TOBACCO LFE'S LKE THAT COLDS and frst day Hudtshl,aO By Fred Neher "Hew eboert t mnstrel show oew that we hare two good cad. v<4» m* > \ ;**

8 &\ o... v -.^.-- ^^¾.}% 4,.-.¾ - /, s ^.. ft'"' / «* Clark's Brng n Your Car WHEN N NEED OF A FRST CLASS GREASE JOB, WASH JOB, Or SMONZNG or POLSHNG We carry a full lne of Tres, Tubes, Spark Plugs, Batteres, Rado Batteres, Greases, Ols, Top Dressng and Naptha We have nstalled ajjattery tester that shows cells, worn cells, and plate wear GOODYEAR TRES For Road Servce Gall 59-FS Lee Lavey dead BATTRES "Real" Hourly Earnngs n Manufacturng, NDEX NUMBERS (40 NDEX NUMBERS 140 Th«above chart Ulstrates the mprovement la "real* hourly saralsfs of nanofactartuf workers fat took place from MP to 19ST. Earalnfs moved ttpward, whle the eott of lvng went down, makng H possble for workers to boy more for ther money. Ths s partcularly notceable la the recovery perod snce 19». H shonld bo ke/t n mnd, however, that the averaf e number of boors worked has been substantally reduced n recent years. On the other hand, the bayng power of the consumer's dollar has ncreased somewhat more than s ndcated because of mprovement n the Qualty of goods aad servces used la the eost-omlvlat lades. The Pnckney Dfapttch, WwlnetaWy, 25, 1937»» (Contnued from frst page) WASHNGTON NEWS LETTER straton. At Roanoke sland, North Carolna commemoratng the brth of Vrgna Dane the frst whte chld born n Amerca, Presdent Roosevelt classfed opponents of-human* taran legslaton as Amercan Lord Macaulays and champoned the cause of the majorty aganst any select class as the rulers of the U. S. A. Defcency Apprvpr**k*k The thrd defcency appropraton bll amountng to $78,090,000 and ncludng some $20,000,001 to fnance the farm tenancy law, was approved by te House and senate n the fnal week. The Treasury announced the publc debt was rapdly approachng $37,000,000,000 and to reduce ths tremendous total Treasury tax experts are overhaulng, the entre tax structure to make recommendatons to congress next January. A voluntary unemployment census that would elmnate a house to house canvass and enable the unemployed to regster at varous places, was approved and the Senate amendments to the tax loophole legslaton were accepted by the House. mposng Harare! By the prerogatve of hs poston Majorty \ Speaker Rayburn of Texas made the last address before congress adjourned. The House adjournment traled the Senate concluson by about ten mnutes as the majorty leader complmented Congress and sad, ''the record of ths congress has been mposng and anyone who calls ths congress a st down or a donothng congress ether s gnorant of the facts or wshes to dstort laws" He pad a eloquent trbute to Speaker Bankhead as one of the really grea leaders of the House and prased the work of the House comm J tees and membershp durng the last eght months. Then the house adjourned wthout day accordng to the announce* ment of Speaker Bankhead. Mr. and Mrs. J. P Doyle who have] been spendng the summer at Lexng, ton returned home today., Tel Bourbonnas has returned from Hemmett, Calf where he has been vs tng hs father. Russell Lvermore and wfe of Dexter were Sunday vstors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Clark. Frst PJowe of Tree BraneJ^e The frst farm plows were, made of crooked tree branchtt tad worked by men power. * Round Steak Ground 21c Salt Pork T-Bone Steak L. A LARGS VARETY OF ^OLD MEATS FOR THE SUMMER TABLE, ALL VERY MODERATE N PRCE. YOU'LL GET BETTER MEATS AT CLARK'S MtfttSl 1 WtDeJtot otttlltltt* THE HOME OF HGH QUALTY ME AT PNCKNEY. MCH. t ^ LOCAL SCOUTS SEE GAME An nvtaton has been expended to local ccoute and leaders through the Scout Executve Walter McPeek to make a plgrmage to East Lansng on Saturday, Sept. 25 to partcpate n the annual fry Scout Day at Mchgan State College. Scout reorg^nzajten cards wll serve as admsson and All scout? ownng unforms wll wear them. How he led a blameless lfe untl around 60, then made ardent love to pretty workng grls, went around n a barrel starved n a glass coffn and fnally made the fa a mstake of steppng on a lon's paw whle playng, "Danel n the Lons Den, s told n an artcle n The Amercan Weekly, the great weekly magazne wth the August 29 ssue of The Detrot Sunday Tmes. r FORD MEN STLL HERE The Ford surveyors are stll here surveyng the dfferent peces of property on whch HenryFord has opton Sope of the descrptons were wrong <and all have to be absolute correct be fore the Ford Co. wll buy them. 9 ALLWESERVE beneft, naturally, by our many years of experence. n many yean of cote applcaton to our prof euonal actvtes; we have learned much that * s of nfnte value to those we serve Experenced mortuary servce s mportant; just as t s mportant to secure experenced professonal servce of any knd, when professonal servce s needed. p.mrswar<nfout. FVNBRAL HOr^...J3KOWE NO. 39' PMC NBY RCH J PAN Classfed t> Want Ads Wanted Good McCormck Deerng Tractor, servce man steady work and good wages. R. E. Barron J Wanted Four used McConmck Deer n Mtford the Ford Co. now has' ng corn bnders. No junk. 16 local men engaged n c 1 earng the. R. E. Barron ste where the Ford factory wll be *,,;».- ~A n * bult Another factory formerly was P? R SA, LE - *«* 'urn.ture, rado, there. Dynamte s beng used to bre-! «. ak up ts foundatons. Then t-s -oaded on"trucks and carred to a stone crusher. After beng crushed t wll be used for road buldng. STATE OF MCHGAN The Crcut Court For The County 0V Lvngston n Chancery Marlon J. Reason Plantff, -vs- l John Dunn, John W. Nanry, Frederck J. Lee, Charle' E. Coste and rene Ccste ht wfe, Margaret Dunn/Thomas Carrol, Danel Turner, John Obren, Charles W. Reeves, ra V. Reeves, Eljah W. S. Morgan, Lucy W. Morgan, George Reevs, Lousa Kng, Joseph Krkland, Wllam W. Feld, Seth W. Feld Charles Felds.Wllam Felds, Eleanor Felds, Lev B. War- Ter, Joseph D. Woodard, Claron Parker, W.!.. Campbell, Jures Bogan.Ed* wn B. Haskyns, Benjam'n Ncholas, Wllam H. Parsons. and Wllam F. Mott, Jr.. a electrc range, Knabe «. KM* P«no, beddng. nqure at the resdence of the late G. W. Teeple, 740 East Man Street or Phone 89. FOR SAL _One Farm. Cash Cheap. E. W. Bush Patterson Lake FOR SALE Large ce box and At- Water Kent cabnet Rado. Sell cheap Jacob Dunn Rush Lake nqure McKelvy'e FOR SALE Oak bed, dnng table, and sx- chars, santary cot, roc, 3-burner gas stove and oven,, 311 West Man, FOUND Female hound, owner can have by provng property and payng for keep. Wayne Bennett FOR SALE Early Eatng potatoes. George Grener Phone 19F4 TO RENT Furnshed upstan rooms Mrs. da Mae Mowers FOR SALE Good Used!>.# Ford Tudor, Good Used 36 Master Chevrolet Tudor Tourng, Good Used 36 co-partnershp, tradng p lymouth Aft( j touy otntrg t0 Cnose ttader-4hajtoj^ma._ol. frt)mrbbt -ay-cft Olen Garwood Ford W, H, PnonA Co., the un- Servlc Srtght n Phono 174 or 114. known wves of all sad male defendant*, and the unknown FOR SALE_ xcellent 85 Stake Ford Hers, devsees, legatees am ' Thck, Low mlage, Good Rubber, algns outl sad defendant!! Guaranteed. Call Glen Garwood, Ford Servce, Brghton Phone 174 or 194 MpaMa* 'to have yocr furnace VRCUM clean* ed or repared call Am* J. F. Ceek HeweU Mchgan Satyag wsffet n ^e/endantf. Sut pendng n the Crcut Court fo Sad County of Lvngston, n Chaneery, at Howell, Mehgan, on SOU Day el June, 1087 tt appearng f*dh plantff's sworn bll of complant and the affdavt on fe tt sad cause that t cannot la aeee'hamed, alter 1 dlgent search and FoOKJLj* ood condton. Parker resdence, &buty rt what state t>r country sad pgr fatu Eatng Potatoes defendants a* any of them resde, K #> _, _ <,",!,, UPON MOTON of Shelds & &nfth, attorneys for the plantff, t s OR- SALESMAN WANTED A relable DERED that cad defendants cause Dealer for HEBERUNG ROUTS of ther appearance to be entered heren 1500 to 2000 famles. Wrte quckly. wthn three months from the date hereof, and that n default thereof sad bll wll be taken as confessed by them, and that plantff cause ths or* der to be publshed wthn forty days n the Pnckney Dspatch, a newspap prnted, publshed and crculatng lt sad county once each week least sx successve weeks. Louse M, Schul Dept. G. C. HEBBRLWG CO floomngton, 111. NOTCE FOR SALE 70 acre farm, 5 acres of tmber, good buldngs; also half nterest n bnder. Terms to salt gjace Solosan 84S Chestnut ; Wyandotte, Mchgan. WATED Experenced farm hand. Homer Nxon Phone Chelsea 157F8 Shot runs and rfles bought and sold Ph^ne 42F2 Lucus Doyle FOR SALE Two wheel traler, extra tre, sutable for stock, $12.00 also o burner ol stove, $4.00. Don Goodrejnont 8861 Patterson Lake Road CHERRES FOR SA«E at the Nck Katon Farm FOR SALE One chemcal tolet complete wth stack and 150 gallon tank* Earl Gallup FOR?ALE One good work mart 8 years old. Arj.ur Shehan. FOR SALE A. young team; eatng and seed potatoes. W. H. Euler. FOR SALE Read's Yellow Dent seed corn. Shelled, screened, graded and tested 98%, wll grow. G. W. Clark 3 -a les Southest of Pnckney CONSULT US-_for mmedate cajfe* $26.00 dollars aad up. Ctzen's Fnance Co. Howell Phone 81 HAVfc BTTY-ERS For small and medum prced farms. E. A. Strout Realty George Van Horn. Rep. 322 W. Washngton, Howell, Men. FOR SALE Fordson tractor wth John Deere plows. Completely new motor wth new Fuel OQ carburetor and manfold. Can be seen plow rwng ths week. A fne selecton of used can also, Servs Chevrolet Sales Dexter, Mchgan. Open evenngs and Sundays. Establshed 186B ncorporatad 1918 State Bank Over Sxty-Eght Years of Safe Bankng Your are eordally nvted to attend Wth the fall season comng oft for at a CAMP ROBNSON BAND CON- rapd:* we begn to wonder nhat knd CERT sponsored by the Toledo Ver*' of busness s n store for us all. JoeV Joseph H. Collns non McCune Post Amercan Legon gng ron* current condtons we'can tf^t^roducts, employment wll be stublztjc due to strkes becomng Crackedpctt Lawmakear Clare Hoffman vao got so much attent- Clerk " J u d g ' X? Sld sut nvolve, and s brought,22nd, SUNDAV ' A^G0 US J to* for Movement AT 4 P. M. ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ n all lnes. ^ J to quet ttle to land n the Townshp of Putnam, Lvngston County,Mchtgan descrbed u Northwest ^ quarter, Secton fourteen 4U.,,, M. on, mostly from bran specalsts by, ta ****'* ^8 «**&y pay check xeepung therefrom a parcel of land! hs ^ attackfl upm ^ ao> ^ ^ hel? ^ retal ^e, descrbed as: Oommencng at West p^^^ ^d thng n general has' Babson Reports stote that a 10% J 1?*!! SL-? #JJSJA* th^* new wmto***- T1»e Hurler haa a ncrease wll not be unlkely for the K S f f e M M ^ bus - e»- Of course, thkwh ee Northeatewy to Nonneast corner. ^ t ^ t ^^^^ to put,. r* of West Kwthwttt ol Secton quarter lne to of Northwest the North. cor hng, ^ whch {n ^ s more than they're worth. Penton Courer. he* of lad secton; thence South on secton ltte to place of begnnng. waste basket well offer,.. *^^ m Jr^ contanng weh qujrter one of hundred sad secton; acres, Whence more ^ ^ f<jy exm ^ agr costs and commodty prces,, Honey to loan at reasonable ratee &terast pad o:» Savng* Books and Tme Certfcates of Depost, al de» or leu Northwest quarter, Secton Twenty- even, and West half of Northeast quarter of sad secton, exceptng therefrom a parcel of land descrbed as: Commencng at Nor&east cornet of sad West half of Northeast quarter) themce South Fourteen and one* half rods thence West sx rods; thenee tfot *tote*n and one half rode; thence Bast Sx rods to place of beghhhf* All ll Townshp One North, Range tott Slt, Mchgan. Shelds k Smth Atteny * Ptnt* trfll ltahm Forbes Mller of Howell spent last Frday evenng at W. 0. Hettdeet*. Mrs Ford lmb retorted home on Frday from ft two week vacaton at Far Haven S. C. Webb, Roes Rnchey and 2am ly spent Sunday wth Mr. and Mrs. Ray Rcks near Lansng. Sally Reason of Lansng s spend* ng the week wth her grandparents Mr. and Mrs. L. Wlson. Mr., and Mrs. Cfca*. Hard and dan* ghters of Cadllac wre Monday cal* lers at the John Harrs farm Mr. and Mr*, L W. Resdee* ther sons- tpent the wejlk end whk tssa. posts nsured by t our membershp a Federal Depost nsurance Corp* McPhersoo Stfe HOWELL, M1CHQAN : t Money to loan at reatonable nterest" pad on Savngs Booka aasl Tme Certfcates of Depost Member uf Federal Dejoe* ^ VM^ v- a fr4 ^ V M+ da^ ^y^. * ' j.4* 4 ^yyy^ m *u-

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