OUR DEMOCRACY ^ - ^ THE FRUITS OF DEMOCRACY

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1 V HOTO lt a ALk nt HEW! TBMSn FT T# RUNT spntrf) amuna *!.* W Y*M Vol 87 Pnckney, Lvngston County, Mchgan Wednesday, Oct Pnckney Hgh School Defeats Hartland Cory-Reason Weddng s Solemnzed except for a lucky break. Late n the last half n whch Hartland made consderable yardage, Pnckney got possesson of the ball on downs n the vcnty of the forty yard lne. A couple of assaults on the Hartland lne faled and then Kuhn started around end. However he dd not go far but stopped and threw a long pass to Joe Lavey who caught t off the ground at hs shoe tops near the ten yard lne and ran for a touchdown. t was a dffcult pass to catch and nne tmes out of ten would have been ncomplete. Kuhn kcked tl±e extra pont For the balance of the game the teams battled on even terms n mdf eld. The game started off as a strong man contest wth each team dependng on lne bucks. Darrow scored a touchdown for Pnckney n ths mannet- n the frst half and so dd Hoffman for Hartland. Nether team made the extra pont. Pnckney showed mproved form n ths game, the lne held at tmes and ball carrers were gven more nterference than at any other tme ths year. Darrow was the most successful plunger. He used a straght arm wth tellng effect and made a 80 yard gan n the thrd quarter. Earl Berqutt was enttled to some glory for ths as runnng nterference he splled three tack era, gvng Darrow a clear feld. Later n ths half Hartland got two breaks as they were able to block two Pnckney punts near the 80 yard lne. However they were unable to take advantage of t as Joe Lavey broke up two of ther passes and ther attack on the Pnckney lne faled. Kuhn quarterbacked ths game and showed possbltes as a good feld general Saturday nght of ths week Pnckney plays Ann Arbor hgh school reserves under lghts at Wnegt Feld, Ann Arbor. Pnckney L. E. - Lavey. T. Ludtke L. G. - Vedder C. - Hamparan R Berqust R. T. Swarthout R. E, - Palmer Q. B. Kuhn L. H. Amburgey R. H. - Darrow Hartland Wermouth Vercelus Sneath Allmond Yaxer Johnson Sparks Husknson Clarkk Lysol Hoffman F. B. Reynolds Substtutons: Pnckney - Cass, Plummer, P. Young, Aschenbrenner, Melnk, D. Wddmaye* W. Wdmayer. Touchdowns Darrow, Lavey; Hoffr/.an. Extra pont - Kuhn. Referee - Rordan.. Local Hgh School Breaks nto Ws j Young Pnckney Couple are Unted Celnsan, " ' Show* Greatly mproved n Marrng* at Ther Home Form n Coatee* Last Frday. on Frday Evenng Mr. Jack L. Kcasoh, Son o My. After playng; a scoreless te and and Mrs. Maron Reason of Pnck lost 9 to 0.' Pnckney hgh school football team got gong laat Frday and won from Hartland 3 to 6. At that Hartland showed about as much stuff as they dd and the game would probably have ended n a 6 to 6 te ney, and Mss Clarce L. Corey, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Vera Corey of Pnckney were unted n marrage at ther home of Putnam St. Frday evenng, October th, n the presence of the mmedate relatves. Rev. J. M. McLucas read ths double rng ceremony. The couple were attended by Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Reason. Mss Shrley Reason, the groom's nece was rng bearer. After the ceremony a very delcous luncl- was served. Mr. and Mrs. Reason wll be at home at 45 Putnam St., Pnckney. Both young people are well known here and very popular. The groom graduated from the Pnckney hgh school n 986. He was a three letter man n athletcs wnnng letters n football, basketball and baseball. Snce then he has been employed n Detrot and wth the Pnckney De Set factory. At the present tme he s employed by the Hudson Motor Co., Detrot. The brde graduated from Allen hgh school, later movng here wth her parents. Sh e attended a cosmetology school n Ann Arbor and has been employed there n a beauty shop for several years. n behalf of ther many frends the Dspatch extends congratulatons DRAFT BOARD COMPLETED Governor Dcknson completed the draft board setup by namng doctors and lawyers n every county to handle the regstrants. n Lvngston county Dr. Holls Sgler was apponted examnng doctor and Don Van Wnkle, attorney. Th e attorneys wll handle the cases of all regstrants who aren't satsfed wth ther classfcatons and clam exempton. n ngham county Dr. Cyrus Gardner was apponted and also Dr., Lemoyne Snyder, state polce doctor. n Washtenaw county Drs. Coxon of Ann Arbor and Brtton of Ypslant. The lawyers are Frank Devne and Jay Payne of Ann Arbor. n Oakland county Harold Howlett was one of the attorneys apponted. n Putnam townshp Kenneth Reason was the frst person to regster fo! owed by Frday Hanes, Curts Chamberlan and Benne Van- Blarcum. Fve hgh school grls, Roberta Shrley, Rose Mary Read, Vrgna Baughn, Golde Markos and Ruth Culver were sworn n as regstrants and asssted n fllng out draft cards A regstraton of 2500 s expected n the county and about 50 n > Putnam, At noon today 47 had regstered here. PORTAGE LAKE COTTAGES ROBBED Deputes Randall and Knght of th* Washtenaw county sherff's offce arrested two Detrot youths, Lee Covert and Leonard Morandy, 9, for breakng nto and robbng several cottages at Portage Lake Shores Thursday. They have been bound over to Crcut Court under bonds of $000 each whch was not furnshed. The youths were stayng at the Co MARRAGE LCENSES The followng marrage lcenses were ssued at the offce of the county clerk last week: tre Anderson, 24, FowlervHe, Helen Seremack, 22, Pnckney; John Parsons leged to have taken a lamp from vert cottage at the lake and are al Vogt, 2, FowlervHe, Geneveve the Wesenhoefer cottage, a leather LynH, 20, FowlervHe j Raymond Salmon, 2, Howell, Mable VanValken- car the boy were drvng carred jacket from the Erdman cottage. The burgh, 2, Howell; Kenneth Hart*,! Oho lcense _ ' plates but a - Florda»0» Howell, Armflla Schwarzburg, J,atf found nsde the car. The 20,Oronj Jack Reason, 2, Pnckney, **». C0 * { *J?* * k A m f ** 0 C m " Clarke Cowy, 28, Pnckney. m! ^ n 0 c^ e r 2 ". r ) Frday, both boys pled gulty n AUCTON SALE crcut court Morandy was gven 5 Barng gold my farm, wll sell J ; 5 y e m v n **?>» " d f overt» my stock and farm tool, at publc < to 5 years by Judge Sftmple * V ^ OUR DEMOCRACY ^ - ^ THE FRUTS OF DEMOCRACY BATHTUBS ARE 90 % OF THE WORLD'S TOTAL,. /4 /7/ by Mat US.OEMOCRACY OFFERS, BESDES POLTCAL AND RELGOUS FREEDOM, A Hl$HEA UVNG STANDARD, MORE SECURTY, THAN ANY OTHZR NATON. [ORE THAN 2,000,000 FAMLES HAVE TELEPHONES, 48.5¾ OF ALL W THE WORLD. Catholc Church Rev. Frauds Murphy Sunday, October 20th s the 2lrd Sunday after Pentecost. Masses at 8:30 and 0:45. Catechsm clasff* Saturday 9:00 a. m. and after mass Sunday. Rosary Hour, adult nstructons, Frday at 7:30 p. m, Confessons Saturday 7:30 to 9 p. m, and onn hour before the early mass. OF 30 MLLON FAMLES, MORE THAN 26 MLLON OWN RADOS. News of the Ccut Court Judge Colln* Hold< m Two Day Court 5e**on La 4 Week. Jury t Called n Ths Week. Judge Collns held a day and a l;lf sesson at Howell last week n whch several non-jury cases were The Rev. Thomas Kennedy (order tred. n the case of Mchael Hoser of the Servtes of Mary) commonly charged wth the malcous destructon of property n the form of a ndcated by th e letters 0. S. M. wll conduct a msson whch opens wth number of turkeys, he pled gulty the 8:30 mass Sunday. Father Kennedy wll preach at both the 8:30 and pad a fne of about $0 and costs. Jerry Barrster charged wtt anc< 0:45 mass Sunday and conduct unlawfully drvng away an auto the evenng servces at 7:30 p. m. belongng to another party was gven? to 5 years n Southern Mch all week. On Frday, October 25th, he wll ntroduce the Novena Devotons n Honor of our Lady of Sorgan prson'near Jackson. He s sad to have a long crmnal record n the rows. He wll teach the hstory and east. orgn of ths Novena. t s a per- Monday the jury were called and A r\ +'.. «. ' nunurt Llt; JUv ntt tun-u anu 5 A v V V n h TJ f u^the damage case of Frank Grffn Blessed V,rgn Mary, The mother _ lla Dan Denton and Frank Hop. of our Blessed Lord. Father Kennedy has had natonal experence n preachng mssons and Novenas. The fourteen hours of adoraton to the Blessed Sacrament wll be held the followng week end, Every body s welcome and free to attend, young anc old, boys, and grls, men and women, catholc and non-catholc. Confessons wll be heard n Englsh, German, talan and n all probablty n Polsh f requred. No one s to be left neglected. Baptst Cborch Servent eaefc Snnday Mornng Worshp...frrtrt) p. m. B. Y. P. W 7:30 p. m. Frday Prayer Servce 2:30 p. m. versus kn.- of Unadlla was to be tred. _ Denton s S years old. He and Hopj kn. were burnng brush and the fr* got away from them and damaged an orchard belongng to Grffn whose farm adjons. Grffn seeks damages. Shelds and Smth are attorneys for Grffn and Don Van Wnkle for Denton and Hopkns. Bert Chapman charged wth a statuory offense entered a plea of not gulty and was held for tral. Marshall Campbell of Howell who plec gulty to settng fre to the Dale Kettler cottage at Patterson Lake last sprng and has been held n jal wthout bal snce repudated hs confesson last week and entered a plea of not gulty. He wll be tred at ths sesson of court. HUNTNG SEASON OPENS WELL The small game huntng season opened Tuesday and jftccordng to reports the pheasants, whch are the COR?regatwnal Church most sought after game are very plentful. Ora Hanes and son, Clfford, were only out two hours when aucton at the farm n Dexter townshp, located 5 mles south of P.nckney ad 5 mle* northwest of Dex Mr. Herman Vedder, S. S. Supt WEBSTER PEARCE they returned wth four brds. C. H. Rev. J. M. McLucaa, Mnster Kennedy and Stanley Dnkel also Wf hater H. Pearce, 64, presdent fame back wth three. These brds ter and one mle wat of Hudson of Northern State Teachers College, Mrs. Florence Baughn, Organst and were all shot wthn a few mles of Corners on Saturday, October 26. at Marquette, ded there Thursday. Chor Drector Pnckney. GEORGE.ROCHE, Prop., He was well known n Pnckney as Mornng worshp and sermon Percy BHa, Lynn Hedeo, hs father, Rev. Harvey Pearce was Auctoneer. Cletk Sunday*"school Z Z :80 a', m. \ LOCAL MAN PURCHASES one tme pastor of the Methodst Young People's Meetng.. 7:00 p./tf. church here and Webster and hs A N ARPLANE ADAtt.TQ TOUH Chor Rehearsal, Wednesday brother, Harvey, attended school r ' cor * e L * of Putnam townshp Charot. Adar of Flnt, Townetnd Evenng 7:30 p. mj hm has purchased a Taylor arplane hero. Tha* mother, was formerly These planes are made n Sagnaw Old Aft Penson Advocate, and the Mss Nelle Glenn of North Lake. A hearty welcome s extended to njmjw^.. ^*>. : :» - "*" «noww wenn 0 Nortn LAce He s recevng nstructon from a j all who worshp wth us. "Come wth Plymouth avaton teacher and so far th* tsth dwret wffl tear Urar eral colleges and was rapt of pub- UJ and we wll do thee good." has had ten hours n the ar. When TSL2L2S*" 9 **~\te *"* «on from Sur- he has had 60 hours aloft he can *! van. S H / Swn S f~-*~ ^ f ^ ~^."". «* ;v»ta».. **»» ht "» wfe 9 and» nq fve «cmoren chldren ; Mr. and Mrs Al Dewey and son ' make flghts alone and wth passenorcr h_ fnds atnanj?t-.?v*~' - ****** *» held Frday wth (left Sunday for Tuscon, Arxona, gers. Mr. Long expects to use the s wwfepax people eon-, barbl n Sprng-port whan has was j where Mr. Dewey wll endeavor to! plane for pleasure and also for bus- ****** supt of schools from 897 to 902. regan hs health. ' no». Mchgan Mrror No. 42 C OMMEN URRENT^ t*fe_ H %*- «.,. M an *» Ye UldlC ncffd General ronpants Johnson, former N. R. A. head who now wrtes p Tb* Artcle 'the 'Numerous a column for the Hearst papers dspute.- the accuracy of the Gallop Amendment* To Be Voted Up on at the November Electon ere poll for presdent whch gave Pres Explaned. cent Roosevelt 42 stof ana Wn. e but 6. Old ronpants bases hs What s the capacty of an electors-e to vote ntellgently on com argument on u poll taken by Rogers Dunn of New York for the Republcan Natonal commttee. Ths poll plex ssue at the polls? Ths queston s agan beng f.:ves WJlke 27 states and Roosevelt 2. Dunn s a lttle known poll weghed by poltcal ntervewers as.,., j.^ a nne Known nol the wth November a ballot of 5 electon statewde approach** proposals taker who seems to have started y3cs when he took a poll of the 'hat hts a new hgh n "bed&heet" Governorshp fght between T. Dewey and Gov. Lehman n New proportons. Captol authortes here York. 7 A * 'V h u-, ng! 8t b a l l V f.! A PP«*ntly h* Poll, are not synd Knd n Mchgan's hstory. Prevous cted us nowhere have we seen a ones have at tmes carred more ndvdual propostons but the four table of them or hs methods. Accordng to an artcle n the Detrot proposals on the current offerng Kee Press, the Gallup poll s wthout requre more space n prnt. prejudce as a poll of ts 200 employees shows a large majorty of Of course the sze of a ballot s not n tself the real pont. t s them are Wllke supporters. the mplcaton that the long votng ^^ heet wth ts confusng complext-! r\ nn ^.,,,, les P. wll overwhelm nvr.fc.m the»,. *~ voter.jul and ~J re Ono PWSOn wh * Wende - Wllke's sut n a small and perhaps unnformed aggregate vote, that nvtes a shown by an artcle by Drew and Lour of the factory dstrcts faled s scrutny, Pearson last week n the Detrot t s not l dened that the voter who '!"?* n"**'* T^ mana * em * nt <* the falj to famlarze hmself w>h w»h tha ' the, at ^ ^ W'Oached the ssue before enterng the polls s men as to an hours layoff n order ear o.t, so far as votng ntellgently on j),.* W,l^;Ulk. The shop cornthen, s concerned. He s left to the " nttce ****? ** vdn K the <"*- choce ether of votng by pure....! guess l,4 ": / ):ml them for ther tme. ThO work, of ballotng "no" on the general ' "n'psny refused and the proposed prncple that he s always safe '.lk was cancelled. h defendng the status quo, or of not votng at all. And t s open to Judge Phllp Kllott has won hs queston.whch s the least helpful. fghc n the state supreme county On the ground that t's a j,vod a to look over all the ssues befc'r electon day, here are the hghlghts of tho four state pr^p^als: Propotton No. Ths s proposed amendment to *he state consttuton. t s desgned to make t easer for school dstrcts to fnance the constructs or reparng of buldngs, by enablng th<m to spread ther taxes for bondn" purposes over a 5-year nstead s a H-vear perod. The proposal -;as t'>e support of the Mchgan Fdnat on Assocaton. ArVordrTg to many school authortes, t s practcally mpossble for j sunr dstrcts to enlarge ther school plants or even to make necessary repar,- because of the bondng restrttons of the 5-mll tax lmt n the consttuton. At present ths allow> a dstrct to bond tself and k\y taxes aggregatng not more ban.-)0 mlls (or 5 per cent of the assessed valuaton of ts property) n any one year. And ths ncrease s allowable for not more than fve H consecutve years. The result, arcordng to school men, - that some dstrcts smply canno afford to buld new schools or add extensvely to exstng buldngs. The tax load s too heavy durng the fve-year perod, and they cannot extend the tme. There are many dstrcts on the outskrts of, large H es where present buldngs pre so crowded that classes meet only for one-half or one-thrd of a day. Genesee county has clas'ses of 60 ' and 7n tdents to a teacher, whch consdered far too heavy a load. The gymnasum,pntform n one h ; gh school has been turned to a classrootu n the emergency. n Alpena the hgh school students are attendng classes n varous places because ther buldng burned down and the dstrct fnds tself unable t fnance a new structure under the present requrements. These are the arguments advanced n favor of the amendment that was proposed by acton of the 939 (Contnued on Last Page) HOWELL MAL CLERK MSSNG F. Perkns, clerk n the Howell postoffce for the past 2 years s sought by the sherff's force, a warrant chargng a statuary offense havng been ssued aganst hm. He has not been seen snce October 5 last at whch tme he drew all hs morey out of the bank, placed t n the seat of hs parked car together v.'th a note for hs wfe and htchhked to Lansng. He has a brother n the west and t s thought he may have gone there. Hs accounts at the J postoffce are all sad to be n good older. NOTCE The St. Joneph Parsh of Dexter nvtes you and your frends to attend a seres of Bngo partes whch are beng held n the parsh hall everv Frday evenng at 8:80. Specal worthwhle prses are selecteo each week. Admsson 25c. to make Secretary of Scale Harry Kelly rotate hs name wth that of Judge Moves for supreme court justce on the non-partsan ballot n the November electon. The secretary of sta'e announced that he vould prnt the names accordng to alphabetcal order. Ths would place hoyles name frst. Kllott protested the unfarness of the decson and the supreme court sustaned hm. Nether Republcan or Democrats nomnated a county surveyor n Jackson county, year. The reason ths offce? lttle sought»* that there s no salary connected wth. The offcal must depend for revenue on the desre^ of people to l;«\c ther work done by a county offcal. The asserton by Governor Dcknson that the teachng of communsm, by the school WSR to blame for the org throwng at Wendell Wllke durng hs recent tour of Mchgan s stll havng repercussons. The Sanlac County Teacher's Assocator was to ntroduce a resoluton at the teachers nsttute at Lansng on last Frday protestng aganst the asserton of the governor. Supt. of Publc nstructon Ellott attempted tr- pour ol on the troubled waters by assertng that the governor only referred to a few teachers not to the teachng professon as a whole Les. Merrtt n the Lvngston County Press takes a more sensble vev* of the dsturbances than any '.«e have read. He says that hgh school students at publc functons havj long been noted for unrulyness At Ann Arbor when Wllke spoke although they threw no eggs the school students ^present made SO much nose and cut up so many antc., that they spoled the occason for many. Also t must be remembered that even n ths vllage t hat been necessary at tmes to call n sherff's offcers to keep order at shews and other entertanment* here. These nstances could not by the wdest stretch of magnaton be lad to Communsm. The labor unons, the A. F. of L. and C.. O. have protested the draft board selecton of Governor Dcknson. They clam that he utterly gnored the labor unons n makng hs selectons. Ths they lay to WObur Brucker who s sad to have approved the lst. Brucker denes ths. At ths late hour t s doubtful f anythng can be done about t, The Washngton Merry-go-round states that at the tme General Hugh Johnson was blastng at Ellott Roosevelt for resgnng a $2000 a month job to accept a $800 a month job n the army n the purchasng department Gen. Johnson's ton got hmself assgned to a doth job te the selectve servce department. Edtor Hasen Smth and Mrs. Mable Smth of 8o«th called on frende here Ttoaday V? ^

2 The Pnckney Dspatch Crocheted Doles to Dress Up the Home AS EASY to crochet as t s love- ^* ly, ths set of doles n the favorte pneapple desgn wll be your favorte, too. You'll fnd them just the thng for luncheon or buffet set. Pattern 2608 contans drectons tor makng dotlles; llustratons of them and Send or sttches; materals requred. der to: Sewng Crcle 82 Eghth Ave. Enclose Address. 5 cents tn Needlecraft Dept. New Vork cons for Pat- ~ A Penny a Tablet Now buys famous BAYER ASPRN'S Fast relef from muscular pans Take 2 layer Asprn Tablet* wth a Blots of water The quck modern way to ease headache, and neurtc and rheumatc pan. We feature the fact that Bayer Asprn coats only tea tablet, to drve tome the pont that there's no reason even for the most budgetmnded person to accept anythng less than genune fast-nctng Baye Asnnn. r/or at the most, t costs but a few pennes to tfnt hours of relef from the puns of neurts, rheumatsm or headache... and get t wth the speedy acon for whch Bayer Asprn s world famous. Try ths way once and you know almost nstantlv why people everywhere prjse t. t has rapdly replaced expensve "pan remedes n thousands of cases. Ask for genune "Bayer Asprn" by ts full name when you buy... never ask for "asprn" alone.?/7? 4»V BAYER ASPRN Learn to Sloop Where you cannot clmb over you must creep under. MOTHERS... { or o»rr V> yrnry h..ve \ttcn u»nf tn* mld lt.uvr anrt carmnatve to releve Headache and Stom- ch Dncomfortt... to OCK-H the <latrlj* of hr.c. yrnv>ton>< ttlrn, they accompany a cold, hcually» "(Kd for a lulu. At all rtrugrt.. - «l-'or Krve Sample and Walkng [>oll MARK wrtemetherl>ayco.,l<-roy,n.y. MOTHER GRAY'S SWEET POWDERS Moderate Prase Always to nve prase moderately, s a strong proof of medocrty. 7om Had a Knotty Problem... he eouldnt afford etpenlve fat snd hated bulnq enesp ones. No* ha buys the Haband way by mall, and SAVES. 7 for 3.5. Ssrvd today for beautful rw. COLOt RCTUSES. HASAND CO. Dpt. «. Msrte*. N. J. Speech of Ejes The ey 3 have on3 language everywhere. ^Msferatle wth bacfathe? WHEN kdneys functon badly tnd you suffer a naggng beckaeht, wth dzzness, burnng, scanty or too frequent urnaton and gettng up at ftk}m; when you f*«l tred, nervous, ttupttt... use Doan's Plls. Dose's «m especally lor poorly workng kdney*. Mllon* of boxes ere used every year. They are recora* mended the country over. Ask your aesfnbor! "TC WHO'S NEWS THS WEEK By LEMUEL F. PARTON (Consoldated Feature* WNU Servce.* EW VUKA. - Vrgna - Gayaa, Washngton Dgest Government Armament Program Presages Huge Busness Boom Federal Spendng s on Scale Unprecedented n Hstory; Senator Johnson May Swng Calforna Vote taly's offcal wrtng wrst, facturers. One of the best statements of the stuaton as vewed by pens a solemn warnng to the U. S. A. n an edtoral n hs para * PJ'A P* some economsts, as a result of the ". Gornale tremendous government spendng taly', Edtoral Dtala> he only partally under way, s set forth Spokesman Suave, tells us not to n the followng letter Eugene F. Mc But Pen Omnous msunderstand the do corporaton, has sent to all hs Donald Jr., presdent of Zenth Ra Axs-Japan agreement and hnts dealers. that we're n for bad trouble f we make a msstep. "Never n hstory from Caesar to the present day has any naton prepared a program of armament and Why Gayda should have been chosen to do the tough talkng, or spendng equal to that whch exsts rather wrtng, for taly all these rght here n the Unted States today. years has been a puzzle to ths onlooker. Not that he doesn't do t "Every dollar goes to labor and well, but t s so unlke hm. met hm once at a tea party n Rome, n the studo of a Brtsh sculptor. One would have thought he wouldn't hurt a fly. That was soon after Mussoln took power. Tall, slender, far-hared, wth a small, slken mustache, mpeccably dressed, Gayda seemed dffdent and eager to please. He was then edtor of! Messaggero, whch had been a strongly lberal paper, and he had made hs poltcal start n the general doctrnal zone of Mussoln's Marxan teachngs. But wth the March on Rome he bad done an about-face wth Mussoln and was makng hs paper daly louder and fercer. There was consderable embarrassment and shyness among the guests, as t wasn't safe for foregners to menton Mussoln's name, and they engaged the suave Gayda n talk about art, Roman runs, the glores of the Ptt and Uffz, and the lke. Notng the sgnor's facle speech, remarked to an old Scottsh banker, standng by, that the edtor seemed lke a mghty smart chap. "Too smart for hs brtches," growled the old Scot. One never would have thought that some day he would be tellng the U. S. A. where t got off. A natve of Rome, he began hs newspaper career as central European correspondent (or the Stampa, of Turn. He was n Russa when the World war started, entered the dplomatc servce there and returned to newspaper work as edtor of Messaggero n 92. t was n 926 that Count Cano, Mussoln's son-n-law, dscovered hs penchant for omnous and threatenng prose and made hm the naton's edtoral spokesman, as edtor of Gornale D tala. \\7 HLE a talent for makeshft * * mght not rate hghly n a cvlzaton assaled by deadly precson, t has certan advantages n a democracy as aganst the all-or-nothng technques of absolutst government. The mechancs of the Col. Netherwood Good mprovser, Yet No Apologst latter are such that when t s wrecked, t s an nert, busted machne n a dtch, whle a democracy has an organc qualty whch makes t adaptve, allows mprovsaton, and perhaps enables t to grow new tssue and survve a deal of waste and muddlng. Col. Douglas L. Netherwood, commandng offcer of the northeast ant-arcraft defense at Mtchel feld, ndrectly touches off ths dea. Recruts for the ant-arcraft forces are wearng odd assortments of unforms, sleepng n garages because of the lack of tents, and drllng wthout suffcent rfles or other equpment. To the worrers, Colonel Netherwood says: "Shucks, we're dong all rght, and 'm sure that the quartermasters wll catch up on ther outfttng soon. drlled n my cvlan clothes when joned the army back n 908, as a prvate after graduated from college. 'm sure the young fellows we have out here at Mtchel feld don't mnd t any more than dd." Colonel Netherwood was born n Brmngham, England, and, ncdentally, the Englsh are good mprovse rs and nstnctve pregmatsts. Ther democracy came from adjustment and mprovsaton, rather than from the grand prncples of the encyclopedsts. However, Colonel Netherwood s no apologst *or ht-or-mss preparedness. n 908 he entered the army, after hs graduaton from Texas Agrcultural and Mechancal college. He has studed technques of precson at the Amy War eouege, the Army ndustral collet* &nd the Ar Corps Practcal school wth dplomas from all of them. Be entered the sgnal corps and got hs ratng as a mltary avator n 97. n 920 the avaton secton of the sgnal corps was desgnated as the army sr corps. Be became a leutenant colonel n 935. From Roosevelt to Wllke. By CARTER FELD Releaaed by Western Newspaper Unon.) WASHNGTON. - A tremendous boom n all lnes of busness s expected by many ar-sgnefl rtlftrlll- proft. Do not pass ths statement off lghtly. ron ore, lumber, cotton, etc., s nothng but labor wth a mnor part to proft. "Please keep ths fundamental n mnd: of our government armament spendng over 90 per cent wll go to labor and less than 0 per cent to proft. Half Bllon Dollars To Be Spent Monthly "From July, 940, to July, 94, the government wll spend 5,000,000,- 000 defense dollars n the Unted States. "n August the government spent only $80,000,000 on ths program, HRAM W. JOHNSON whch means the program must rse from now on to $500,000,000 per month to meet the year's total. "Fgure out what 500,000,000 AD DTONAL dollars each month means to busness. Busness spurted ahead and looked upon the spendng of the solders' bonus as a godsend at the tme. Yet, ths solders' bonus represented only two monthly nstallments of $500,000,000 each and from now on that amount wll be spent each month. "The WPA n ts heyday njected barely $40,000,000 a month nto busness. The AAA put n less than $75,000,000 a month on an average. "The farmers' ncome, ndependent of all the above ths year, wll be the second largest snce 930. Chan Stores Show ncreased Retal Sales "The present defense program antcpates over $36,000,000,000 expendture up to and ncludng 946, of whch the $5,000,000,000 to be spent ths year s only a small part. n August ths year, when only $80,- 000,000 of the $5,000,000,000 for ths year was spent, the 30 leadng store chans of the Unted States ncreased ther busness from 3. per cent to 33.3 per cent over August, 939. Not one of these store chans showed a decrease. Every one of these 30 leadng chans showed an ncrease n the eght months of 940 over 939 up to August, and mnd you, the spendng had hardly started then. "n other words, all these defense bllons that are to be spent ths year are plus expendtures whch come on top of the already splendd ncreasng busness. "The draft wll ncrease busness. The majorty of men drafted wll be sngle and certanly these men have not averaged $30 per month, net, to spend n cvlan lfe after they have pad for lodgng, board, and clothng. The solders and the salors spend ther money." Johnson May Calforna to Swng Wllhe One of the most mportant personaltes n ths presdental campagn may turn out to be Hram W. BUSNESS BOOM Huge government contracts for war materals wll cause a tremendous boom throughout the Unted States, accordng to Carter Feld, Washngton correspondent. Although Calforna seems to be safely Democratc, Feld bell tves that actve campagnng by Sen. Hram Johnson could swng the state to support Wllke n the electon next month. Johnson, U. S. senator from Calforna for these many years. Calforna has 22 electoral votes. When she had only 3, she decded Most of the fgurng on electoral votes ths campagn on the assumpton that the electon may be farly close has gven Calforna unquea tonably to Roosevelt. Folks began wonderng about Cal forna when Presdent Roosevelt went out of hs way to slap Hram Johnson, just on the eve of the Calforna prmares. Everybody who knew anythng about poltcs n the state was wrtng to frends n Washngton that Johnson was almost certan to capture both the Republcan and the Democratc nomnatons for re-electon as senator. Yet the Presdent was so annoyed wth Johnson for varous reasons that he permtted hmself to be quoted by the newspaper correspondents to the broad general effect that Johnson could no longer be consdered a "lberal." Johnson ddn't lke that a bt. He regards hmself as havng been an outstandng lberal snce long before Roosevelt knew hs way around n poltcs. Most commentors on ths slap of Roosevelt at Johnson have based t on Johnson's opposton to helpng Brtan. Ths s NOT the real reason. Roosevelt's dslke of Johnson goes back to the tme Roosevelt tred to pack the Supreme court. Johnson was one of the lttle group that fought ths so btterly that t was eventually defeated. Just as he was one of the group that fought Presdent Wlson on the League of Natons and other features of the Versalles treaty. t was not the falure of Johnson to change hs polcy on nternatonal questons that brought forth Roosevelt's re. t was hs battle aganst enlargng the Supreme court. boy frend's. The skrt of desgn No s smartly flarng and talored, and you should wear a Defeat of Johnson narrow leather belt wth t. la Now mpossble For the blouse, flat crepe, washable flannel, spun rayon and lnen Every man who fought the Presdent on that ssue has been marked are smart; for the "skrt, tweed, n the Whte House black book ever flannel, serge or corduroy. You'll snce. That of course was admttedly the chef motve n the unsuc halves of ths two-pecer talor. be amazed to see how easly both cessful attempt to "purge" Democratc senators n 938. Ths year the attempt to purge was renewed, and wth more success. As a part of t, Sen. Edward R. Burke was defeated for renomnaton n Nebraska. Sen. Wllam H. Kng of Utah was also defeated for renomnaton as a part of t. Defeat of Johnson s now mpossble. t was mpossble when the Presdent slapped hm, but the feelng was so strong that the Presdent would not be poltc. Several observers beleve that f Johnson s mad enough to denounce F. D. R. and support Wllke n a few speeches before electon, Wllke wll carry the state. But that does not mean that Johnson, though a Republcan, s gong to support Wendell Wllke. Nobody knows what he s gong to do. All we know s that he s very btter aganst Roosevelt. Senator Johnson has been one of the outstandng solatonsts n the senate. t s the act whch bears hs name that forbds any country n default to the Unted States on prevous debts to borrow any more money n ths country. * An nterestng sdelght on the demoralzng bombardment of London has developed n Washngton. Reports from Brtan ndcate that ths constant bombng has tended to stffen the resstance of the Englsh people. Brtsh sympathzers here are presentng another plan by whch materal ad can be extended to the defenders. Ths group has organzed tself nto the Amercan Commttee for Defense of Brtsh Homes. Ths commttee was formed by a group of well-known sportsmen and explorers who, hearng of the Brtsh people's need for small arms, ammunton and bnoculars, decded to do somethng about t. The decson has resulted n a natonwde drve for sportng rfles, shotguns, and pstols, ammunton and bnoculars. New York headquarters of the group report that the publc has responded to ther plea by sendng n a consderable selecton of ther favorte guns. Although shotguns predomnate, old Sprngfeld rfles used by the U. S. army a decade before the war, 97 Sprngfelds, and many pstols of vared calbers have been receved. a Frms known to operate n volaton of federal labor laws are gong to be out of luck as far as U. S. defense orders from the army and navy are concerned. That word was forthcomng from the Washngton offce of Sdney Hlman, the defense commsson's labor member. Hllman's announcement regardng the award of defense contracts was based on a statement of prncples outlned by the defense commsson and approved by the Presdent. He beleves labor should not suffer because of the present emergency. >** c/ *>. "phs type of two-pecer wll be "* much n evdence on every campus ths comng semester. The talored blouse has the new, larger collar wth long ponts that fts correctly over your sut revers. t's made wth acton back, and has lnk cuffs lke the Pattern No. S7S8 la desgned (or sze* 3. 4, 8. S and SO. Sze 4 requres yards of 39-lnch materal wthout nap tor short-sleeved blouse; l\k yards tor km*-. sleeved; Ta yards at 84-nch materal wthout nap tor straght skrt; 2 yards tor bas. Send order to: SEWNG CRCLE PATTERN DEPT. Room X24 2 W. Wacker Dr. Chcago Enclose S cents tn cons tor Pattern No Sze Name Address Delcous energy bulders-m heat and eat '.or serve cojd...$ovet none/, order, today, from your grocer. V(.rr..- pott* r«w Van (amps Pork ndbeans Feast-for-the - Least General's Glory The blood of the solder makes the glory of the general. 'FLORDA -xsja Wnter nexpensvely la a re- ^ n^* fned and congenal atmosphere. SO COTTAGES, housekeepng or noa-housekeepng. Free danelng, swmmng pool, horse shoe and shuffle board courts, png pong. Solarum. Excellent Huntng. Fshng. Bathng, Golf, Tenns and Rdng. Aetat by tke W k, Monk or Saaaeav Wrte for llustrated folder, Bos 005. MDWAY MELBOURNE, COLONY FLORDA Justce Arrves Justce, even f slow, s sure. Solon. GET VTAMNS YOU NEED SSS AS YOU REFRESH.*J YOURSELF! VrS ^-HF*. * M Oranges can help youtofeel your best When you want refreshment, eat an orange! Or help yourself from the bg famly ptcher offreshotangeadel "Hts the spot"! you'll say. But that's not all Oranges sdd needed vtamns and mnerals to your det. And fully half of our famles, says the Department of Agrculture, do net gt enough of tha health essentals tofdwm best/ The best way to be sure of gettng al the vtamn C you normally need s to drnk an 8-ounce glass of fresh orange juce wth breakfast every mornng. You also receve vtamns A, B, and G and the mnerals calcum, phosphorus and ron. There's nothng else so delcous that's so good for you. So order a supplyof Sunkst Oranges next tme you buy groceres. They're the pck of Calforna's fnest oranges. CefcMa, CaUssnda ha* Geeee CALFORNA ORANGES l><^ {or nce ////</ r f< 7tf ttsr / f..«.«t

3 T RE-ELECT a RVN J. KENNEDY LVNGSTON COUNTY SHERFF Democrat Tcket PflOPtSSONAL CORNER The Pttcbey Santarum AY M. DUFFY, M. D. P&cfcaejr, Mchgan. Offce Houk *tt to 4t00 P. M. m to t#0 P. M. %'S r r - DUGR. McGLUSKEY BKHTWt UH H. KkUffM Pho&M _ # Re*. 28J EVaftaft by appontment HOWtfau MCHGAN CLAUDE SHELDON «L CTRCAL tfll CONTRACTOR Pl»ck»«y, Mck. PERCY ELLS AUCTON*!* Para S«lw a Spoeajts Ft*** Ptetka^ l»fm LEE LAVEY GENERAL Pkm Pl»cks»y, NSURANCE M-F MlcUgM R«9 H. BwecU P*«l M. BurwU A. BURRELL & SONS ARTSTC MEMORALS R M. GbarlM worth, Mgr. S Brghten Mck P. H. Swarthout & Son PUNEftAL HOME Te AmfcUMt ff Servce PlckMf, Mch. BON W. VANWNKLE Afcareey at Law flret St»A Sftvtf Baa* T HGWEJLL, MCHGAN Dr. Gerald W. McCollodh Osteopath - Physcan and Surgeon FRST NATONAL BANK BLDG. Phone Howell 57. (Howell, Mchgan Hours* 9 to 2 - to 5 Evenngs by Appontment n Pnckney Every Thursday Afternoon at 20 Lvngston Phone 87 For Advance Appontment Offce Phone 6368 Resdence Phone CHROPRACTOR DR. V. W. PETERSON A» n Arbor, Mchgan 502 Frst Natonal Bank Panless Chropractc Techne C M. GBSON, D. C. 307½ S. MAN ST. ANN ARBOR, MCH. DR MARY MNNSS CHROPODST All Foot Troubles Quckly Releved PHONE Man St Ann Arbor, Mch "The Sws* Watchmaker" H. RUST, JEWELER Sklled Watch and Clock Reparng Across from Allenel Hotel 07 S.Fourtk Ave. Ann Arbor, Mch. Cemetery Memorals A R N E T' S»24 N. Man Ann Arbor Mch Represented by JOHN W. RANE Whtmore Lake Phone 68 JAY P. SWEENLY Attorney at Law HOWELL, MCHGAN MARTN J LAV AN Attorney at Law Phone 3 Brghton, Mck. Electrcal Contractng SUPPLES JCAL WRNG AND REPARNG REASONABLE PRCES ESTMATES CHEERFULLY GVEN ALL WORK GUARANTEED C. Jack Sheldon 8F2 Electrcal Contractor P STOCK POOD 6+tft Chop aed Ground Feed for Sale aulng Truckng LOCAL LONG DS rancf WEEKLY TRPS MADE TO DETROP STOCK-GRAN-Cftl '* Produce of All Kndt ^rt# H* ME jtet ^ gkkapeyt»>ratcb Wednesday, Oct NOTES of 50 YEAR5 DUpatch of October 6, 890 Thomas Turner has been granted an ncrease of solder's penson. Martn Melvn s buldng a new house on hs farm. Dck Baker s the contractor. D. G. Coste shpped hs household goods and lve stock by ralroad to Dakota Thursday. Trenan's orchestra wll play for the K. 0. T. M. Ball at Hamburg on \ day nght. On account of an extensve practce Dr. H. F. Sgler has assocated Dr. J. W. Decker of Lake Cty wth hm. John Kearney has returned home from an extensve vst wth relatves n Nebraska and Dakota. Rev. Hopkns, the new M. E. mnster and hs famly have arrved n Pnckney. Bert Green has gone to Stockbrdge to assst Wm. Moran n buldng the new hotel. C. P. Sykes, New York Lfe nsurance agent, has wrtten 75 polces n Putnam townshp alone. James Allen wrtes us he s now j located n New York Cty. Wll Black has retruned from a vst to Petoskey and s now Grand Trunk agent at Gregory. Charles Love whle workng on hs barn, west of town Monday fell off a scaffold and broke hs collar bone. Mr. Jones of Dakota who owms the Coste farm has moved onto t. Henry Hoagland of owa s vst- NOTES of 25 YEARS AGO Dupatch of October 20, 95 Henry Cobb, an old resdent of ths, county ded at the Pontac state hosptal, October 0. He \va; a member of the Pnckney O. E. S. chapter and also of the Masonc order for the past 52 years. The funeral was hela from the Cong'l church Sunday, Rev. Jones offcatng. Lvngston Lodge No. 7(5 F. & A. M. had charge of he servces at the ^rave. Wllam Cooper and Xehemah lacey have been drawn to serve u.> crcut court jurymen. Lews Love of near Anderson ded n Detrot Wednesday. The funera!.\ervces were held at the home of hs daughter, Mrs. George Sargson n M swell. The junors of the Pnckney hgh have elected the followng offcers: Prts., Curts Brown; V. Pres., Hlda Hudson; Sec, Lous Stackable; and Treasurer, Pearl Hanes. An acre of ground has been purchased and the Howell Electrc Motors Co. has been organzed at Howell. The offcers are Pres., Henry Spencer; V. Pres., and Gen. Mgr., Carl Dann; Sales Mgr., Charles Norton; Sec. Treasurer., Wm. Spencer. "Rev. FT. Hannas of Orchard Lake preached at St. Mary's church Sunday A socal wll be held at the George Hockey home Frday for the beneft of the Sprout school. ns* at the Jacob Teeple home. He S GVEN HONORABLE moved from here to owa, 20 years MENTON ago. 2 of Mchgan's 83 county road Thomas Dolan and Floyd Jackson commssons garnered one-thrd of have fnshed ther courses at Cleary the SG natonal awards for excellcollege, Ypslant. Dolan_ wll work j ence of 0ff j c e management practces for George Sykes and Jackson for Barnard and Campbell. James McCluskey wll sell hs farm stock, tools, etc. at publc aucton on the Burgess farm, 4 mles east of Pnckney on October 23. L. N. Fshbeck, auctoneer. n a contest sponsored by the Better Roads magazne to encourage better standards among the 3000 odd county road commssons n the naton. n Class of coountes under 20, (l)o populaton Emmett county won The Frank Wrght clothng store f: rst( T OSC0 CO unty thrd and Lvngwas entered Wednesday nght and j f lon C0Unty was gven honorable pbout S00 worth of goods taken. Justus Swarthout found some of the clothes hd under a brdge near hs home next mornng. Rom to Davd Walters and wfe of Anderson one day last week a daughter. Mr. Lews, who has been lvng on the C. B. Eamen farm has move<' to Mason. The Stockbrdge Far Assocaton cleared $340 ths year. Whle huntng n the Garry Brggs v>-oods the other day near Dexter, J. Uostrck of that place fell over a fence n such a way as to break 2 bones n hs rght arm. Dr. Lee rec.uced the fracture, Mrs. Kezah Love, 68, ded at the heme of her son, Frank, n Maron Frday. The ndustral and Prohbton partes both have county tckets n the feld ths year. The ndustral tcket s Rep. Andrew Wckman; Sherff, Frank Backus; Clerk, Charles Johnson; Treas., Jay Redfeld; Regster, Albert Holmes; Prosecutor, James Pettbone; Coroners, Joe Flaceway, Henry Warner. The Prohbton tcket s: Rep., Frank Hoden; Sherff, Arthur Wmbles; Clerk, A. M. Wells; Treas., Calvn Colburn; Regster, George Hotellng; Prosecutor, Albert Dodge; Coroners, Henry Bucknell, Alva Gage. Ths successful young Mchgan farme s preparng to harvest hs crop of sugar beets, and s nspectng one of hs beets whch appears to be of unusual sze and good qualty. Most sugar plants n the state runnng by October 2 and the sugar wll last from 70 to 00 days. menton. n Class, 20,000 to 50,000 populaton ona county won frst, Franch, second, Geogbc thrd and Chppewa honorable menton. n Class Washtenaw county won frst and Ottawa county honorable menton. n Class V Kent county was a- warded frst and ngham got honorable menton. n Class V Wayne county won frst, wth Cook county, llnos, second RED CROSS RENEWS ACTVTES On account of the draft and the preparedness prgroam the Red Cr<>-> s ncreasng ts actvtes. Army hosptals have already called for 4,)()0 Red Cross nurses. The frst group reported September 5 and a second group on October 5. For convalescents the Red Cross Gnu- Lades wll wrte letters, read booketc. There wll be an ncreased enrollment n the Red Cross Reserve Nurses Corps. n addton the assocaton must contnue to produce surgcal dressngs and garments for men n army camps. Wendell Wllke's foregn polc;..-terns to amount to the followng. He would gve Brtan all possble ad short of enterng the war on ther sde but would do t n such a manner that Germany and taly would not become angry about t. We wonder. STATE OF MCHGAN The Probate Cout for he County of Lvngston Ata sesson of sad Court, held STATE OF MCHGAN at the Probate Offce n the Cty of The Probate Court for the County Howell n the sad County, on the of Lvngton, 4th day of October, A. D At a sesson of sad court, held Present, Hon. Wlls L. Lyon>, at the Probate Offce n the Cty of Judge of Probate. Howell n sad County, on the 8th n the matter of the estate of day of October, A. D C ude W. Reason, deceased. Present, Hon. Wlls L. Lyons, t appearng to th e court that the Judge of Probate. tmt for presentaton of clams aganst sad estate should be lmted, N THE MATTER OF THE CHANGE OF NAME OF and that a tme and place be apponted to receve, examne and adjust Stanley Anthony Kosakowsk, Adult. Stanley Anthony Kosakowsk havng fled n sad court hs petton deceased by and before sad court all clams and demands aganst sad prayng that the Court enter an order, changng hs name from Stanley Anthony Kosakowsk to Stanley Anthony Jamros, t s ordered, That the 4th day of November, A. D. 940, at ten o' clock n the forenoon, at sad probate offce, be and s hereby app» nted for hearng sad petton; t s further ordered, That publc notce thereof be gven by publca t U Ordered, That credtor* of sad deceased are requred to present ther clams to sad court at f fa d Probate Offce on or before the 23n! day of December, A. D at ten o'clock n the forenoon, sad lmp and place beng hereby apponted for the examnaton and adjustment of all clams and demands aganst sad deceased. t s further ordered, That publc notce thereof be gven by publca- ton of a copy of ths order, once each week for three successve ton of a copy of ths order for three weeks prevous to sad day of hear- successve weeks prevous to sad ng n the Pnckney Dspatch, a day of hearng, n the Pnckney Dsnewrpaper prnted and crculated n p*uch, a newspaper prnted and crpad county. ; culated n sad county. A true copy. A true copy: Wlls L. Lyons, Judge of Probate Wlls L. Lyons, Judge of Probate Celetta Parthall, Celesta Parshall, Regster of Probate. Regrter of Probate S Whte Magc" for HOW TO MAKE DOLLARS WTH LGHT! N YOUR STORE: Sellng merchandse wth LGHT f* lke pullng dollars out of a hat... t doesn't seem possble. But many alert, progressve busness men are usng ths powerful sellng tool every day to rng up extra cash sales and boost profts. These two facts have been defntely proved: () Good lghtng n show wndows wll often DOUBLE ther stoppng power and attract more customers. (2) Clever "spot lghtng" and featured dsplays nsde the store wll frequently TRPLE sales on specfc tems. N YOUR FACTORY: ncreases n producton of 0% to 35% have been acheved through mproved lghtng n ndustral plants. Good lghtng cuts down spolage, makes accurate nspecton possble, and s un mportant factor n promotng»;tfety. Fgure ts rout approxmately three-tenths <>f one fx'r cent of produeton cost aganst a pos- >.hle 0% or more NCH EASE n producton, plus 5% or more savngs from fewer accdents am fewer errors and rejects.,, and there s only one concluson: Good lghtng pay* dvdends. We wll be glad to send one of our Lghtng Staff to study your lghtng problems and offer recommendatons wthout charge. Phone your Detrot!\d-on offce. The Detrot Edson Company. NOTCE OF MORTGAGE SALE WHEREAS, by the terms of sad mortgage, t s provded that n cas* default be made n the payment o* any nstallment of prncpal or of the nterest, taxes, assessments or nsurance or any part thereof en any day whereon the same s made pay-j able, and should the same reman due and unpad for the space of thrty days thenceforth, the prncpal sum of sad mortgafft, together wth nuerest, taxes, assessments and nsurance pad, shall at the opton of mortgagee, become and be due and 'd'ault havng been made n the condtons of that certan mortgage payable forthwth, and default havr" been made n payment of the n- dattu the frst day of October, 934 executed by Frank Salatowsk and a < >t and taxes provded n sad Frances Salatowsk, hs wfe, as the mortgage, whch defauk has eonlt'.- mortgagors, to the Land Bank Com- ur.d for more than thrty days, the. '., nv, armng pursuant to the pro- sad mortgagee doth here l >y er.erc^e «- ; - m- of 'art 3 of the Act of Con.,:nv>.^ the Emergency Farm :;\m of sad mortgage and all arrear ts opton to declare the prncpal ''..; Ac: of 033, as amended age of nterest and taxes due and ( L'. S. C. Ttle 2, Sectons 06- p- yable. 0.!)), as mortgagee, fled for record NOTCE S HEREBY GVEN n the offce of the Regster of Deeds That sad mortgage wll be foreclosed, pursuant to power of sale, and of Lvngston County, Mchgan, on the 2th day of October, 934, recodcd n Lher 44 of Mortgages, on the premses theren descrbed as: West Half of the Southeast pa.l'.e 73 thereof, and whch mortgage Quarter of Secton Twenty-two, va-; thereafter and on the 3th day Townshp Four North of Range of.july, 940, by an nstrument n Three East: v. /tng, duly assgned to the Federal ly;r:g wthn sad county and state wl Farm Mortgage Corporaton, a corpo at on, of Washnton, D. C, and bo sold at publc aucton to the hghest bdder for cash by the sherff of whch assgnment of mortgage was Lvngston County, at the front door fle*, for re< od n sad offce of the of the Court House n the Cty of Regster of Deeds of the County of Howell, n sad County and State, on Lvngston, Mchgan, on the 7th Tuesday, November 9, 940, at two Hay of July, 940, recorded n Lber o'clock P. M. There s due and payable at the date of ths notce upon ]4\) of Mortgages, on Page 259, and the debt secured by sad mortgage, the sum of $ Dated August 7, 940 FEDERAL FARM MORT GAGE CORPORATON a corporaton, of Washng, ton, D. C. Assgnee of Mortgagee BUBKE AND BURKE Attorneys- for Assgnee of M ortgaget z Ann Arbor, Mchgan. \ r '»-.' M?*

4 Dspatch r * 'A Sherff LVNGSTON COUN fy Wllam REPUBLCAN TCKET HllllllllllllllllHllllUllllllllllllnlllNlllllllllllllllllllllg 5 3 Announcement Dr Gerald W McColloch J 3 Osteopath Physcan and Surgeon = Frst Natonal Bank Buldng, Howell. Mch. = Now n Pnckney Each Thursday afternoon from s = to 5:30 P. n. at the home of s S r Mrs. Charles Chamberlan 20 Lvngston St g S For Your Appontment Phone n Howell Telephone 57 S n Pnckney Telephone 87 = :nnnmhunnnmutunnn>uu»mmmh>uthmuum= Why nterest s Not Pad on Savngs Accounts Payment of nterest on demand deposts by any nsured bank s prohbted by law or rej?ulaton.the reason underlyng ths prohbton s that the bank can pay nterest on deposts onry out of earnngs from nvestment of those deposts n loans or securtes. The money n a checkng account may be wthdrawn at any tme on demand. Consequently the bank must carry larger cash reserves to provde for possble wthdrawals, leavng a smaller amount avalable for nvestment. Also, f money nvested s to earn a far return the loan or nvestment must run for a reasonable length of tme. Ths n turn means that deposts must be left wth the bank a reasonable length of tme. AUTO LOANS nuance your new er late model used car through ths bank. Frst Natonal Bank N HOWELL Member Federal Depost» jurmnc* Corporaton. All De» ooets cmred «p> t* 5.00* Sal aaeb Depostor. Hamburg Wllam Blades dropped dead as he was enter...? bl3 home 'n Hamburg vllage lace Thursday art-*- r ( n. l SYLVAN THEATRE CHELSEA, MCa Mchgan's Fnast Small Town Theatre Ar Coadt<t*ed Fr., and Sat., Oct 8-9 FOUR SONS A Drama (wth DON AMECHE, EUGENE LEONTOVCH, MARY BETH HUGHES and ALAN CUR TS. NEWS CARTOON Sun., Mon., Tues., Oct 20*2-22 THE HOWARDS OF VRGNA A Drama wth CARY GRANT and MARTHA SCOTT. Bated on t*a Great Novel "The Tree of Lberty" by Elsabeth P»K«. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Wed., and Thwrt., Oct. ^3-24 DOUBLE FEATURE SALOR'S LADY and Mss Jul* A. Ball, frst prxe beng won by Mrs. Harry A. Lee on a te wth Mrs. Glenn Borton, consolaton by Mrs. Mary Downng. The next meetng wll be entertaned by Mrs. Mary Downng at her home at Strawberry lake Tuesday afternoon, November 2. A potluck dnner at one o'clock wth Mrs. Barbara Tessmer apponted to act a c chaplan and Mesdames Bert Hooker and Ben Tomln as entertanment commttee The meetng opened wth sngng "Count Tour Blessngs" and Mss Jul* A. Ball actng as chaplan. Offcal reports were gven by Mrs. Glen Borton, Mrs. Edward Houghton and Mrs. Ben Tomln; Mrs. Tomln jer's Junor crcle, statng that the Lakeland Senor crcle would be expected to entertan the annual junor county conventon n September, 94. Hamburg hve, No. 892, Lady Maccabees met n regular secton at 0OF Hall Frday afternoon. t was announced that the October party wll be a Hallowe'en party! place to be announced later, wth Mrs. Mnne Buckaleu and Mrs. May. Stephanon as commttee. Plans for the junors attendng the state meetng at Lansng, Saturday October 9 were dscussed; those from Hamburg Sunbeam Court wvo wll take part n the patrotc pageant are: Alce Ruth Moore, Barbaradell Way, Hazel Lear, Shrley Gray, Mary Stranborg and Dana Gray who wll be gowned n yellow crepe paper dresses. Plans were made for attendng tho Washtenaw county conventon to b e held at Ann Arbor Tuesday. The meetng was n charge of Mrs. Los Borton, t. commander n the absence of Mrs. May E. Stephanon, the commander. Offcal reports were gven by Mrs. Emly Kuchar. S j Followng the meetng a play was practced to be gven at the counsel ty conventon at Fowlervlle, Tues- 5 j cay, October 22nd. S Wllam H. Keedle observed hs eghty-frst brthday annversary on Sunday, October 6. Hs son and daughter-n-law, Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Keedle and three chldren, Msses Annette and Marjory and Blly of Mutkegeon Heghts spent 4¼ week wth hm. Among the many callers Sunday were: Mrs. Catherne Cebulsk, Mr. and Mrs. George Chesbrough and Arlan Taylor of Detrot Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. DeWolf and three chldren, George, Dorothy, and Barbara of Ann Arbor, Wallace F. Watt of Monroe and many others from Brghton, Green Oak and Hamburg. He receved many gfts, letters and cards. Mrs. Jesse Wheeler entertaned at a brthday party at her home Oct. 8 ftf RtafO Sugar 0 u.mustard ARMOUR'S 2 PKG QT. sptvfou ARE MS CkM ML7 'Corn a Spced Ham 2 Oz. Can 23c ; 4 TALL \ RCHWHP Mlk Spry MONARCH 8 0z. CAN laek Pepper xxxx 2 Sugar : MONARCH odzed salt2 CANS Measurng OLB* Plcb.r Fra* O CAN PKG. LB. PKG5 2 Lb Pkg MONARCH Marshmallows 2 HERSHEY Chococolat. Syrup < }* Bsquck Rng Bolonga Lard 2 Slcng Bolonga ROUND 5 ^ BONE Mr OaTJfc 2 LB. LB. n Webster townshp 2 lady employees Sstes Mary Veronca up the tme * j of the Hamburg t o h JMfg. J SCo. T honorng Z S ' r f ^r death, she had spent 32 years ' Mr? Florence Navarre of Brghton n relgous lfe. May her soul rest Other guests were: Mrs. Harold Rogers, Mrs. Roland Hackbarth, Mrs. marter. n eternal peace wth her devoted George Kenney, Mrs. Jack Brogan, Mrs. Arthur C. Smth, Mss Freda Schreer, Mrs. Louse Jones, Mrs. Dorothy Gray, Mrs. Tesse Lee and Mrs. Ruby Smms. Coote was play JS LB. Steak" the Reverend Pastor, late and devot- * ed Sster Teresa Beatrce, who was a Relgous of the Order of our Lady of Mercy. Her relgous name was Among those who vsted n Pnckney Sunday wer e Mr. and Mrs. Wn. Bennan of Detrot, Dorothy Gertrude McCleer and mother, Mrs.Rosella Dolan McCleer of Detrot, Mrs. A Comedy Drama nrth NANCY KELLY, JON HALL tend JOAN Basydlo weer n Lansng Thursday DAVS. forenoon where they attended the Teacher's nsttute, returnng to Howell n the afternoon to attend : npr conducted by the Masonc lodge, the... funeral of _. Mss E. «. Alma -«. Sharpe. VM_y«of Pnckney of whch Mr. Blades They attended the nsttute at Lan was a member. {sng agan Frday. Others attendng Pall bearers were: Donald Brooks wert Mn. Roland Shehan and Mrs. Wlfred Brooks and Thomas Brooks Dorothy Campbell, of Ypslant, Loran Jedele, Calvn' Mr. and Mrs. Carl Allen and three Hooker and Charles Root of Ann ' chldren were guests of Mrs. Allen's Arbor. J parents, Mr. and Mn. Edward G. Mrs. Henry M. Queal entertaned {Houghton Saturday. the Lakeland crcle of Kng's Daugh- ed, prze wnners beng Mrs. Rog- Rose Ann Jeffreys Dvne of Jackson ers, Mrs. Jones and Mrs. Hackbarth. A danty luncheon was serv Amanda Martn), formerly of Pnck- Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Jacox, (nee ed, the table beng centered wth a ;ey, now resdents of Wayne, Mch., brthday cake, Mrs. Navarre was Mr. Francs Fnch of Detrot, Mr. presented wth personal gfts, and Mrs. J. Hughes of Flnt, Mch., THE QUARTER BACK Mr. and Mrs. Eml J. Kuchar at- and grandson of Lansng and a son Paramour'. 940 football Clas- tended the annual state conventon the Rev. Father Hermes of Howell, ec wth WAYNE MORRS/VRGN of the Order of the Eastern Star at Mchgan and the very Rev. Father A DALE, LLLAN CORNELL and Grand Rapds last week as delegates Fedewa of St. Joseph's Parsh, How- WLLAM FRAWLEY. from Brghton chapter. They were ell, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. DeWtt and ALSO accompaned by Mn. Harry Young t famly and mother, Mrs. Ann Dvne o/ Brghton. Mss Eva and Helen Wenderlen, Mn. Donald Swarthout and Joe 35* Coffee /r c LUX 7' Tolet Soap U C GRQSSE PONTE 2c 474 GROSSE LB. PONT 3 CANS FANCY Red Salmon JACKSON Tomato Juce g* n J F,oar UMRCHFOOD a TQT2 GOLD m LB MEDAL 22c utter S - cjpearut JAR LB. SEEDLESS Rasns 4 BAG 5 Sweet Pckles %23 c 25'JewellShortenlng3cAN 4 n jroman Cleanser 2 QTS LB. jg c 5* UM PLLSBURY 29 c lpancake Fleur S0Z. PKG Fresh Eatmor* Cranberres ^ 8 C Rutabaga 3 LB 0 Golden Rpe 5 Bananas 4 LB 25 l9^tokaygrapes u Qc REASON & SONS of Detrot, Mrs. Josephne La Jesse of Hartford, formerly of Ware, \^^mmmm^mmm ~ m^e w ~*T~ E ± Ma&., s vstng and assstng Aunt' a ]tar vessels, chalce, ostensorum Mayme M'Owen at the church rec- C'borum wll be returned from Phltory ths week n prepatory work a?elpha where they are undergong Guy E\ Hosley Canddate for State Representatve Democrat Tcket Yocr Vote Wll Be Apprecated as communcants at mass and recev np holy communon. for the openng of the Msson whch ^^ replatng the ostensorum and WLLAM BLADES opens Sunday at St. Mary's. j chalce are studded wth amethyst We wsh to thank the lades, and' ard a cross of b^a Wllam Blades, 77, ded suddenly "ts. These ves men as well as the chldren of the} sels have been n the servce of ths ' zl V* 0 m HamJ > ur «* ^"V 8 last parah who asssted n the church! church for over 40 years and when lh^s<lay from a heart attack, cleanng and decoratng the sane- { He ^plated wll be worth twce ther. bom on February 8, 863 value Some of tuary for mass Sunday. The autumn - th * s e vessels could m p»" ck ney, beng the son of Mr. colored branches, flowere were an n-t be replaced today for les* than ard Mrs * C*"!** Blades. On November added attracton to enchance the $ «888 he was unted n marrage to Emly Welled *f Hamburg beauty of the altars. The Blessed Vrrns anh ^^«^ u ^ ~J»~Z~~ * A" 0 * the new famles regster- townshp. Two yean ago they cele ter? at her home at "Bob Whte St Mary's Church.* -».. Bench" Tuesday afternoon wth 20 sed Vrgn's statue s decorated n j Wa, Fman Road> John. Vertn of sary. Wllam Blades, sou of Mr. and, n attendance; guests "were*: Mn., Vrgn Blue color and the Sacred Survvng are the wdow, two sons Sw*rthout Road. Mrs. Charles Blades was bom n j Harry Drake of Detrot, Mn. Wllam Wlson of Webster and Mn. A.^J-.7^7^ k-wm., * the The 'Hearf n cardnal red. The celng Stephen and Wllam, two daughters, Putnam townshp, February 8, church s panelled n soft followng were awarded fav- Mrs. H. L. Shankland of Ann Arbor "863. He was un ted n marrage wth Anna Dcknson of Lakeland. * T^SL ^ 2*2? wtlalt * *»" *>M ^lon, and the' o» at the Wednesday nght socal and Mn. Donald Brooks of Ypslant, two great grandchldren and a Mrs. Emly Weller of Hamburg on A pot -,,.- luck dnner was served at n jsfft ^ 7. at ZZL «*s Yearns are refnshed n the l«t week. n brdge, frst prze, Mrs October 6 at 8:00 p. m.. All gamef J November 29, 888. He s survved one clock co]org Q{ wheftt> ^ ^ U(j o Jw Vl- ola Read second prz6 Mr8> Clare ster, Mn. Mary Benbos of Ann "lowed by the busness wll start sharply at 8:00 o'clock. b: the wdow, four chfldren, Mn., meetng wth Mn. Harry A. Lee, green. Palmer, low, Paul Young- Arbor. The followng commttee wll act, T n euchre arrv L. Shankland, Stephen BUdes P««t, presdng. Bed jackets to... Mr. and Mn. Lous Coyle, Mr. and The funeral servces ware held and Blle Blades of Ann Arbor and! J e made f w wl4jo ^,.., w. aunt The statons of the cross are done ' fw * P rze. C. E. Bucher f,^fll ^ Mr S C * v W W _«? P*tents at the State Mn. John L. Donohue, Mr. and Mn.» ^vory. The gallery s dove "fawn" 8econd P^e, E. J. Berry, low, Lous * - n ~f.^^l^*? ^"JL ** Mrs. -Danel - - Brooks - of _ Ypslant;.. «San'tarum n Howell were dstrbuted among the member. t was vo les Clark, Mn. Don Swarthout, Mrs. * * *» The transcept, whch dvdes P n <>cwe» frst prze, Mrs. Jos- w.v*!! n offcat,n «- ^"^ «*. lb TM* Andrew Snger, Mr. and Mn. Char- an <l chocolate. The wanscottng n Co >' le -!J, 5 ^ *L.? P '?'J ' **? n ejrvt grandchldren,two great grandch'ldren and one sster, Mn. Mary ted to make a number of roof jac r^». n *#^J n.,._ «. lk-..._.. *_.,t. AnV. A^.*.» A...J ; %»_.». w asnxenons? cemetarv near Ann Ar. Ella Uvey, Madam Helen Gardner, the sanctuary from the man church e P h Artalo8» secon <* P r n%mr «, Mn. Edna L,? J T L ^? ^ ^ Dembos of Ann Arbor. Mr. and ' ket * for!»** «*»»* U- ** M. Hos- Madam Helen Tplady, Mr. Nelson Blue and gold. The back ground of *?****' A M^SSS ^ 3 W f * Mn. Blades celebrated ther golden : ptal Shfhan, Franca Smth, Mr. Frank audtorum s crcled wth Vrgn ^ 6 roffle P r2 e» a tea kettle do- J^^fu'V * Mrvtew " d ^ weddng two yean ago. Delegates named for the State Bowers, Mr. Bert Harrs, James Mc- nated thv sanctuary s n ols, n forms of b? * Lee Lavey store was TJ "Monc bural servce Conventon at Ann Arbor, October Kure. Publc s nvted. Tckets 25c. ««k. «arbl e **»d J the ^ celng, of the.. snr.c- awarded to F J. Pommervlle.. of grave. Funeral servces were held at hs are: Mn. Ed. G. Honghlate resdence Sunday afternoon, ton, Mn. Smth Martn, Mss Volet nerved. j Blessed Trnty, clouded n sky ****** n attendance, The-fecpts r^jt **J How»«Sddt Prws awarded and a lunch wll.-. w, be t0ltf s y n a hallo, depctng the Pmclmey were ' ^ ^ aoout sxty w. v _. Rev. Harold J. Green of Hamburg,, Pettys, Mrs. Harry A. Lee, Mrs, A Requem Hgh mass was offer-' c0,0 "«The vestbule of the church - ^^ abot2t ^22 whch s appled to W? *?* ^ 6 fnm ^P* *"** *ho pastor of the Free Methodst church Charles Thomas and Mrs. Grace 3d Saturday a. m. for the late Mar-, f,n a the *>ft cream wth dark walnut m P rov Tno WMlt ement. ***> offcatng. Mrs. Earl R, Wllams Howard. Next tn and John Mthrn, at the request j woodwork. The vestry s n. lght Sund *y h Mssonary Sunday. Don Swarthotxt. Leon Haakon unh sang "Asleep n Jesus". Bural was Mn. James V. Jury recetved the of Mrs. Margaret Mehrn and daugh- rold colored wall* -- f).»v * «.t * '»»** ngt; j! noster n - eolov {«# -,-^^.,. TV«-»J «*V^ m»-* -w»* tuvwmnnnjn, cn^ ^ ^^ A/eon ^T^7 stemoon ' ST»«! n Washtenaw Memoral frark n [gft box. A watch guessng contest * tor Madam Bra MalvL Today, fet fold colored walls, dark walnut wood!. A f 0 ***' m color s P^ed n the Charles Sknner are n Wfllamtton Ann Arbor, the bural servces be- was conducted by Mrs. Fred MrenJ ** t the Feast day and natal day of work and soft yoke of egg colored chuch \ B 8 t^ M ^0 enter whch helpng the Detrot Asphalt Co. hard floors. n a* near future aft the r *»*» n * a" the dfferent countres,' rorfaee a porton of state Ughwsy ^ ^ ' < :,* - "'"5^H r f^^m

5 mmm ">um < The Pnckney Dspatch Wednesday, Oct ! SPECALS! FB. SAT. Pet. 8, Oct. 9 SUGAR, Fln«Granulated 0 Lbt. 48c Gold Medal Flour Wheates a for 9c Ktchen Tested 24'- Bag 83c Breakfast of Champons 3 Lb* Can vory Soap 3 Med. Bar* Oxydol 2 Lge.Pkg. Oleomargarne 2 Lbt Shredded Wheat % Pkg. Mracle Whp Salaa Draftng Snn-Ray Soda Crackers Oatmea? n Bnlk 47c 6c 37c 9c 9e Qt. 33cP Lb. Box 7c 6 Lbs* 25c Peanut Butter Qt. Jar Quart Frut Jars Doz. sbest Peas No.* Can Chase & Sanborn Coffee Tomato Juce 46 Oz* Can Kraft's Cheese 2 Lb. box 63c 9c 22c 5c 49c v^.vmnges 2 Dozen 35cJ EGG PLANT Each 5c * ANANAS 4 Lbs 25dPEPPER SQUASH 3 for 0c TOKAY GRAPES 2 Lbs. l9c GREEN PEPPERS 3 for 5c SWEET POTATOES 3 Lbs.. loc/carrots 3 Bunches 0c CRANBERRES Lb 8c/ CUCUMBERS 3 for 5c Kennedy's Gen. Store PHONE Z3F3 Gregory Mrs. Lawrence Owens and famly had as week end guests, her mother Mrs, Ulrch of Howell, her ssters and famles of Howell and Chlson. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Hoard have moved to ther new home the former L. L. Hoard home. Mr. and Mrs, Elwell of Howell have moved nto the Claude Hoard house. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Burnett of Howell, Mr^and Mrs. Norman Reason of Pnckney were week end callers at the Harlow Munsell house. Mrs. Cole returned to her home n Byron after spendng the past 6 weeks wth her son, M. H. Cole and famly. Mrs. Gerald Barnes and daughters of Dearborn are vstng her parents Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Bshop. ; Mrs. Edth Peck s spendng a j couple of weeks wth frends n De- trot. Mr. and Mrs. Wlls Calk attended the ball game n Lansng Saturday. Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs, Stanton Lne were Orla Stone and wfe of osco. Mss Patsy Mauk of Portage Lake spent the week end wth Mss Leona Campbell. Mr."and Mrs. A. C. Watkns and daughter, Gwendolyn spent the week ena n Detrot. The Past Matrons of the 0. E. S. helda card party at the Masonc Hall Tuesday afternoon, Albert Hnderer and wfe of Chelsea were Sunday guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Meyer. Edward Van Horn and a party WE DELVER Mrs. Lous Coyle and M=s Eva Melvn were n Detrot Saturday. Myron Dunnng of Detrot spent Sunday wth hs mother, Mrs. N. 0. Frye. Ms. James Roche spent Sunday wth Mr. and Mrs. Gar McKllen at Dexter. Mrs. Lola Rogers s spendng the week wth Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Gult'ord at Detrot. Mr. and Mrs. Norbert Lavey of Detrot vsted Mr. and Mrs. Mchael Lavey Sunday. The Pccbej Dspatch Eftttted at the Postolflce At Jttnckney, Mch, ar second class matter. Subscrpton $.25 a year Pad n Advance. PAUL W. CURLETT PUBLSHER Mss Margaret Curlett of Lansng was home over the week end. Mrs. Ray Duffy s vstng relatves n St. Lous, Mchgan. Mrs. Elwn Hulce and son, Larry, vsted Chelsea relatves Monday. Pu^U WWkg Bttfl famly ot Urand Rapds spent the week end at ther home here. Loren Meabon has returned to hs work at the Fsher body plant n Pontac. W. H. Clark was called to Owosso Sunday by the sudden death of hs br< ther. Mss Hazel Chambers called on M\ and Mrs. F.E.Holls n Hamburg Sunday. Basl Whte of Howell s now recoverng from a recent appendcts operaton. James Martn and son, Robert, of Swartz Creek were callng on frends here Thursday, Mrs. Flora Smth of Dexter and Mrs. Myrtle Phelps of Sagnaw were n Pnckney Monday. Mss Wlla Meyer was home from St. Joseph Hosptal, Ann Arbor on Thursday nght and Frday.! Lee Lavey j s buldng a two car parage at the rear of hs home. Henry Shrey s boss carpenter. Wllam Pdd and Chauncey Goodrch of Dexter were callers at the Dspatch offce Monday mornng. Eugene Mann has closed hs home here and returned to Detrot for the wnter. He wll week end here occa-, Honally. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Johnson and famly from Brghton spent the w<.fk end wth Mr. and Mrs. Henry Johnson. Fred Lake left ths week for Lakeland, Florda, to spend the wncompany wth Mr. and Mrs. J. Stanton. Lloyd Nash wll leave soon for Los Angofes, Calforna where he 'vl! drve a car through for H.Avers (>f Plymouth. Mrs. Alta Meyer recoverng l v o>-. a fractured toe receved whle ^'- "dng the 0. K. S. Conventon at Grand Rapds last week. Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs, M. F Darrow were Mr. and Mrs, Wt f.llen of Lansng and Mr. and Mr-. Kr-hard Looms of Detrot. Dr- Cecl Render who has been l>r:utc'ng veternary surgery at Dexter tor a number of months has located at thaca, Mchgan. Hex Read wrtes us that he has loft New York Cty and s n Mam j Pearh, Florda, gettng hs hotel there ready for the wnter season. Mr. and Mrs. Lous Clnton, and : daughters, Jeanne and Janet, of St. Catherne, Ontaro, were callng on frends and relatves here Sunday. Sunday guests of Mrs. Hatte Mss Dorothy Brogan of Howell vsted at the home of Mrs. Don Hammer Monday. Decker were Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Mrs. Charl es Smoyer of Akorn, ^m th > Mrs. Hatte Rae Mans, her Oho, s spendng the week wth Mr. t daughter, Ruth, and a frend of and Mrs. Ross Read Dearborn. 4 chldren of memhers of Jeho-... «~., j of frends from Detrot called at Mrs. Wm. Padley of Reardon, j vans' Wtnesses at Rochester who Mrs N. McCleer and grandson are, thg BeH ^ ) ^ home Tuesday and Washngton, and her brother, Fred! refused to salute the flag were exspendng ths week at ther home hunted n ths secton. Gauss of Ann Arbor were Sunday j ppled last week under a rulng of here. Mr. and Mrs. Ona Campbell and '& uests of Mrs - C - J -J. T Teeple. e e P - jt»e supreme court. Mrs. P. J. Resco sr., a former daughter, Leona, called on frends! A number of the Pnckney Kngs j The Sykes famly who lved on resdent of Gregory who has been,^ Ypsnant Sunday. Daughters are attendng the State the M. J. Reason farm several ll the past three months passed Mrf^ pvph ^AftH wfl9 was >ngtpqq hostess frt to rnnvfmt conventon j 0 n at at Ann Ann Arbor Arbor ths ths week. week. year- ago have returned here from away early Saturday mornng, October 2th at her home n Mt. Clem-; Club Monday afternoon. Arbor were Sunday callers at the hn at Hland Lake. the members of her Contract Brdge Wlls Johnson and wfe of Ann ] Detrot and are buldng a log caens, Mchgan, at the age of 64. j Mrs. A. J. McGregor and son,, homo of Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Hendee Mss Hazel Chambers, Worthy Mawerc Saturday afternoon vstors at Mr. and Mrs. Orvlle Nash and tron of Pnckney Chapter E. Left to mourn her loss are her j husband, F. J. Resco, sr. t eght chldren and ther famles: Mrs. Ray cer. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ayers at Ply- mses at the 0. E. S. Conventon, the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wll Mer- son ; Lloyd were Tuesday guests of 5\ receved a basket of beautful Lavey, Gregory, Nel Resco, North Mr. and Mrs. Verne Beatte of mouth. presented to her by Worshpful Mas- Carolna, Mrs. Chrs Nssen, Wxom, Lake Chemung were Sunday dnner) Mss Jesse Green and Mrs. We- ter, Ross Read. Mrs. """ Donald ^7^ r Page, J? e ' ^Detrot, S " ' ^-V^ Mrs. La ffwrts at the home of Mrs. Berkley j tha Val spent several days last, Sheep dogs got nto flocks bevern Gamer, Detrot, Mrs. Rchard j s h a m ; weej, wj t h relatves n Horton and, longng to Bert Reason, Mrs. Alma Swnn,; Port Huron, Clppert and, MM* c+0 +/^ T{T, A «^^,,^ at. p.,m.a. Harrs and John M. Harrs one nght Fred, \.Mt. Clemens; 22 grandchl-j a surprse card party Saturday nght Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Carr were j last week and klled and mangled a dren and a host of frends. j honorng her husband on hs brthday annversary. Mrs. Mylo Kettler at ther cottage Ernest Packer who has been on Sunday dnner guests of Mr. and number of sheep. Frank Johnson and wfe vsted Funeral servces were held Monday at the La Croyx and Grosbeck Funeral Home, Mt. Clemens at :00 p. m. wth bural at Romulus, Mch, WLL BE N PNCKNEY THURSDAYS Dr. Gerald W. McColloch, Osteopathc physcan and surgeon of Kowell wll be- at the resdence of Charles Chamberlan each Thursday afternoon from :00 -to 5:80 p. m. to treat patents. He has been practcng for 6 years n St. Lous Mo., Jackson, Mchgan and n. Troy, Oho where he had charge of frst ad work n a factory there. Those desrng appontments should phone Pnckney No. 87 or Howell No. 57. Mr. and Mrs. Lous Coyle, Mss Eva Melvn and Mary Howard r* tended the waddng recapton for Mr. and Mrs. Bdon Condt at the hone of the brde's parents, Mr. tftd M* Cleoa Brown 4800 Sco Hoed, Amn Alter, the other day. rt Patterson Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Waldo Ttmus at Flnt The members of the Fve Hundred Sunday and wth them called on Club were guests of Mrs. Wllard frends n Lapeer. Ponbaum of Lakeland at a one o'- Mr. and Mrs. Lous Coyle, Msses clock luncheon last Wednesday. Eva Melvn, Mary Howard and Ed-) Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Nsbet had as de Drort were Sunday dnner guests Sunday dnner guests, Mr. and Mrs. of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Shlell at De-} E- L. Naylor, Mr. and Mrs. J. Naytrot. j lor and son of Eaton Rapds. Mss Henretta Kelly of Ann Ar- Mss Shrley Wedman, daughter bor and Dave of Detrot are spend- f of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wedman of ng a week's vacaton at the home of j Dexter was unted n marrage at ther parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robetr j St. Joseph's church, Dexter, last Kelly.. ' Thursday to Thomas Taylor, son of Mrs. Charles McRore and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs.Burt Taylor, of Chelsea Wll Mercer vsted Mr. McRore, \ A dnner was served at St Joseph's Mrs. Merwn Campbell and Arnold < na^ a * a recepton later n the Berqust at the Howell State San-jnom* of the brde, trum Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Tasch at ten- Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Ayers of Ply- < ded the marrage of hs brother,rchmouth spent Thursday evenng wfth ^xl, n Ann Arbor Saturday to Mss Mr.and Mrs. Orvlle Nash. They left Lo«Ann Fsher, daughter of Dr. va auto for ther wnter home n and Mre - Leonard Fsher of Ann Arhe Wm. Smth farm near North Lake for a number of years has lented the Esele farm on the Howell road. Estes Borng who s now on #>e farm wll go to Detrot. Mr. and Mrs. James Mornenu and daughter, Shrley, who have been employed by Wm. Loll n hs tavern the past sx months leave for Metamora, Mchgan Thursday where he has purchased an nterest n a tavern busness wth hs brother. Harvey Blanchard of Dexter was n town Saturday. He nforms us that the Steptoe and Arksey Hardware was entered there Frday nght and $.75 n money taken from the tll but nothng else apparently was mssng. Mr and Mrs. Lee Lavey, of Pnckney, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Metz of f-owell and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Lavey cf Gregory were n Mt. Clemens on Santa Monca, Calforna and were bor at tne H * Methodst church. Sunday where Mrs.- Resco, mother accompaned by Lloyd Nash who J Robert Tasch acted as best man and' of Mrs. Ray Lavey suddenly passed wll spend some tme wth them. *"< Tasch»* matron of honor. away Saturday. "Halloween 9? Noveltes of All.Knds for the Occason. Masks, LanUfne, GWHCS Fatos. Detu HALLOWEEN WTHOUT CANDY? Etc. at Very Low Prces. LARGE STOCK OF BOX CANDES )ON HAND Kennedy Drug Store % *%> «^4^^ fe 4^ ^ Communty Hall Thar Pnckney 7 Cct. Your Show and Mne CALDWELL'S ANS Ths Week's Play Toby, the Mllonare A ROT OF LAUGHTER A»k your Frendly Merchants Jor FREE COURTESY TCKET Prce wth g J%*% Chldren a Dme Tcket &$}%» Any Tme Used Rados For Sale or Trade $3.00 am Vp Shreys Rado Servce X PHONE 35F4 Ftank Plasko LCCA L AND LONG DSTANCE TRUCKNG. Jv'E STOCK.FURNTURE NO JOB TOO BG *m z+m OALY TRPS Wrecker NO JOB TOO *MALL TO DETROT PNCKNEY, MCH. Servce Battery Servce General Auto Reparng 24 Hour Road Servce Weldng Done Charles Clark A. A. A. Servb Staton /

6 R 4*.* **. %- «'' * f MEOHAMZGB PREPAREDNESS r^ Mechanzed and motorzed forces are essental to telephone preparedneaa. n Mchgan there are,275 telephone trucks and cars most of them equpped \>th tools, power unts and materal. Ther day-by-day work may not seem dramatc. But n tme of emergency... flood, tornado, sleet storm... these mechanzed forces can be moblzed lke an army. For nstance, followng the 938 Hurrcane n New England, Mchgan's trucks and traned crews worked sde by sde \ the storm area wth others from as far west as Nebraska. Mechanzed preparedness s but one of many reasons why ths Company s ready to do ts part n the program of natonal defense. Ready When Needed... and Where MCHGAN BLl vde B*ll TeUphonm SyUr of the Naton. - _ ^n L ^ V»rf f rt*l TBLBPHONE Pncfcaey tfspech Wednes COMPANY SUNDAY Huntng Lvngston Volators Wll Be Prosecuted " see by the papers that the Gallup poll shows one out of every three persons hasn't made up hs mnd whether to vote four years for Wllke or nne, ten, eleven and twelve years for Roosevelt. * "Well, t were a veteran, 'd remember that Wllke volunteered wthn 24 hours after we got nto the last war. He won hs captancy by overseas servce on the front lne, not by Whte House pull. He ddn't warm a B.wvel seat at Washngton, ether. "f ware a mother, 'd surely want to know how far the Bran Trust has nvolved us down a costly and bloody road to war. Who and where are those 2,000,000 Amercan boys gong to* fght, anyway n France agan, or Japan? * * "f wet* a laborng msn, 'd < a steady job wth good pay and res> sonable hours. can trust a m.n lke Wllke, who rose humbly as a worker hmself to responsblty as an em* plover of thousands of folks. He served even as legal counsel for labet unons, wants to preserve and extend our socal securty laws, and otherwse gve the worker «real deal Pd beleve m a man wh6 proved durng the depresson that t could be done lot/ernf consumer costs and puttng more men to work, both at the same, tme! After all, you've got to have a job frst before you can bargan wth anyone* Portco/ -»** OLD BLL says Here's what thnk- wd»rt»mt* C "t wars a busness man, 'd eer* L tanly remember the staggerng debt of 60 bllons spent n tht past seven and a half years, the mountng burden of taxes, and the un-amercan nctng of class aganst class. Let's gve busness a chance! "// 7 were a far mar, % thnk twce > about today's low farm prces, our' threatenng natonal bankruptcy, sad 'd support ths next-door Hooster just because t makes good horse sense. Here's a man who owns bs own farms. You can't go wrong wth Wllke. W~4*LWmdt "t was Churchll, a few yean who sad Roosevelt had faled to salve ) the depresson here snd was hurtng world recovery. What dd the Brtsh do when Chamberlan got them nto the mddle of the stream, even after war was declared? Why, they turned to ths man Churchll " feel we're n the samefxnow. t's hgh tme we turned to our Amercan Churchll, Mr. Wendell L. Wllke, ' whle there s stll tme for us to keep out of war. "Yes, they threw rotten eggs at Mm n some of the automoble towns. Well, some radcal agtators tfarsjr more than that at the good name of. Mchgan n 937, and you rsoember what we folks dd n November, tw«years ago? We saads no nnsteke thorn. r e * %Mnssjnjsf4erevetMWss9**E/ r c;t*--- RESOLUTONS ON THE DEATH OF BROTHER WLLAM BLADES Lvngston Lodge, No. 76 P. & A. M. t tender through the undersgned commttee the followng resolutons:- Whereas :-The Great Rulng Archtect of the Unverse has called from our crcle our worthy brother, Wm. Blades, thereby severng all earthly tes whch bnds us together, therefor, - Resolved :-That n ths dspensa* ton of Dvne Provdence the com- NEGHBORNG NOTES A crcut court sesson n Judge Sample's court was nterrupted one day recently when a pheasant flew through the wndow of the Court House at Ann Arbor. Ebet Sawtele of Unadlla who was njured last week when he ht a car whle rdng on a gasolne scooter ded at Unversty Hosptal of bs njures Thursday. The soy bean crop on the Ford acres at Manchester have boast all plowed under as the season dd not gve the crop a chance to develop. fhe Lalngsburg' ellwlluf s beng remodeled over nto a dog food factory. The state recently nspected the Mlford school busses and found all brakes n A-l shape. The Ghelesa Kwans wll put on the "Womanless Weddng" on October 24, 25. Ernest Allendnger has been named actng manager of the Washtenaw county road commsson to replace Major Hallenbach, called for army duty. Walter E. Render, 58, of osco, fell down stars at hs home last week Tuesday, sustanng njures whch caused hs death. * Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Pfau entertaned the Howell postoffce clerks at the Pngree church recently at a dnner n honor of Albert Purdy, who recently retred and Mrs. Jesse Brayton who retres on Nov. l. Roy M. Beadle of Lansng, a former Dexter resdent. s the new plant manager for the Wlatson-Uptegraff creamery at Howell. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Rancour of! Howell recently became the parents * of twn sons* Mss Arlene Thorpe, formerly connected wth the Evelyn Louse Shop at Howell has accepted a poston n a dress shop at Grand Rapds and gon* there to jon her mother who s teachng school there.-lv. Co. Press. Chelsea hgh school s sponsorng en other bg amateur show ths year on November 6, 7, 8. Anyone wshng to take part s nvted to attend»he elmnaton contests there. ConsemtMm Dept Notes For 20 years the producton of fsh by Mchgan's Great Lakes Corn mecal Fsheres has averaged $2, 859,60 a year an average value of 9 cents per lb. ncrease n the number of coarse fsh taken lke suckers and carp has lowered the prce. Wth a take of,68,000 fur bearng anmals last year Mchgan ranks fourth n the naton after Lousana, Maryland and Wsconsn. A charge of trespass may be brought aganst persons huntng on another's land wthout perml&svon cno year afte* the offense la commtted. $0 s the mnmum fne that can be assesseu aganst them. Stormy weather that wll brng hgh flyng brds down and frosts and hgh wnds that wll strp game l cover of folage are what hunters arc lookng for. Favorable weather has ncreased the gam e supply the, past,8t summer. summer. _.u. After October 5 cscoes, whtefsh and carp may be speared on certan desgnated lakes. Fshermen murt obtans * * * * ^ * spear them. The season ends Dec. 8 To per cent of the Umestone used n Mchgan s used as furnace flux n the manufacture of steel. From a comparson of the cree, munty has lost a fathful ctsen recors of both the upper and lower, and the Masonc fraternty an ever penngu a ths dept has cceettaeo present and apprecated brother. ^ ftny superorty the upper pen- Resolved >That n the tme of ^ ^ ^ as a fshng resort s due Attenton Farmers! Free ServceforYour Dead or Dsabled Horses - Cows - Sheep - Calves end Hpgs REMOVED AT ONCE Phone Collect Day or Ntfb - Nearest Stat** Howell 360 Ana Arbor SftS Oscar MyersRenderng Warts Complete TRY A lalt-o-plenty 6 OZ. FOR 0c Plenty Good Plenty Refresbte* CANDY, CE CREAM and TOBACCO wew,w Mrs R. K. Ellot fea ards and MlM " BUwsh *!&*$* ^ t of the po^ck supper, enjoyed M*sonary offerng amounted * ther bereavement, we tender our j tq the fftct tnat there are less fsnerb^arly a score of menb^and f2. 8 o. kndest sympathes and n the at- men ^ ^ v.tw.va frends, and the "brthday frettng- Qn ^ ^ of ^ U y 0n last \ tendant sorrow of the frends, com-, c c c enrollees of Camp ** "» was gven wth a wll. mend them to Hm who wll fold the ^ pa88ed the half mllon mark n Sunday, no cass sesson was told. arms of hs love and protecton ee tree plantng ths tns year. yew. Tha sesson was opened by Devo- A fne program W. ***»»**** around them who put ther trust n Forest -p orls gt fres the frst week A of the. ^ ^dncted by Mrs. Peck, and t:e commttee, and ncluded well Hm. J huntng BWHKJH season ««- added *. only 9 A^.-j acres ^ ^ ^ l f 7 ^ n d We Mndered numbers by theltt* fete Resolved:- That as a testmony of L n the ^ 8ea8on's season's fre loss and extend- A T.. W n Jams". ' «^ Wltn Mrg Srs. Lola uv» Ro- *»»- ft a readng, reauub, «* am *» the -- Church", ' * >r our esteem and regard for the mem-, ^ ^ ^Q months the V* no T._ M9a * _ alt^etano. t tv.. e _ O - ano. ~ Tne "The *m»«ro» roll M « call call and ano j»unc. Murel Murel «««., HA* Read - a - duet -# >y Mr. _«a* and» ber of our departed brother, Wm. \ whch the we«kly loss has not ex- gers fury's secretary^ attne^l9» report ^^ were ^ n charge of of ^KUhen, ^ and and mmc musc ^ by by J9Wg ^ j people. Blcdes, the hall of Lvngston Lodge, ceeded 8 acres.»t TL Henry wth several com- 09o ulks by the pastor an* mr 76,«F. * A * A. M.. M., be draned draped n n mourn- Road nunt g * * > * *» ^ to mu^cx. auo read. Floyd Weeks. ng for sxty days, and further, volves Hrespass. t s ummwj-. ncatons»-««- - -*- "««w at that these resolutons be sgned by Mrs. Mr*. Henry Henry was was « also gven ^ charge.fca,,. "The Boyhood eff J ^ ^J«S k Meggage 0 f John the \U#a?r% tht proper offcers of ths Lodge, shoot from an automoble. 0 ZB9,,^^ ut, ^^ and the lesson for October W, fled n the records thereof and a Luke 8:8, and 8:«-" *W*> *»?* copy of these resolutons be forwaded to the frends of the deceas- ran. Gladwn s second and sabella The presdent apponted as callng be studed together for nest Sunday, ffth, of o rl a ofl w reetatartd "*"--!».»<**: r _. «_ <u nn B ths hl. y«r year w» was «»«. dscussed..., 'LUK«O.O,»*«. «, --^, ed brother. thrd. commttee for ths month, Mrs. Rose! n order to follow tht sx months Pat Kng, charman. Hendee and Mrs. Lola Rogers. peres The to Phlathoas be*' advantage. hoeo to keep «s FHlATHEA NOTES An artcle by Helen Grwold, V. Glenn Slayton, the* *> d Sunday 8elsool reoald Presdent, New York stato unon, W. H. Clark. fr ths next church year. f yen A w^nderft^m*j^jt ^What Can Our Phflathea Class Do were once a member, or f yom'd Mk» ble«ed our meetng en lartw^ For Our Church and Pastor", WM How sugar makes better ^lfe^ blewed our meetmg on»-- " -- A Calforna doctor tres feedng the dfty afternoon **»»»? ^ ^ ^eet stuff to 80 lnksmen, tt prove w> c. Hendee. ^ f ^ J " ^,_,_ h* theory.v that *V.T man small nuanttes quanttes of «f>t«tme was our annua* oww- candy, eaten at the rght tme, perk nn trng nerves and muscles. Read ths artcle n The Amercan Week- born n *****<**,^SLT^\\^^^^J^^nS^ ly, tho magazne dstrbuted wth next week's Sunda..y Chcago Her- J tld Amercan, honorng 0«to-U PhU»t-»» V**' W e( h.md.y «ft*»o<m ** *?^- """"" obw 20,»W>. Two blrt-ujr ««NoTtmbw *w~nr J* *"* JTTrT «. t't " Yk «A wth Mr. «d Un. Ctalta. &',' +.!", ^ >. S k ^ ^ ^

7 ' : '. * - * r HOUSEHOLD QUESTONS Aaj flaked ready-to-serve cereal may be used nstead of bread crumbs n a recpe that calls for bread crumbs. «' f 70«sprnkle a lttle flour n the grease n whch you are to fry gft, croquettes, etc., the grease wll not sputter. * Wash seves wth water to whch a lttle bcarbonate of soda has been added. Never use soap wh«n washng s^g,, A pece of chamos that has been dampened makes an excellent duster. t makes furnture look lke new. ««When makng baked costard, pour bolng mlk onto the beaten eggs. t wll then bake very frm. Apples that are to be baked should be prcked wth a fork before beng placed n the oven. f you do ths you wll fnd they wll not break whle cookng. CLASSFED DEPARTMENT "Snake" relef from tobacco habt guaranteed or money refunded at once. Prce «3. KlBf Laboratores. Box 40, Aurora, U. Secret of Greatness t s easy n the world to lve after the world's opnon; t s easy n soltude to lve after our own; but the great man s he who n the mdst of the crowd keeps wth perfect sweetness the ndependence of soltude. Ralph Waldo Emerson. Relef At Last For Your Cough OreomuWon releves promptly because t goes rght to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel term laden phlegm, and ad nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, nflamed bronchal mucous membranes. Tell your druggst to sell you ft bottle of Creomulson wth the understandng you must lke the way t quckly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. CREOMULSON for Coughs, Chtst Colds, Bronchts Happness a Twn All who joy would wn must share t happness was bom a twn, Byron. JWHYSUrTDlrmctowl j FEMALE COMPLANTS Ttw womantodaydo tot bar* KM etfn of factonal treubfa, Maybo yau'rt notsm YOURSELF ftttnfrotkav,moody, narrooa, wd lataty ywrlrorktoomwflfory«l ^r¾ try Lyda E. Pakham'e V«c*tabto Conpouad to halp qut* ustruat nam*. mdaeba) and wwk dlssy falntm spate ««a to functonal dlaordara. For o-rar «nan Ftakham'a Conpouad baa balpad lot* tods el thousands of vask, ruadowa aw VMMwomuL TrvU Counsel Needed Arms are of lttle aval abroad unless there s a good counsel at home. Ccero. What? WORMS n my chld?.. Neverf Don't b* so sur; Atofhorf Yea, rght now, crawlng round worm* may bs arowlas and multplyng nsde your chad wthout your NK knowng W Th* naaty nfecton ma? be "caught" easly, everywhere. And the outward sgns are) very msleadng. For example: Squrm* lug andfdgetng.noss-ptcklng. and acratenl&g other parte. Uneasy stomach. Fncky Appette. Btng nals. f yoo even sujpset that your chld Las romdwonna,ctjaynk-8ve:kmklgk rght away! JAYNK'S la the beet known worm erpellant n Amerca. t a backed by modern adentfo atudy, and baa been uaad by mllkus, for over a century. JAYNE'S VXRMFUOK baa the ablty to drve oat large round worms, yet t tastes good and acts gently. t does not contan santonn. f no worms are there t works merely as a mld Uxatve. Ask for JAYNE'S VA*af*FUGataaydrat More. FREE l Valuable medcal book, 'Worms lvng nsde You." Wrte to Dept. M-*. 5r.^Ja rne*son.2vla«st. ) Ptuladalphls> TrVNU O 9BSSSS= 'All the Traffc Would Bear' There wts atmen Amerca when there were no set prces. Bach merchant charged what be thought 'the traffc would bear." Advertsng came to the rescue of the onnwmrt. t ted the way to the establshed prces you pay when yon buy anythng today. aa Lavsh and Unque Use of Fur s mportant Fashon Message By CHERE NCHOLAS EX)R drama and glamour, watch * furs and fur treatments. t s an exctng story. nterest les not only n the fact that the types of furs n use are so wdely vared but n the caprcous, whmscal out-of-the-ordnary treatments that desgners gve them. Ths adds a new and fascnatng touch to fall and wnter coats, suts and even dresses. Almost everythng s beng lavshed wth fur ths season. Vogush longcoat costumes are especally rchly enhanced wth fur. You can have as much or as lttle fur as you lke on your wnter ensemble. The "bg dea" s that t must be appled wth cunnng ngenuty and artstry. Much s beng sad n regard to the outstandng mportance of brown furs. Brown on black s especally favored. t s brown beaver that enrches the handsome coat of black suede-lke wool shown to the rght n the pcture. There s a generous collar of fur. The novelty of the fur treatment begns n the wde beaver crcular-cut ruffle that rpples ts way down one sde and all around the hemlne. Dramatc and exceedngly swank and new s the large beaver-faced felt hat whch mlady wears. To complete ths wealth of fur there s a matchng muff for muffs have been lsted among the "must have" tems for fall and wnter. Speakng of novel and almost eccentrc use of fur, the prze for orgnalty and darng should go to the desgners of headgear. The dsplay of hats made of fur out-magnes wldest fancy ths season. The fall and wnter output of mllnery created of fur exceeds all prevous records. n matter of turbans, magnaton plays up to a new hgh n orgnalty and out-of-the-ordnary effects. n every nstance almost wthout excepton there s an accom Rot Red Accents And now t a rot red that s cre- atng a bg collegate str. For that ' hgh-style ratng, the collage laaa pctured a majorng n rot red. Ths new color accent starts rght at her fnger tpt (rot red polsh s very popular), contnues n the lnng of her Teddy-bear jacket, goes on and up nto the kntted helmet wth ts brght brass buttons, and repeats n the wool pouch that holds her pencls and her change. Ask for rot red when buyng accessores. f you want to know, rot red s a clear dark red, sophstcated, and as young as the casual styles that are causng a collegate sen-»«ww ths season. panyng fur hat to match the fur on one's costume. The wde brms faced wth fur are creatng a sensaton. One of the new moves n fur trmmngs s to elaborate the entre front of the cloth coat. The gesture s aptly expressed n the handsome coat centered n the pcture. The tuxedo fronts are generously furred wth all possblty of bulkness removed n that there s a full-length zpper closng. And sn't the lttle fabrc bow at the throat clever? Pockets are another of the fur themes that ntrgues the fancy. An example of the exstng pocket vogue s presented n the costume sut shown to the left n the group. The dress wth hs neatly gored skrt s of handsome gay wool. Wth t a bloused jreket s worn of gray sheared lamb, supplemented wth huge pockets of matchng fur on the skrt. Here s a fur-enhanced jacket sut that s to be coveted. Wherever the wearer goes, t s sure to attract attenton. No report as to what's what n fur on the current style program s complete wthout a few enthusastc remarks n regard tb the tremendous vogue that exsts for spotted furs, most notably leopard and cvet cat. The younger set s especally keen on the spotted fur subject. As a spectator-sports number, the coat worn by the grl pctured n the nset s a star n the frmament of smart casuals. Ths coat of cvet cat s typcal of what college grls want for general outdoor wear. t has polshed metal clasps to fasten t n ths nstance. Huge taffeta bows ted at the necklne are also popular. You really should have at least a dash of spotted fur somewhere about your wnter costume f you are young and fashon-asprng. (Released by Western Newspaper Unon.) Fabrc Combnaton New Stylng Theme t s growng ncreasngly apparent that desgners ntend to make a bg play on fabrc combnatons. The newer coats and dresses feature velvet and now-so-vogush velveteen. They are used ether for trmmng touches or n ffty-ffty combnaton wth wools, velvets and other materals. Some cloth coats have long rever panels of velveteen down the front. Other cloth coats are pped or bound wth velvet, addng buttons covered wth matchng velvet. Very unque and strkngly attractve s a coat of velveteen that s bordered each sde down the front and openng wth black suede. When carred out n a warm maple brown velveteen wth matchng suede, the dea s very effectve. Long-Coat Costume Suts Have Dgnty Quet smplcty that stresses elegance of materal and the dea that."beauty unadorned s adorned the most" s the new trend ths season. The new costume sut has ganed almost mmedate popularty. t has a long matchng coat wthout fur or other enhancement, except possbly a lttle bradng or sttchng, or sometmes even a restraned qulted motf. Best dressed women are startng the season wth the long dressmaker-black coat topped wth an mportant lookng wde brmmed felt or suede hat The Pnckney Dspatch OP>SEW 4 Ruth \Fyeth Spears c*s > /"\NE day there came a letter ^ wth a rough sketch of the old rocker at the upper rght. The last lne of the letter sad, " wll remove the rockers f you say so. Mrs. Spears, but would lke to keep them." Well, why not? There s nothng smarter now than thngs Vctoran. Old ol lamps wth flowered globes are beng wred lor electrcty so, why not redesgn ths rocker along smple lnes? Cover t wth plan rep n a nce shade of blue perhaps, and gve t a matchng foot stool and a hem sttched lnen char set all trcked out n tassels? Here s the result of that dea and the dagram shows all the steps that led up to t. Almost any old char may be transformed wth a slp cover f a lttle work s done frst to buld out or to saw off projectons. Paddng s also mportant, and open spaces under CAMELS ALWAyS TASTE SO GOOD - EXTRA MLD, VET SO FULL OF FLAVOR EXTRA MLDNESS OCTRA COOLNESS EXTRA FLAVOR,~t. Csmel* burned arms may be covered by stretchng the paddng tghtly and tackng, as shown here. 9 NOTE: Drectons for makng the toot- tool are la Sewng Book 3. The hemttched char set s n Book 4. All the tcpa n fttng and makng slp coven are llustrated la Book. Booklets sr«32 pages each, and wll be sent to any address upon recept of 0c to cover coat and malng. Send order to: "EUB Blt.ll BH.AR8 < Drawer 0 Bedford Hlll New York Enclose 0 cents for each book ordered. Name Address What s a Gentleman? The queston: "What s a gentleman?" has no doubt been asked thousands of tmes and answered n scores of ways. To descrbe anybody as a gentleman seems to mean anythng and nothng. On reference forms of varous knds a man's occupaton s often defned as "gentleman," meanng that he s n no busness and s retred. Whch, of course, s rdculous. The curous part of t s that to speak of a man as beng "no gentleman" usually means somethng qute defnte! Perhaps the best defnton of a gentleman ever propounded s: "A person n whose company no one s uncomfortable.",'/' Yet a Damond Better a damond wth a flaw than a pebble wthout one. Chnese. T f- 25 * ^^/^"uogbrsod. tested- -ssrsam.'*^ crtrfe^ Why Let Yourself Get Constpated? Why endure those dull headachy days due to constpaton, phu the nevtable trps to the medcne chest. f you cac avod both by lettng at the cause of the trouble? f your constpaton, lke that Of Twllllnna U due XO Uck OX "bulk" n the det, the "better way" s to eat KeUogfs All-Bran. Ths cruachy toasted breakfast cereal s the ounce of prerenuon that's worth a pound of emergency relef. t helps you not only to get regular but to keep regular. day after day and month after month, by the pleasantest means you ever knew. Eat Kenogg's All-Bran regunf Bftar, tnrt,. you dont forget all about constpaton. Made by Kellogg'* la Battle Creek. f your condton s chronc, t s wse to consult a physcan. Smple Charm Take nto your new sphere of labor... that smple charm (love) and your lfework must succeed. You can take nothng greater, you need take nothng less Drummond. T0 <&\ yes, you CAN ALWAyS COUNT ON A SLOW-BURN.NO CAMEL FOR EXTRA PLEASURE AND EXTRA SMOKNG TOO COLDS LQUD TABLETS SALVE NO DftOM COUCH DROPS GET THE "EXTRAS" WTH SLOWER-BURNNG CAMELS THE CGARETTE OF COSTLER TOBACCOS Lttle Learnng the learnng, but n the lttleness, Thrust Out "A lttle learnng s a dangerous Get more! Get more! So only "Wll ever?" No you wll nevthng;" but the danger s not n can you be safe. Phllps Brooks, j er whle you ask that queston. mmm^mmmmmmwmm^ \~Jt-~ :r:> j^#**-> MCHGAN WNDSTORMS CAUSE LOSSES LKE THS! Wc can't predct where the next Mchgan wndstorm wll strke! t may strke your communty! t may strke elsewhere! But we can predct, wth absolute certanty, that Mchgan wll suffer thouaands of dollars of wndstorm damage n 940 aa surely at t dd n 939! State Mutual*! clam payment!, annually, for 43 years prove ths concluavely! Are you prepared, fnancally, to rebuld your home, bam, slo, wndmll or mplement thed... f t's demolshed by a wndstorm? Pew people are. But everybody can protect hmself from such a fate! Everybody can afford to pay $.50 per year for $, worth of wndstorm protecton... from thf relable, tme-tested State Mutual Cyclone nsurance Company. Dont wat 'tl t's too later ATE MUTUAL CYl \. -' K. MC S c' t»ofy \^m w..y.*vft >lfr' **-.-.

8 The Pnckney Dspatch Wednesday, Oct MaketheHome Work Easy MCHGAN Xronrte take* yon off your feet save* yoar beck prevents ronng flay fa. tgne and fraxxled nerve*! Keep that weddng day anle and vbrant nealth wrth an ronrte. Only ronrte has the doubleopen-end roll, shoe and ft'-d board. rons everyn' ng that's washable rts, presses, chjdren'a clothes, enrtans! lo fnsh by hand NotMng Compact desgn saves space. Closed top serves as p\tra table. Ask for a free ron rte demonstraton to- ;.'ay! -Vow as low as $CO Specal on Blackstone Washers $37.50 LAVEY AftuWARE {Fru Oct. 8 r» SPECALS Tomato Vegetable 22 Soup Onons 0 venture beyond that radus they nary practtoners. The socety contends the act s necessary to cor- would come under the jursdcton of the publc servce or utltes com- rect such abuses. mpson. Ths was the stuaton up to 939 t would prohbt dentsts from. when the newly elected Republcan advertsng by means of large ds- legslature followed the dctates of CASH SPECALS Oz- Can Lb. Bag Pasacake Flour Coffee, ymons B>Jt Lb. Orent Sat* Oct Karo Syrup Blue Label Mac* vovt Spaghett /\ Lbs- Oxydo 2 Pkgs. Gr*aham Flour 5 U). 9 Sack Tomatoes Satt*?*** 3 for 25 Salad Dressng 5 YOU GET BETLK MEATS""XT Clarks K ter est Qt lo VeDefvw <t all Tme* (Contnued from Frst Pag«) STATE MRROR NEWS leg.>-lature. n bref, the measure would allow school dstrct, for buldng, and repar purposes only, to rase not more than 2 mlls (n.-».eac of 50, as at present) each >e;r ('or not more than 5 years. On objecton heard s that the nly n r cost would be greater. That s regarded, however, as a necessary evl, as n the case of the man who buj- a house on a long term plan because he would be unable to own one any other way. Proposton No. 2 he s anuthe pupujcd amend' -ent to the consttuton, placed on ' the ballot through pettons sponsor- ( ed by the Mchgan Mert System assocaton. ts passage would wrte cvl servce nto the basc law of the state, strp the legslature of vrtually all ts tradtonal powers over state employment, and place ths authorty n the hands of a four-member, non-partsan commsson functonng drectly under the consttuton. The proposal was treated n detal n last week's column. Proposton No. 3 Ths s an act of the 939 legslature now beng brought before the Classfed Want Ads FOK SALE: 7 mxed mlk cows; l>0 lb. base. Be^t offer taken. See Mr. Teodor, after 5 p. m. Pe^tysvlle, Mchgan. SPECAL NOTCE:- Wll the persons jwho borrowed the extenson ladder and house jacks from the late Charles J. Teeple please return them. lrs. Mary Teeple. FOR SALF Snw *nh»wn nre nqure of: Carl Schmd, Pnckney Hamburg and Wllams St. Mchgan WANTED TO BUY: Old buttons! gtas^ chna dolls, furnture, anythng eld..mrs. Bronson, 306 Mll St., Pnckney, Mchgan, Telephone 63 FOR SALE: One Unversal automatc electrc stove, 5 burners and oven. Good as new. Lucus Doyle. FOR SALE: Large crculatng coal and wood burnng stove. Very good condton. Apply at Pnckney Tavern. electorate for a referendum vote. t FOR SALE -- Chevrolet panel job juld remove the rght of muncpal,! truck> new battery, generator and 2 trs to operate busses beyond ther ow lmts wthout beng subject to state regulaton. Popularly ths measure s known as the D. S. R. (Detrot Street Ralways ) act because t represents a f.eht between the cty's lnes and prvate bus nterests over the suburban Detrot area. The D. S. R. s ur.gmg a vgorous campagn to defeat the measure. Bus tops and street cars n Detrot are panted conspcuously wth "Vote No on Proposal No. 3" sgns. The opposton,'rne;uv hle Ls plfdter'ng the atea wth "Vote Yes" placards. Luck of the controversy s the nterestng story of a legalstc overs* ht whch occured durng the 939 sesson of the legslature. new new tres. Pnone 4FG Mrs. da Reason. FOPTRENT: Stock"traler or box traler. wll also do haulng jobs. Russell Gardner. FOR SALE Cheap. 30 young geese, 8 old ones, also 30 Barred Rock pullets. Theodore Olderman m. east of Pnckney. FOS SALE: 55 bushels of oats for hop: feed. Two tons of alfalfa hay and a large stack of oat straw. nqure of: Mrs. Nel T. McCleer, 225 Covngton Dr. Detrot, Mchgan. dentsts on the ground that the law B\, way of background t should would abrdge ndvdual rghts. be mentoned that for years the D. The socety clams t has found S. R. has had the beneft of certan upon nvestgaton that so-called pvleges granted n the cty charter. "bargan" prces offered by some One of -_ these permtted,- -. t to. (hntsts have the sole purpose of operate wthout state control n and [lurng patrons to "cut-rate" offces for 0 mles outsde Detrot. How- where they are then vctmzed nto ever, f and when ts buses should ; payng more than the prces of ord- the late Governor Frank D. Ftzgerald and abolshed the publc utltes commsson n order to remove somr recalctrant Democrats from offce. The act whch accomplshed thu purpose set up a brand new publc servce commsson that was supposed to nhert all the mportant prvleges and authorty of the old P U. C. There was one slp n the procedure, however. The legslators neglected to gve the new commsson the rght to regulate muncpal buses outsde of cty areas, ( After the law took effect the howl went up from prvate bus lnes who vsualzed the D. S. R. as beng now n a poston to spread oul all over eastern Mchgan. And so the legslature passed an amendatory act to correct the stuaton. t s ths measure that appears on the referendum ballot. Brefly, t amends the state motor (..Ter act, whch was orgnally des--rred to regulate prvately owned lner, so as to nclude muncpal buses. Ths would prevent the D. S. R. from operatng more than two mles beyond the cty lmts of Detrot wthout a permt from the publc servce commsson. n other legslature put on the ballot by pet-, J play sgns and would outlaw, n r ewspaper advertsng and on professonal cards, all matter except nformaton as the dentst's name, degree, address, and offce hours. Planfed Sunday October 20th, the sngng, cop wll be at th e Planfed church j n the evenng. Rev. Gllette^ former mnster who preached here 25 years ago gave a heart to heart talk here Sunday. Jacke Butler, oldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Butler fell on the star steps Saturday and broke hs arm. Mrs. Jack Butler spent Frday nght n Detrot. Mrs. Florence R, Dutton spent Saturday wth her son and famly, Mr. and Mrs. Bmey Roberts. ' 'The Msses Emma Jacobs, Eva Jacobs, Pearl Watters and Ada Van Syckel galloped n Thursday for ^ FOR SALE: Sze 20 Romnd Oak Heatng Stove n good condton. lke new. J C. M. Beads, 2426 Kensngton, Lansng, (Mchgan. FOP SALF, flhropsalre Kama, Yearlngs and two year olds, at farmer's prces. Fred Leece, Whtman Lake. Lemen Road. Phone 27 WANTED :Ewe Sheep. Good grazers. Horace A Fok, 6660 Zeeb Road, Darter. WANTED: Elderly wdower or a bachelor to stay on farm. More for home. Small wage. Oaor«re Hornanaw, Koute Pnckney FOK SALE-250 Shocks of Corn. Edward Snger. FOR SALE One davenport, oat large "Vects" Coal heater and ona ktchen range. seler Ssters. FOR SALE One cook store, Very good shape, used one year only. Met Chalker WE HAVE AG. E. 6 bulb tabu model rado. Wll sell or trade for bred sow; rug 9x2 wth feh pad, an electrc clock; 2 burner electrc stove at 3025 Patterson Lake Road. FOR SALE - Large Crculatng base burner coal stove. Charles Clark. FOR SALE Team of horses, 6 an* 7 years old, wt, Lee Lavey. FOR RENT _ Huckleberry Swamp John Spears LOST _ Black mare, beleved to be n the vcnty of Pnckney. Branded on rght shoulder, No. 9. Fnder please wrte Box 08. FOR SALE Fresh Holsten cow. Robert Pke, Henry Klce Farm. TO RENT Reasonable. Well fa* n.shed sleepng room, grouad floor, prvate entrance and bath. Also meals served. Mrs. Charles Chamberlan FOR SALE 24 Blacktop Delane bucks, yearlngs. Bert Reason, Pnckney. WANTED _ Grl for general housework. No washng. $7 per week. (Mrs. Wm. Loll, Pnckney. Pkone 29. FOR SALE Two wheel traler wt* steel box. A J so outboard motor, two cylnder. Lucus Doyle, Phone 42F8 *gg ^aa«un*^ * Establshed *Mf ncorporated MM McPherso State Bank Over SUty-Egfcf f Safa Bankng WNTER FRES Wth the comng of wnter, furnaces are lghted to keep UB warm. Occasonally the frendly warmth of the fre escapes ts bounds and dsaster results. Loss of furnture or even Loss of Home. A safety depost box wll prevent loss of valuable papers such as deeds rnd contracts, nsurance polces. '-v-h certfcates, bonds and the lke The cost of replacng these papers s consderable. The rental of a Safe Depost Box 3 comparatvely small, and the r«- dnner on Mrs. Florence Dutton. The Frendly Bble class met on Frday nght wth Mrs. Ada Van Syckel. Electon of offcers resulted as follows Presdent, Mrs. Suse! sullant peace of mnd s worth many words, the D. S. R. would be oblg- Sweet; V. Presdent, Florence Dut dollars more. ed tc haul n some of ts suburban ton. secretary, Hazel Kng; Treasl : nes or submt to state regulaton, urer< Florence Holmes. A danty Accordng to the prvate bus frm ]uncn was served. The next meetng the act would equalze competton by causng the D. S. R and any other cty lnes operatng outsde ther boundares to pay equal taxes and meet comparable safety requrements. From the Detrot cty vewpont, however, the act s an attack upon home rule and an attempt to penalze suburbantes who now share n lower fares the D. S. R. has made possble. Proposton No. 4 Ths s also an act of the 989 wll be at the home of Mrs. C. E. Sweet. Mrs. Ada VanSyckel spent last Wednesday wth Mrs. C. E. Donehue. The callers Sunday at Mrs. Ada Van Syckel's were Mrs. EJla Conkln, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Gauss. Mrs. Mary Hassenchal and chldren spent the week end wth her sster, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Gnnther and Mr. and Mrs. Perry Brown cf Ann Arbor. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Mapes of Flortons callng for a referendum da were guests most of last week t would provde for regulaton of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Sweet of the practce of dentstry n Mchgan. The act was sponsored by the Dansvlle were Sunday cahara at Mr. and Mrs. George Grmes of Mchgan State Dental socety and Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Holmes. s smlar to laws n effect n some Mrs. A.. Holmes spent last week other jftates. The am of the measure n Lansng. \* to rase the standards of dental Mr. and Mrs. Gulford who have practce, but some of ts provsons f pent the past two months tearng partcularly those whch deal wth the west and the Pacfc Coast were the rght of a dentst to advertse pnests last week of ther daughter as he pleases, have met opposton and famly, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald f om newspapers and advertsng Foulker. r Mcpherson Stale Bank Money to loan at w l*'«rest pad on Savngs Books Trr>t Certorates of Depost. All deposts up to $, man* e«l by our membershp n Federal Dapost nsurance Company. DEAD OR ALVE FREE COLLECTON VCE ON FARM ANMALS. WE PAY LONG DSTANCE TOLL CHARGES, CALL COLLECT TO: DARLNG A COMPANY HOWELL 450 AVN ARBOR 63M SeecMtora la aw MLLENBACH BftOS.

9 EDTORAL STAFF fcrtor Megan Meyer Senor news Golde Markos Junor news Maron Shrley Snnhnmnro novx (;nrjm Craft Freshmen news...joyce Chamberlan Bographes:- Anna Van Rlarcum Elose sabelle rene Gardner Head Bokros Grade News :- Grammar Room Jane Wttwer Sx and Seventh...Paulne McLucas Kndergarten June Caldwell General :- Jeannette rene Gossp :- Anon. Blades Hanes EDTORAL At the present tme there are man ra f ety measures beng ntroduced for the purpose of achevng a natonal safety record as nearly parlect as possble. The legslators are dong ther part by makng laws. To.- example, the law stat : ng no The Pnckney Dspatch Wednesday, Oct The Pnckney School News ^ "SK* Teachers nsttute Th( next Monday another meetng wa-: held and the date for the party Last Thursday and Frday school ; was set for November 2nd. t s not was let out for Teachers nsttute. Here are nterestng thngs that one one may make rght hand turns on teacher saw, heard and dd. a red '','ht. Cvc and polce authortes &-e dong ther part by nstal more red lghts, extra traffc sgns and by beng very strct n the punshment for breakng a traffc law. Stll, all ths has not cut down tral c accdents and fataltes n even a moderate rato to all measures taken, And why? Of course there s a reason and t happens to be a very smple one. The publc! Of course, we don't just go out and break laws for fun, but at some tme or another we'll do that very thng. By thep ublc, of course, mean everyone of us, but ths message s more for the beneft of students n.vhool. However, th P same rules T suggest for them can just as easly apply to others. General rules for safe drvng ae: frst, be courteous. What f J'm or Jcfe^does beat you uptown.' There s no reason for you to pass every car on the road and shoot across ntersectons wthout lookng. Second, be careful. Better to have loo much cauton and a whole car than too lttle cauton and a smashed car. Thrd, know the condton of your car. f you drve to school every mornng check your car for defects, especally n the tres, steerng wheels and brakes. t may save someones' lfe to have your brakes r. good condton. There are general rules for all to observe. Here are some good rules especally for hgh school students. Don't race around town wth your car and absolutely don't race arom the school yard. They are always gong to and from school all the tme. These chldren unheedngly dash across the roads or nto the roads after a football or some other cbject. O Thursday mornng, Mrs. Wl- on lstened to a speech by Channm Pollock, noed playwrght and kcturer. Hs subject was "Wake up Amerca". He lkened Amercans as t > the passengers on the Ttanc at the tme t sank. They danced and sang and played all the whle the oeved the mpresson that he belev- Ttanc was snkng. Mrs. Wlson receded the mpresson that he beleved we Amercan are not serous tnough about current happenngs. mown»e held. We are sngng, dancng, and playng "whle dsaster s overtakng us" that s beng put Thursday afternoon, Reverend C.aane of Central Methodst Church spoke on "Ol for Lamps of Educaton". He lkened the Amercans o (mpty lamps. They would lke to Jo somethng and they have the abl-!t\ but tack the "ol" or knowledge teachers * lust supply that "ol". Frday mornng Mrs. Wlson attended a Hstory and Socal Scence ^ ee ng. A Mr. K a y, news c o m m e n t- ; t<-r n France at the tme of the Geman Oeoupaton n July talked r.n the falure of France, whch he attrbuted to three reasons. Frst, lack of preparedness; second, ">th ceumn ae vty wthn France tself and thrd, d ; ssenton among hgher offcers of the French government. M. Kay predcted a very dffcult wnter becaus e of the scarcty of food. The Germans have taken over ( "h'' food supply and ar e ratonng t out. Frday afternoon a talk was gven by Camlle Kelley, a Polce Judge of Memphs. Her topc was "Arphres, not Covered Wagons." Her dea was, modern days should be t>rated n a modern lght -- remember, we travel n arplanes, not covered wagons. Per talk showed much operence wth serous cases of S h e br0uj?ht o u t What they lack n cauton, hch? * ^ M ' the fact that Amerca was becomng school students should make up for too much "follow the crowd" and not wth carefulness. YOU can not be enough ndvdualsm. exevsed upon the grounds of heedlessness nor carelessness. n the followng weeks w> wll For the same reason, don't turn * vf the mpressons other teachers corners too fast or unexpectedly, receved of Teachers nsttute. Always slow down and gve warnnp by hand sgnals. Ths gves both SENORS drvers and pedestrans a chance to pee oue of your way. ' ^ t sn't smart to go as fast as you n} a meetng held las* week no as yet where the party wll SOPHOMORES Th Sophomore K. ass of Pnckney Hgh School made a good proft on. ellmg candy at the last football ca.r.e. We sold every bar of candy rand every package of gum, makng a > ' nf't of one dollar and sxty cents G'M'O) t was the frst tme we had ever tred to sell randy at the gan C" and we are well pleased wth the results, and especally pleased wth our football team. P n't former the All-Hgh Party- 'V. her 2 h- ' ; ON tra : t :> rah on Frday t s a Halloween m:-masouerade. w'" be cvon to the co-lump e that the.hd,: os thnk s the best. Maybe '-. old lone- dress or sster's -Vn-t dress wll wn vo* the p zc. You had better try for t a.. ;:-.- 7m-- party s for each h rhool - utleat and h ear - V ncknc'v hh"h amy nav.- Th.' ed lh< < Mf have to! tare know re est hoc! A ngh, party prze nvte three guests, j:'-t so h a dtae for each one le nvto. n :-h fact ndent r ;r fc; ent commttees have.-tart- ; r work and an enjoyable tme a<ed each person. Come and Adam and Madam La7onga ou" for una. What does th e fuhcld for you? Well, who? Madam and Adam LaZonga. NTERMEDATE nth g.'ad ROOM s."'artme a study of ranch brands. They expect to wrte letters to boys and grls on -nches. ; The fth erade s studyng the sn ess letter. New black boards we-e nstalled ; n the rear of Mrs. Lobdcll's room hv Mr. Jeffrey durng the teachers "n-l' ua. Ths pract-rdy doubles 'he board space r the room. PRMARY ROOM Those who won the -nelhncr match n the second grade were Jo Ann d-ffths and Vrgna Shrley. The Prmary room had a major Powes d.nv Tuesday. Jacke Craft ced as the Major. S veral jars have been brought for our mono ram paste jar. Fa ah chh! Actons were reported aganst the jar. wll ha»*o hs own monogram can and then whrl your car around S^or Trp to Washngton. ' Cotton rabbt^ were made by the n the mddle of the road. Ths may mean your lfe as well as someone P ars f o r t h e 6 da >' else's. * $5 check was receved by the Remember these rules and also the Senor Class from Mr. Rencke, the thre* general rules prevously men- a~ent for the Curts Publshng Co. toned. Be courteous to pedestrans Ths was an added reward to the and other drvers. Don't betray the Senors for ther sales of magaznes. trust your parents place n you by T n c t n P commttee can now make thre r. clnsses. They were made for A tr P- ' fhp, ' r mothers. Paula CorMt and Pohbe Clark re on the sck lst for ths week. GRAMMAR ROOM meetng was held last Wednes- The f ; fth crade have smarted an lettng you drve. day to dscuss whether the check re- Englsh project ths week. Tltev are Ee careful - better be overly rau- reved by the class was to be put makmg a grave yah of frementlv ved n Pnektous. n the treasury or spent on a party. Alwavs know the condton of The class decded upon a party your car, especally tres, steerng ant^ tn e Pres. apponted a commtwheel and brakes. j tee to make plans for a party. «. - * > TT Gwendolyn th e skk lst. " < *&",<»:. Watks s stll on NOTES ON THE GAME t would he hard to pck out dvdual s.ars of the game. Al t'm hys played well and showed of pep. n:a was we Hartland's speedy half back, Hnf'fm- of ots! hand bv m'kney e\( opt n one nstance when broke loose on the yard lne lot; for a touchdown. PckneyY fnal touchdown play \- s a clover pece of decepton. Kuhn ran wde as f attemptng an ( ;a run, stopped short and pas.-ed to avey who was s.andng al! alone o, the ;"> yard lne. t was execute*! n a mane' that would have done e,eda to a college team. He'n ld.- njury marked the frst ( t-(.u- m-hap n the '--t three \ravs. *. s ex pec ed that the njury \>. M hoop h'm on the bench for the remander of the season. 'arl: aey's football to ord for the \v ". reads: won ; lo-t :! :. '!':rck: ey wll he seekng t" fl'st v\r\ <o y '. n a n aht gam f. when t,:-l:o wth the Ann Arbor second ;e: TV A. S *,' J-Y [!-Y! Fr.Ann Arbor team!n-t ts frst t to Dearborn 3-f. err s the for-tbatl schedule for l-emanedr nf the season, Oct. f) a: Ann Arbor. S :,~> Oct. \'ov. at Wnes Feld Saturday rv^h'- tn-,()'.- x St.- Let's all turn Lnden hero, 3:30 No hoys some real ma'aaa GUESS Sho mo f ( ' e.'.he «he ^ame.--. (lason her f, kbrdge here, out and gve upport n the WHO BOGRAPHES NUMBER t'"23. le d 3:3f) 3 ::!() the re- Porn :n a nck nev on and blond hah. s of a<"eraue heght, has haz- -tarted schocl at No'th Lake and a tended school the-re for one vear. Then -he cane to Pmek'-y for 4 vears. When she was n he ffth Reeve' She v. School Her sv mrnmg chahes. Ter trr de K r o r o m c s. e\e> and ambton he.-taled school at, whch s a country school. s then entered n the lrh and - now n the!2h arade ntere-t-' are hor-oback rdnr do- gang her own to teach Home her hobby - musc and art. He we "-) He ha and NUMBER l"-r»t brown har, a feet 0 nches tall about 40 lbs. was born n Pncknev on h ne and A u g- m'-nrcd word' s uch as "an't" and Hs chef nterests ar f. readng, al "T seen". Ths we hone tha.t crow. ust «. 0-?. He has n f all hs lfe, s one CR?O n whch knds of sports and travel. the grnve yard may P 7 '*- ambton s to he an avator or state polceman. Me wu.- born July 23, l l J23 n Detut. NUMBER k has dark brown har and» te BW tyg', and w qute tull At the age of nne hemoved from Detot to a farm f tner northwest of 'nekney. H- nterest- are football, ceskatng am bob sleddng. H- ambton s to become an *dec rcan. NUMBER V Sh (. s."> feet '< ncle" tall, habla'-k har and gr-ysb blue eyes. Sbt wa- born n Detrot August 2 r.'lh'l and lved there for 3 year.-. Then she moved to Mt. Clemens whore "he lved for fve year-. After a j t ars she moved to Wllumston where she lved for two years. Seven years ago she moved to Pnckney and has lved here s nee. t Her ambton s to become a teacher and an author. j Her hobby - to read good book-. She spends most of her tme dol' -!'. work. ' She doe.-, not lke any knd ol sport.- but enjoy.- walkna by her-eh' an atlv. ANSWER TO BOGRAPHES. Marlyn Glenn ; '2. Peryl An, br-.'.ey;.",. Donn Wdnayer; \. Mry Jane \\ ttwer. YE OLDE GOSSP COLUMN W< would -aea-'-t that a certan. '' a M. Lobd'-M's room m )'ove ' y ; n: before b,- aran at t empt -,o :\\-;ken anyone by throuna peb- Me- ;st the w ndow. Ye-, the dnne ado w w a- hroke n, \^ a- n't ',!,' a J'w of our Somor a' rh- -M-a'd >', ( ' : ( \^}: et.-»me of the S< n o > _: L. ' -' ' r "Oc'ober '!< " a- the n:.! ' '". * ] : e cla --- we' nor ma -t. ("an t, ; },e '<<>,> T o l' M r. Cahl wel " '"> \ v he po'.ccr of -on:,, oler M D'd a cerlah lv".-h;: L-'; -. ' (,, ( Sroot ) : -ato-er to take!,o -. e 'he "! o\< ard - of Y ran :a " <> "- :,da;. or Tue-day nuh 4 Dd \ on, Do' " Do ' wo of on r new '"fe dl'n :: n '/ -'-u r" hrtvo a prvate cha.ffe r >> 'o ; l'e them home on \\>dne,-d:\ h h' -. Ask M;e and J<'an. Who are the "Musketeer.-" that m,';-r so ma.v trp* to Gregory on nee'; nah's. V.'f. unde)--and tlva ] -' -re composed of a la-t year' d ale, a sevnr and a n n o>' l"!'*! 'T nformato v.ll be v,-reatl,\' :;,( ' ecated by th - dr-pt. ef NO APPONTMENT YET MADE Tlo vara ney cap -< <] by ' he deat ' A T;, - A -. ; Sharp", -'-loo ov. '- lone" -.! he fller) for \\" b! - u of her t ejrn whch e\ r» ;, -e- : '''-; ). ;n>prntnent. Accordne; to ' ". 'h- a pno'" meat mu-t be mnd a, the ud' r e of prnba'e, county eh '-'-' an,-! 'n-t ' 'r-: a'tomey. t wll moh'h.lv be made n the no\t few da*-. T' order to nualfv the por-on aoaoo'rd must ha,- e a Th A. rle'-ro' VH'" tho-e person- mentoned are >j n! l,.\- O-dornf', frrnen -ajt. of her;]-' row ; member of the county >' c] fare romp.-.-'on. A L VAY VOTE ON PARKWAY V'rmev General Tom Read has '- <; 'ha' a" ct ; -/er." may vote on t v. 'lm-en-cl tor parkway projoc' * *}-,(. \M -enbro- electon whether 'he'- are t:n- p- \-er- or nt. The-' wa- '» f'pnnse to a rpery from Count'.- Clrvk r.-per T/n<remnn of WnvarruT-*v s- to ^ b<', her nnlv taxpaye'"- 'n;ld vote on ''"e proposton. n ' a. county authortes doubted the '-al''v of h- opnon the attorney " enr-7-al sad that countes could have.en sets of ballots pnn'.eo. However so far a- s known no county ha" ordered more than one set prnted.

10

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